Jeff is absolutely correct. He is given you sage and sound advice.
Here are my two cents to add:
1. Pick a project type that your firm is familiar with.
2. Chose a project that is a bit smaller (for your pilot project).
3. Chose people on the team, and keep the team size smaller, that are
interested in the software program.
4. Set a reasonable timeline to complete the work. You will spend more
time in modeling, but less time in documentation.
5. Training in the product is crucial to success.
David Haynes, AIA
Ideate, Inc.
www.ideateinc.com
wrote in message news:5239083@discussion.autodesk.com...
It's not that large project can't be done in Revit. It's that you have to
know how to do a large project in Revit to make it successful. With AutoCAD,
everything was so broken up into little DWG's that this wasn't as big of an
issue. With more 3D-based tools, like Revit, or heck even 3DStudio,
efficient model management is something that is vital for large projects to
not bog down.
I'd recommend that you pick a smaller, easy project type that your team is
familiar with as your first Revit project. Ehter that or get some
experienced help, someone that's helped large projects out, so you know what
to do (and what not to do). Also come back here and ask questions, there are
a few folks here that post pretty regularly that have done large projects in
Revit...