2016-10-19 06:55 AM - last edited on 2023-05-23 04:17 PM by Rubia Torres
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2022-11-25 01:04 PM - edited 2022-11-25 01:08 PM
Hi Barry, I thought the discussion was interesting.
I'm afraid I shared a lot of views with Anonymous but I don't think that he answered your question in a constructive way after.
The answer in my opinion of why would you use a thin zone instead of a slab is that it would limitate the amount of elements, and therefore the amount of work.
Let's say you have a generic slab in your project for the entire story.
You draw a zone with a pretty stamp for each room.
If you want to add a floor finish visible in plan, section and 3D, re-drawing a new thin slab for each room seems fastidious, especially if you already have nicely delimitated zones that could do the job very well.
Having thin flooring slabs AND zones for each room seems like a tautology to me.. and extra work.
I think that the absolute best would be to have a "flooring option" included in the zone tool, with a composition option, thickness, materials, etc. easily available on plan/section/3D, rather than just a cover fill. That would be a mix of 2d/3d tool but really useful I think
2022-11-28 02:15 PM
There is a Goodie called Accessories, which includes Room Accessories, which can create floor structures based on the geometry of the Zone:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CiWl7JTeGSE
Goodies download page:
https://graphisoft.com/downloads/goodies/
2022-11-28 04:20 PM - edited 2022-11-28 04:21 PM
If your floor finish building material has a fairly low priority, all the wals in your model will just cut straight through it. If you set it up as actual 'finish' in composite settings, it will 'flow' through door openings. The way we tackle this is that we model the 'exceptions to the rule' bits (like floor tiles in toilet/bathroom) and substract these through SEO. That leaves the majority floor finish stuck to our floor composite.
However, often with proper classification the need to model things seperately arises and the problem solves itself. However, minute detailed modelling is never needed if the walls have higher priority building material. Just make sure your slab is displayed all the way to the back in drawing order, or you will see unwanted lines in the floor plan.
2022-11-28 05:25 PM
Laszlo: this goodie Accessories seems very interesting, looking forward to trying it.
Erwin: I think that's a good method for New build with not many different floorings.
I often have to work with the renovation tool though, but (the biggest Archicad miss of all time) I don't think that it's possible to assign a renovation status to part of a composite (wall/slab/etc...). For example having an existing composite slab with ceiling/core/flooring, and say put only the flooring as downtaking, or have an existing wall and just add some insulation with the status new. I remember using composite slabs for generic flooring and SEO for flooring exception (bathrooms) but it was a bit of a nightmare combined with the renovation tool.
2022-11-29 09:46 AM
Partial demolishing of composite is not possible, sadly.
For new elements like added insulation, we do generally model these separately from the existing walls. Sometimes it helps to have a layer with a different intersection group number for the new elements, so they don't interfere/connect with existing elements.