Learn to manage BIM workflows and create professional Archicad templates with the BIM Manager Program.

Modeling
About Archicad's design tools, element connections, modeling concepts, etc.

Silly question for Aussie

I am nearly metric illiterate - can someone help me with what these window sizes mean?

ArchiCAD 25 7000 USA - Windows 10 Pro 64x - Dell 7720 64 GB 2400MHz ECC - Xeon E3 1535M v6 4.20GHz - (2) 1TB M.2 PCIe Class 50 SSD's - 17.3" UHD IPS (3840x2160) - Nvidia Quadro P5000 16GB GDDR5 - Maxwell Studio/Render 5.2.1.49- Multilight 2 - Adobe Acrobat Pro - ArchiCAD 6 -25

20 REPLIES 20
Anonymous
Not applicable
KeesW wrote:
Those Aussie dimensions are millimetres, This is the standard for our construction industry.
Yes, but what is the "51-87"? Is that a catalogue number?
Barry Kelly
Moderator
It is not anything I recognise.
We usually nominate in millimetres (or possible decimetres for framed construction) or brick coursing.

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
KeesW
Advocate
It looks like a manufacturer's catalogue number. These were sometimes based on window sizes and if the windows or manufacturer is old fashioned, dimensions might be in inches, not metric.

For arithmetically challenged Americans - metric is dead easy to understand. Much easier to add, subtract, multiply and divide millimetres than feet and inches. Hardest thing is to know if metric is in mm, cm or metres.
Cornelis (Kees) Wegman

cornelis wegman architects
AC 5 - 26 Dell XPS 8940 Win 10 16GB 1TB SSD 2TB HD RTX 3070 GPU
Laptop: AC 24 - 26 Win 10 16GB 1TB SSD RTX 3070 GPU
Aaron Bourgoin
Virtuoso
Kees, Come to Canada where we use both. Daily.
Think Like a Spec Writer
AC4.55 through 28 / USA AC27-6010 USA
Rhino 8 Mac
MacOS 15.2
KeesW
Advocate
Aaron
I'd love to visit Canada - actually have some relatives there!
Why use both? Is it because you need metric for the French and imperial for the Americans? You don't need to put both on architectural drawings, do you?
Cornelis (Kees) Wegman

cornelis wegman architects
AC 5 - 26 Dell XPS 8940 Win 10 16GB 1TB SSD 2TB HD RTX 3070 GPU
Laptop: AC 24 - 26 Win 10 16GB 1TB SSD RTX 3070 GPU
gpowless
Advocate
KeesW wrote:
Aaron
Why use both?
It is because in the 80's the government decided to adopt metric in order to match the world standard. Unfortunately since a lot of materials come from the US and since builders are reluctant to make any changes to their current methods and materials imperial measurement stuck around.

So today the building codes are all in metric (although they are also echoing some measurements in imperial) and our drawings must satisfy the builders.

Funny thing is that most municipal building departments readily accept imperial construction drawings but insist on metric site development and work plans. Crazy Canuks!
Intel i7-6700@3.4GHz 16g
GeForce GTX 745 4g HP Pavilion 25xw
Windows 10 Archicad 26 USA Full
Anonymous
Not applicable
I worked in Malaysia for a while in the late '90s. The boss used metric and imperial in the same sentence - "I want this wall 2metres and 6inches long". Always good for a laugh.
Aaron Bourgoin
Virtuoso
Kees,

It's not uncommon to issue drawings here for permit where the buildings are dimension in Imperial and the Site Plan - always the Site Plan - is Metric.
Think Like a Spec Writer
AC4.55 through 28 / USA AC27-6010 USA
Rhino 8 Mac
MacOS 15.2
Eduardo Rolon
Moderator
Puerto Rico is also metric for Site and Civil, and Imperial for everything else.
Eduardo Rolón AIA NCARB
AC27 US/INT -> AC08

Macbook Pro M1 Max 64GB ram, OS X 10.XX latest
another Moderator

KeesW
Advocate
How confusing to run 2 systems at the same time! Must generate real clanging errors!
Cornelis (Kees) Wegman

cornelis wegman architects
AC 5 - 26 Dell XPS 8940 Win 10 16GB 1TB SSD 2TB HD RTX 3070 GPU
Laptop: AC 24 - 26 Win 10 16GB 1TB SSD RTX 3070 GPU