2008-01-11 03:02 PM - last edited on 2023-05-25 05:54 PM by Rubia Torres
2008-01-12 12:29 AM
mtogni wrote:You can use any of the tools in ArchiCAD to build up a preliminary model and get quantity information. ArchiCAD does not have a massing tool like Revit. It is very easy though to add walls, etc. to the massing geometry with the magic wand (space bar click).
1) In Revit we can work with masses as a first step when we are going to draw a new projet to have the first look of the building and get some fisical information (volume ecc...). Is there anything like that in ArchiCAD?
2) Can we set a wall to stay locked to something (a level, a slab...)?No. ArchiCAD does not have relationships like Revit.
3) Can we have several views of the same floor plane (for different scale and/or different purposes? The model is (of course) the same and we can add text/dim/labels, set different scale, different level of level of detail and so on...Floor plan views are by story and are typically done with multiple views of the same plan. These are controlled by view settings and layer combinations. You can create separate views of partial plans (etc.) using the worksheet tool. This unfortunately (for now) creates a 2D drawing of the plan view. It retains its link to the model and can be updated at any time but it is not a live model view. As a rule partial and enlarged floor plans are done in the plan view, but some enlarged plans may be suitable for the worksheet treatment. Plan details are probably best done with the detail tool.
4) IN Revit when you are placing a door or a window we get always some dimensioning to say where you are placing the door. IN ArchiCAD?In general this is displayed in the coordinates palette and the tracker, but the tracker only displays after the first click of a multi-step process. Since doors and windows are placed by the first click the tracker doesn't help. The usual method is to place the "user origin" at the corner of the wall (hold shift+alt/option and hover over the point) then type "r" or "d" and the distance. You can also use special snap points set by distance. This is handy if you have a lot of doors to set at the same distance off the corner. Revit is easier in this regard. Hopefully AC will catch up soon. Perhaps with an offset geometry method.
5) Can we do this in ArchiCAD (see image attached)?Yes, to a point, but with difficulty.
Thanks in advance.
2008-01-12 04:14 AM
2008-01-12 09:04 AM
2008-01-12 03:26 PM
mtogni wrote:Glad to hear you weren't just trolling. Since I have been using Revit a bit lately, my experience now confirms what you (and others) have said as well as my own first impressions.
Thanks to all of you for your kind answers.
To Matthew.
No really my questions was honest, I'm not here to win a race and I asked for them just because - to be honest - sometimes I'm a bit tired of Revit for some reasons, so I'm just looking around for something else but as far I can see ArchiCAD got what Revit doesn't have and viceversa. A perfect software still doesn't exist.