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Hi,
I am currently taking a program at a nearby college for architectural design, and one of the classes I'm taking focuses on Revit fundamentals. I have been doing extra research and practice with Revit outside of class. I am trying to design a residential house for practice and I ran into some issues with designing lap siding for the exterior of my walls. I am aware that I can simply edit the structure of the wall, add another layer to it, and apply an image that looks like lap siding, which I suppose would suffice for rendering purposes. However, if you just use this method, when you look at the wall in a section view, you can't see the overlapping panels. So what I did is created a wall sweep, loaded in a profile that looks like a siding panel, and kept duplicating and offsetting until I was able to cover my whole wall (this was really tedious). This looks great in a section view, but when I go to my elevation views or 3D views the panels are intersecting with the trim of my windows and the frame of my front door. Also, the panels are not aligned and cutting incorrectly with the wall openings and curtain glass walls I have on the back of my house. I have already tried toggling on and off the "cuttable" option in the wall sweeps dialog box. I'm wondering what process architects use to design siding in Revit. Is there some kind of siding tool that I'm missing? It doesn't make sense to me to just apply an image to the wall because you can't see the paneling in other views that you would use in an architectural project, which seems to defeat the whole purpose of designing in Revit. Thank you for reading this post. I attached the Revit file with my house.
Solved! Go to Solution.