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Hey all!!
Working as a landscape architect in an engineering firm has brought along a few unique questions I can't seem to find a solution too. One particularly useful aspect of Revit as a landscape architect is the ability to use 'floors' as automated planting beds. Although a bit clunky, we model "planting masses" as 'floors' against a reference civil surface using modify points. This allows us to use an automated equation to prefill and determine the required quantities of plants for our Planting Schedules. Although this is a great solution and gives us a faster workflow, the end result of our sheets can look a bit messy.
For example, when viewing the floors in plan view. The floors show the network of tangents joining all the points together to form the floor mesh. Is there a way to turn this off? Our solution at the moment is to make the floor transparent (to keep the calculations of plants) then create a filled region over the top of the floor using the annotation tool. This does give the desired result, but is essentially double handling the work.
Please see the screenshot. I've draw over some of the issue in red to make the pattern more visible, but this problem affects the entire green floor. Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated!!
Do you mean you are shape-editing Floors using Modify Sub-Elements? Turn of Interior Edges Subcategory under Floor Category .
Yes correct, we add points and move so they match to the required surfaces. Unfortunately your suggestion didn't work 😞
It should have worked. Is the View Range Cut Plane intersecting the Floor? Raise the Cut Plane above the Floor and uncheck Interior Edges.
Not exactly sure, just pressing Ctrl + P and sending to the virtual Adobe PDF printer. Revit seems to be using the same tangent geometry to divide the region up for vector printing.
Yah, I'm not following you, but Printed output in Revit is WYSIWYG...for the most part.
About Printing Views and Sheets | Revit Products 2021 | Autodesk Knowledge Network
Except the issue doesn't appear inside Revit, only on the PDF output it produces. So I guess for this case it's not 'WYUSIWUG'.
What do you mean by "what?"
The issue I'm describing only appears on PDF's produced from Revit, it doesn't appear when viewing the floor in Plan view inside Revit. Therefore, I would assume the issue is an artifact produced by Revit when rendering/printing the plan. Because the floor is being sent as a vector output, Revit must be either assigning a line weight to the lines, or there is a small gap between each face of the floor.
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