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From an architectural model (SketchUp/Vectorworks) to a solid body for 3D-printing

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Message 1 of 6
segaertjonas
257 Views, 5 Replies

From an architectural model (SketchUp/Vectorworks) to a solid body for 3D-printing

segaertjonas
Participant
Participant

Hi all, 

 

One of my customers provided me with an architectural design of which they need a solid body 3D-printed to show volumes. The interior doesn't matter at all, they just want the outer shell to reflect the actual building. I'm at a loss on how to approach this or what the most convenient way of working is for something like this. Can anyone point me in the right direction please? Thank you in advance!

 

Files included:

STL- and OBJ-export from Vectorworks.

Zip-file contains the SketchUp file.

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From an architectural model (SketchUp/Vectorworks) to a solid body for 3D-printing

Hi all, 

 

One of my customers provided me with an architectural design of which they need a solid body 3D-printed to show volumes. The interior doesn't matter at all, they just want the outer shell to reflect the actual building. I'm at a loss on how to approach this or what the most convenient way of working is for something like this. Can anyone point me in the right direction please? Thank you in advance!

 

Files included:

STL- and OBJ-export from Vectorworks.

Zip-file contains the SketchUp file.

5 REPLIES 5
Message 2 of 6

Warmingup1953
Advisor
Advisor

Why not simply open the .stl in your Slicer and 3D print?

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Why not simply open the .stl in your Slicer and 3D print?

Message 3 of 6


@Warmingup1953 wrote:

Why not simply open the .stl in your Slicer and 3D print?


It looks to me that part sf the model to not enclose a volume "watertight". There are infinitely thin surfaces that will have to be thickened.

 


EESignature

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@Warmingup1953 wrote:

Why not simply open the .stl in your Slicer and 3D print?


It looks to me that part sf the model to not enclose a volume "watertight". There are infinitely thin surfaces that will have to be thickened.

 


EESignature

Message 4 of 6

This is the exact issue indeed. I guess I'll have to go back to the customer and ask to fix this, or redraw the thing in Fusion360 based on measuring performed on the SketchUp?

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This is the exact issue indeed. I guess I'll have to go back to the customer and ask to fix this, or redraw the thing in Fusion360 based on measuring performed on the SketchUp?

Message 5 of 6

Accepted solution

I would take the .obj, import it into Blender and do all the work there. Much quicker than doing that in Fusion, although I believe this can also be done in Fusion.

 

If you really want to 3D print this as one solid volume, there is a lot more work involved.

 

I would avoid working with the .stl at all cost.


EESignature

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I would take the .obj, import it into Blender and do all the work there. Much quicker than doing that in Fusion, although I believe this can also be done in Fusion.

 

If you really want to 3D print this as one solid volume, there is a lot more work involved.

 

I would avoid working with the .stl at all cost.


EESignature

Message 6 of 6
g-andresen
in reply to: segaertjonas

Hi,

Just a side note:
It is important that you remove elements that are not printable after scaling (factor 100) before scaling.

 

Günther

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Hi,

Just a side note:
It is important that you remove elements that are not printable after scaling (factor 100) before scaling.

 

Günther

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