License Delivery maintenance is expected to occur on Saturday, November 30, between 8 AM and 11 AM CET. This may cause a short 3-hours outage in which license-related tasks: license key upload, download, update, SSA validation, access to the license pool and Graphisoft ID authentication may not function properly. We apologize for any inconvenience.
Modeling
About Archicad's design tools, element connections, modeling concepts, etc.

Hip roof

Dontknow
Enthusiast
Trying to create a hip roof with different gutter heights.
Any suggestions on how to construct this?

Architectural construction designer, draftsman, modeller
ArchiCAD 25.
7 REPLIES 7
Gerald Hoffman
Advocate
You just need to add a node on the bottom edge of the roof plane you want to extend down, drag each of them perpendicular to the corners and then extend the edge to the desired overhang.

Cheers,
Screen Shot 2015-12-12 at 4.03.48 PM.png
Gerald Hoffman
“The simplification of anything is always sensational” GKC
Archicad 4.55 - 27-6000 USA
2019 MacBook Pro-macOS 15.0 (64GB w/ AMD Radeon Pro 5600M GPU)
Barry Kelly
Moderator
No need to add nodes manually (unless they are single roof planes rather than the multi-plane roof).
You should be able to drag the edge with the pet palette option straight away.
The only problem you may have with this is if your roof edge and pivot line are on top of each other (I.e. zero length eave overhang).
In this case type in a temporary distance for the overhang, stretch the edge you want, and then set the overhang back to zero but tell it not to reset the custom overhangs.

Barry.
One of the forum moderators.
Versions 6.5 to 27
i7-10700 @ 2.9Ghz, 32GB ram, GeForce RTX 2060 (6GB), Windows 10
Lenovo Thinkpad - i7-1270P 2.20 GHz, 32GB RAM, Nvidia T550, Windows 11
Gerald Hoffman
Advocate
Barry I always use single roof planes I guess which is why I answered that way. I often end up with some complicated roofs and I find that I have a lot more control with single roof planes.

Cheers,
Gerald Hoffman
“The simplification of anything is always sensational” GKC
Archicad 4.55 - 27-6000 USA
2019 MacBook Pro-macOS 15.0 (64GB w/ AMD Radeon Pro 5600M GPU)
Dontknow
Enthusiast
Gerald wrote:
Barry I always use single roof planes I guess which is why I answered that way. I often end up with some complicated roofs and I find that I have a lot more control with single roof planes.
I agree.
I can't get it to work without single roof planes. Can't set a different roof angle.
But when I do a SEO with single roof planes I get this gap between the roofs.

Architectural construction designer, draftsman, modeller
ArchiCAD 25.
Aaron Bourgoin
Virtuoso
be sure to set all the edges of your roof planes to a vertical cut. Avoid the use of SEOs - cancel them in fact, and use ArchiCAD's intersect roof plane functionality. when you have it the way you want, go back and make sure that all the ore edges are set to vertical. They will likely mitre in the intersection process.
Think Like a Spec Writer
AC4.55 through 27 / USA AC27-6000 USA
Rhino 8 Mac
MacOS 14.6.1
Barry Kelly
Moderator
You can do quite a bit with a multi-plane roof but I agree it is often easier to convert to single roof planes when things get a bit complicated.
Attached image is 2 connected multi-plane roofs.

Barry.
One of the forum moderators.
Versions 6.5 to 27
i7-10700 @ 2.9Ghz, 32GB ram, GeForce RTX 2060 (6GB), Windows 10
Lenovo Thinkpad - i7-1270P 2.20 GHz, 32GB RAM, Nvidia T550, Windows 11
Dontknow
Enthusiast
I fixed it by drawing in the roofs as single planes complex roofs and using the intersect roof plane functionality.


Architectural construction designer, draftsman, modeller
ArchiCAD 25.