Revit Architecture Forum
Welcome to Autodesk’s Revit Architecture Forums. Share your knowledge, ask questions, and explore popular Revit Architecture topics.
cancel
Showing results for 
Show  only  | Search instead for 
Did you mean: 

Complex Roof

30 REPLIES 30
SOLVED
Reply
Message 1 of 31
ayushi.s
1625 Views, 30 Replies

Complex Roof

 

Hello,

Thanks in advance, i am using Revit 2020 and i am not able to design this roof, can anyone suggest me procedure to achieve this roof in Revit, Any kind of help will be great and appreciable.

 

Thanks

30 REPLIES 30
Message 2 of 31
ennujozlagam
in reply to: ayushi.s

you can refer to this LINK lots of tutorials for complex roof. thanks





Remember : without the difficult times in your LIFE, you wouldn't be who you are today. Be grateful for the good and the bad. ANGER doesn't solve anything. It builds nothing, but it can destroy everything...
Please mark this response as "Accept as Solution" if it answers your question. Kudos gladly accepted.
Message 3 of 31
martijn_pater
in reply to: ayushi.s

This is correct ? How it's (going to be) made? Just checking.

rooflinesrooflines

Message 4 of 31
ayushi.s
in reply to: martijn_pater

Yes you are correct, that is like that in roof plan.

Message 5 of 31

I would roughly create it something like below probably, combining four roofs together. Are you familiar with methods like using slope arrows and/or roof join tool?

Combining 4 roofs.Combining 4 roofs.

Using slope arrow over (part of) sketchline.Using slope arrow over (part of) sketchline.

Roof join tool.Roof join tool.

Message 6 of 31
ayushi.s
in reply to: martijn_pater

Yes i know slope arrows, i tried that way but no success, can you please help little more.

Message 7 of 31
martijn_pater
in reply to: ayushi.s

...actually easier to define these three sketchlines with negative slope. No need to use slope arrows then, but below as an example how you could use those.

Negative roof slopesNegative roof slopes

Using slope arrowsUsing slope arrows

Message 8 of 31
ayushi.s
in reply to: martijn_pater

Thanks, I really appreciate your help, can you please share a screencast or procedure to follow how to do it from scratch.

Message 9 of 31
barthbradley
in reply to: ayushi.s

Have you tried using Roof Cut Off? Maybe that would be easiest for you.  

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=roWJst7xBsw

 

 

...or maybe even the SHAFT tool.  

 

https://knowledge.autodesk.com/support/revit-lt/learn-explore/caas/CloudHelp/cloudhelp/2019/ENU/Revi...

Message 10 of 31
barthbradley
in reply to: ayushi.s

Be interesting to see what this question-marked area is all about...

 

Roof0808520.png

 

CR.png

 

CR2.png

Message 11 of 31
ayushi.s
in reply to: barthbradley

Thanks for helping me out, question mark area is flat roof.

Message 12 of 31
barthbradley
in reply to: ayushi.s

Ah sh*t! Wish I knew that. It was my very first roof and then I starting messing around with different configurations that took way to long. Looked like drainage crickets with integrated down spouts.    

Message 13 of 31
ayushi.s
in reply to: ayushi.s

Roof at inside portion is of negative slope. It is going downward at inner side. and there is flat slab also in middle portion.

 
 
 

 

Message 14 of 31
barthbradley
in reply to: ayushi.s

I figured as much. It's pretty obvious. We've built many like this. Mostly commercial. Yours look residential. What country?     

Message 15 of 31
ayushi.s
in reply to: barthbradley

Yes this is residential.

Message 16 of 31
martijn_pater
in reply to: ayushi.s

ow, thought it was an inner courtyard...^^ You could use modify subelements on a flat roof...

Message 17 of 31
lucdoucet_msdl
in reply to: ayushi.s

@ayushi.s 

 

I suspect that the transition between the sloped roofs and the flat roof will require a minimum vertical height to transition between the two different roofing membranes. 

 

If that is the case, can you tell us what the elevation of the flat roof relative to the ground floor level?

 

Do you have a reflected ceiling plan showing the required interior ceiling heights? 

 

I suspect that the roof transition between the sloped and flat roofs will require vertical walls which explains the lack of counter slopes on the left and top (see annotated plan)

 

-luc

 

Roof plan.jpg

 

Section.jpg

 

 

Message 18 of 31

Nice section scribble, hehe. But yes, perhaps sharing some sections would help...

Message 19 of 31

@martijn_pater 



Nice section scribble, hehe. 


I was trying to show the accumulation of snow on the flat roof 😉

What happens you buy a $$$$$ computer and software and you find yourself dragging a finger across the screen to draw a line! :-0

 

-luc

Message 20 of 31
ayushi.s
in reply to: lucdoucet_msdl

thanks, please check section views.

Can't find what you're looking for? Ask the community or share your knowledge.

Post to forums  

Autodesk Design & Make Report