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Why don't structural columns show up in architectu ral plans? (Revit 2013)
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1) Anyone know why structural columns don't show up in architectural plans. The only way I can see to coordinate the structure with the architectural elements is to use structural plans.
2) Anyone know how to make structural columns visible in architectural plans? I've tried the visibility graphics but everything seems to be turned on by default.
Solved! Go to Solution.
Re: Why don't structural columns show up in architectu ral plans? (Revit 2013)
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Structural columns do show in architectural floor plans, by default, even if the discipline of the view is set to architectural. It must be something specific in your template or visibility settings, that is turning them off.
Planta1 Revit Online Consulting | info@planta1.com
Re: Why don't structural columns show up in architectu ral plans? (Revit 2013)
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I suspect you are seeing a message like this when placing the structural column?
Then you can't see the column you just placed. Structural columns are positioned in a negative direction from the level. The view range of an "architectural" plan has the bottom of it set to the height of the level itself. So the structural column is being placed below the view range of the view and you can't see it. Visibility and graphics is NOT goin to affect this. To see the structural colums you either need to change the negative offset of the column to move it where it will be visible in the view range, or change the view range of the view so it "sees" a bit below the current level so the column can be seen.
As I understand it, the negative offset placement of structural columns is related to the typical workflow of a structural engineer. They think of plans from the level looking down (floor framing and below is what is critical to them) where architects think of the level as the 4' or so above level of the floor.

Jeff Hanson
Sr. Subject Matter Expert
Autodesk, Revit User Experience
Re: Why don't structural columns show up in architectu ral plans? (Revit 2013)
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Thanks Jeff.
Glad I asked. May I suggest that the visibility message might be considered for improvement. Perhaps a specific message could be triggered for structural columns reminding users that they really belong to the level below.
The workflow seems reasonable (if that is what engineers want) but none of the textbooks I have read have mentioned it. (odd)
Re: Why don't structural columns show up in architectu ral plans? (Revit 2013)
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You should have mentioned that you were receiving an error message at the moment of creating structural columns. It was understood as if you could not see any structural columns in architectural plans at all.
Planta1 Revit Online Consulting | info@planta1.com
Re: Why don't structural columns show up in architectu ral plans? (Revit 2013)
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I guess that might have made the post better but even if when we created the columns in the structural views, they didn't show up in the architectural views. I didn't think about the structural columns being drawn downward instead of upward. The warning did show up when we attempted to draw structural columns in architectural views but now I understand why they are related.
Thanks for your responses.
Re: Why don't structural columns show up in architectu ral plans? (Revit 2013)
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"The workflow seems reasonable (if that is what engineers want) but none of the textbooks I have read have mentioned it. (odd)"
Not "want", but "need".
If you read a typical set of multi-level structural drawings, the fact that engineers usually draw what's holding up the floor instead of drawing what the floor holds up, must become apparent.
Re: Why don't structural columns show up in architectu ral plans? (Revit 2013)
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I understand and agree with your point. But it flys in the face of what would be expected IMO per orthographic viewing. Since most plan views are sections, they are expected to illustrate the things that the cut plane intersects. If I was reading a structural plan for a particular level, I would have expected that the columns labelled would exist at the ordinary cut plane of that level.
AutoCAD Architecture does it the opposite way BTW. Placement of columns is at their bottom, not their top. Since standards vary, there should be some documentation of it in the standard training manuals. I haven't found any yet. I will continue looking.

