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Adding Location/Room Number to Wall Type Schedules

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Message 1 of 5
Anonymous
2092 Views, 4 Replies

Adding Location/Room Number to Wall Type Schedules

Anonymous
Not applicable

Hi everyone,

 

I'm looking for a way to add the numbers of the rooms where a certain wall type is used to our wall schedule. 

So far, we have been adding the room numbers manually but since in our office big changes often happen in projects after issuing all of our sheets, it has been very time consuming to go back to the wall schedule and check where every single wall type is being used. 

I'm attaching a picture of our schedule format.

Any ideas for a workaround is appreciated.

 

wall type schedule.PNG

 

Adding Location/Room Number to Wall Type Schedules

Hi everyone,

 

I'm looking for a way to add the numbers of the rooms where a certain wall type is used to our wall schedule. 

So far, we have been adding the room numbers manually but since in our office big changes often happen in projects after issuing all of our sheets, it has been very time consuming to go back to the wall schedule and check where every single wall type is being used. 

I'm attaching a picture of our schedule format.

Any ideas for a workaround is appreciated.

 

wall type schedule.PNG

 

4 REPLIES 4
Message 2 of 5
Redrunner92
in reply to: Anonymous

Redrunner92
Collaborator
Collaborator

I'm curious why the room number is needed on a Wall Type Schedule. I've only seen the direction go one way, i.e. people start by looking at a floor plan, then use the wall tags placed on the floor plan to refer to the schedule. Thinking logically, Floor Plan > Schedule (that symbol means "refers to" here, not "greater than"). I can think of arguments for including room numbers on a Wall Type Schedule, but I still think for the most part schedules are read in response to floor plans, not the other way around.

Anyway, wall elements do not "read" data from the rooms in which they enclose. That only goes one direction: Rooms react to walls, but walls do not read their subject rooms. So no, there is no parametric way to do this, unfortunately.

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I'm curious why the room number is needed on a Wall Type Schedule. I've only seen the direction go one way, i.e. people start by looking at a floor plan, then use the wall tags placed on the floor plan to refer to the schedule. Thinking logically, Floor Plan > Schedule (that symbol means "refers to" here, not "greater than"). I can think of arguments for including room numbers on a Wall Type Schedule, but I still think for the most part schedules are read in response to floor plans, not the other way around.

Anyway, wall elements do not "read" data from the rooms in which they enclose. That only goes one direction: Rooms react to walls, but walls do not read their subject rooms. So no, there is no parametric way to do this, unfortunately.

Message 3 of 5
Anonymous
in reply to: Redrunner92

Anonymous
Not applicable

Thanks a lot for your response.

I don't disagree with you, but this is the way our office has been doing schedules for the past 25 years and the management is not really interested in changing their conventions.

Do you think something like this could be done using dynamo though?

 

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Thanks a lot for your response.

I don't disagree with you, but this is the way our office has been doing schedules for the past 25 years and the management is not really interested in changing their conventions.

Do you think something like this could be done using dynamo though?

 

Message 4 of 5
Redrunner92
in reply to: Anonymous

Redrunner92
Collaborator
Collaborator

I'm not an expert at Dynamo so I will defer that question to someone else here. And I understand each company has their methods, I'm not trying to cause reform or anything like that, just wondering the reasoning.

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I'm not an expert at Dynamo so I will defer that question to someone else here. And I understand each company has their methods, I'm not trying to cause reform or anything like that, just wondering the reasoning.

Message 5 of 5
barthbradley
in reply to: Anonymous

barthbradley
Consultant
Consultant

@Anonymous wrote:

 

I don't disagree with you, but this is the way our office has been doing schedules for the past 25 years and the management is not really interested in changing their conventions.


 

Old timers! You can't live with them. You can't shoot 'em. 


@Anonymous wrote:

 

I don't disagree with you, but this is the way our office has been doing schedules for the past 25 years and the management is not really interested in changing their conventions.


 

Old timers! You can't live with them. You can't shoot 'em. 

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