I have a query regarding Reflected ceiling plans, I'm using 2104 version of Revit. Please refer to the images below.
Are reflected ceiling plan supposed to be like this? On a floor plan, its like viewing the services from the top, but when i comes to the reflected ceiling plan, its like viewing from below. Are ceiling plans supposed to be like that? I wanted the services in the drawing to look right, the services on higher elevation should not look like the other way around. What i am currently doing is that, on the drawing sheets, i have 2 view ports, one for the floor plan with the services and then view with just the ceiling plan nothing else. Its a bit hassle at times since i need to create 3 views for this, Floor plan, Clean ceiling, and a working ceiling pan (where i modify stuff with respect to the ceiling grids), instead of just one view for all of it. Am i doing something wrong here? any assistance would be appreciated.
That's the exact definition of reflected ceiling plans...seeing things from below
If you want to see things like floor plan but also showing your ceiling grids you need to overlay your ceiling drawings above your floor plan....just be sure that mechanical stuff are not visible in the ceiling plan...you can use a ceiling plan with Architecture template for example and make everything half tone
In case you aren't already aware, creating the corresponding Reflected Ceiling Plan Views will be much less of a hassle with the use of a View Template (to instantly set the V/G Settings) and Scope Boxes (to instantly and identically match the same Crop Regions).
When you are overlaying the Ceiling Plan Viewport on top of the normal Floor Plan Viewport, it may get a little obnoxious if you are used to working through an Active Viewport (accidentally activating the Ceiling Plan instead of the Floor Plan). A little trick to avoid this is to select the Ceiling Viewport and "Hide Element". This will not affect printing, and will not only hide the View Title, but make the Viewport unselectable until it is unhidden.
@ajax05k wrote:
The other way to do it is to adjust your view range so your cut plane is above the ceiling. then adjust the transparency of the ceiling so U can see elements below, although this is not the correct way to do it, but U have bend the ways to make your own way.
I have tried this and it does not work. I have yet to find something that truly works, with properly showing piping besides overlaying viewports which is one of the hackiest ways I have thought of to make this fix work. Revit is very lucky they have such a monopoly on the market at the moment.