Hello All,
I am stuck (novice) as to what I need to fill in this gap on a gable end side of where the soffit comes down to the roof eave on the pitched side of the roof.
Obviously in training they didn't show us how to accomplish this, so I would much appreciate on the talents & tips within this forum to point me in the correct direction.
See attached..
Thanks,
Jeff
Solved! Go to Solution.
Solved by VWD-MLM. Go to Solution.
Solved by Alaaeldin_Alsahli. Go to Solution.
You can---
Use a Ceiling, and specify slope with Slope Arrows, give it a Material ( such as metal perforated vent, etc. )
Use a Roof by Extrusion--draw sketch lines at the gable end, specify depth of roof equal to the overhang. Specify Material, etc.
Create a separate Compund Roof, that contains the soffit material at the bottom side--and place it where the "main roof" stops at the wall plane--then use Join Geometry to join the main roof and the "overhang roof".
There may be another way with the roof tools using a special Fascia etc. as well.
cbcarch,
Thank you for the input. Would/could you take the time to show me the end results for the three options you gave? Screen shots or RVT would be much appreciated!
Thanks,
Jeff
To all;
All weekend I've tried to figure this out, without any luck. I get the soffit, but the thickness protrudes above the roof when I need the thickness to cover the opening by changing the soffit thickenss. I am not able (per my level of knowledge) to make a trapizoid to fit in the profile of the slope of the angle, dimension of the fascia, depth of the soffit, dimension at the wall. I know how to do this in Acad Architecture, but in revit it is driving me insane. I don't get it.....
Frustrated....
Jeff
Hi Jeff, I usually use a copy of the main roof and then change it to other with the materials and definitions of the soffit you will use. Place it at the right position a then edit the boundary creating contourn lines around the exterior walls to define the soffit edge. See the attached image.
I hope you solve your problem. thanks, Alex
Alex,
Thanks for the input & jpg. Ok, if I want the soffit to be parallel (to the ground, floor) instead of perpendicular to the roof & to fill in that void at the gable end sides, how would one go about doing that? See attached for clarity...
Thanks,
Jeff
Hi Jeff, in that particular case, the Soffit Tool in Revit is ease to use, because the flat soffit is very well done there,see the attached image, but you could also use the same roof without slope in any edge and make the same procedure. The cover at the end of the gable end most be done will a wall with the same materials than the soffit and modify the profile to the shape of the soffit end or make a generic element to make the cover.
I hope you solve this problem. Alex
Alex,
I think that I made this work per your last post. I made a wall, moved it as needed to that void area at the gable end. I then modified the profile, then the material for that new wall. With some fine tuning I think I can make this work & still look correctly.
Thank you very much!
Jeff
A wall is I thing the easiest way to do it or what you could do also is the following
Create a Mass element and then use Model by face---roof or you could use the Paint Feature to apply it on the mass element
Here is a video with sounds
https://chronicle.autodesk.com/main/details/a57b5065-4132-4b0a-b683-320593585428
Jeff, attached is what "I Think" you were asking for............if it is, let me know and I'll upload a sample roof for you to look at.......be advised, this was Created in 2014 version.
Mike
Alaaeldin_Alash,
Thank you for the video showing how to do this, it really helped.
Jeff