2009-08-09 04:22 PM - last edited on 2023-05-11 12:15 PM by Noemi Balogh
2012-04-19 11:21 AM
2012-04-19 12:04 PM
2012-04-19 12:19 PM
2012-04-19 10:37 PM
2012-04-20 07:45 AM
quiet wrote:Very Nice! I think the creation of computer models of historic structures should be part of every architectural student's education. Its amazing what you learn doing these things, because you're actually building the thing from the ground up at full scale. It would be completely obvious that those huge windows at the King's Bollege Bambridge Chapel (weren't we doing Pythonisms somewhere else here recently?) are only made possible by the massive buttresses. Laying down the foundations to those buttresses at full scale gives you a tremendous sense of the loading forces involved, as well as tremendous respect for the original mastermasons.
This reminded me of an exercise I did last year....
2012-04-20 06:40 PM
2012-04-24 03:17 PM
2012-04-26 10:00 AM
Rakela wrote:The Fenchurch project file was 8.8 MB, but considering that a single line of GDL (like SPHERE with RESOL 500) can generate a buzillion triangles, file sizes can be deceptive in a project like this. The object library weighed in at 96.3 MB, which doesn't seem bad when compared to the ArchiCAD library at 200 MB, but the Fenchurch model used every friggin' object in it's library.
whats the file size ?? ...
2012-04-26 02:35 PM
David wrote:David:
A better indication of the model's complexity would be the triangle count in Artlantis, which came out to a total of 8,657,363 triangles.
2012-04-27 07:46 AM
David wrote:When I first started counting polygons on this project, back in 2007, the PolyCount add-on was giving me a significantly lower number of polygons than what Artlantis was reporting for the exact same model. It may be that "polygons" and "triangles" are not quite the same thing. In any case, since I was primarily interested in what Artlantis thought of the project, I stoppped asking ArchiCAD about it.
Did you try the PolyCount Add-On (Polygon Counting Tool) in ArchiCAD?