Regarding wood and concrete (and insulation) materials and such, our template (which is based on the Dutch standard template) uses a sort of load-bearing and non-loadbearing or structurual/non-structural setup for most materials that can be used in both ways.
So, for example, we have insulation for structural wood-frame wall elements with a high priority, as they are part of the structural core. We also have a high priority plywood for these elements as they have a structural function.
We also have a fairly low priority insulation for light separation walls with a low priority plywood.
This allows for light separation walls to connect to the structural wood-frame walls the proper way.
If you are making slight variations of materials to clarify your drawings (and why not, it seems like a good idea!), just duplicate the proper materials and increment the priority by 1. This generally works well for us.
For concrete we have a fairly high priority material for prefab structural beams/collumns so they get priority over the concrete used in slabs. We also have fairly low priority concrete for the stuff that gets poured on site.
Our template has just over 100 materials, which might seem like a lot, but it has quite a few 'subgroups', so you get to 100 fast. I'd say it is rather slim on materials.
We do try to not cram in every single colour finish option in the template materials though, rather create those per project as needed and tag them with a project ID to find them fast.
Erwin Edel, Project Lead, Leloup Architecten
www.leloup.nlArchiCAD 9-26NED FULL
Windows 10 Pro
Adobe Design Premium CS5