Nathan wrote:
Ok folks,
Here is the big idea: have a file that has existing, new and demo walls organized, and worked on by someone doing layout. They save it out as a module, which other team members can then overlay electrical, ceiling, flooring, landscape into.(I here calls of teamwork now)
I know it seems a little backwards: modules are often the piece brought in to make up the puzzle (bath modules, apartments in buildings, buildings in developments) but why not run it the other way?
-Nathan Brauer
We / I have worked this way in Teamwork projects and solo projects.
Two scenarios
In new build projects where we have repetitive elements such as repeating flat layouts see this tip I posted
http://tinyurl.com/49hsa
. We often use a module that just has the building grid on it that way no one can make a mistake and move a grid line thereby messing up the accuracy of dimensions in the drawing. Using Publisher to publish your modules keeps it all very simple btw.
In rennovation / refurb worb I am often given a 2d Autocrud drawing from a building surveyor, I tart up this drawing to suit our pen colours etc and insert it as a module in the ArchiCAD model. I then just 3d model the new elements only as and sections and elevations will be of the new areas. Where an area of the existing building is demolished I put this on a BS-0-Removals layer in the module file and in the ArchiCAD Project I just hide that layer.
As I don't trace / convert the Surveyor's drawing it saves a lot of time and I just concentrate on the new work.
AC versions 3.41 to 25 (UKI Full 5005).
Using AC25 5005 UKI FULL
Mac OSX 10.15.7 (19G2021) Mac Pro-2013 32gbRam AMD FirePro D500 3072 MB graphics