So I have two types of floor, 1- 200mm concrete as core boundary, 10mm tile as finish. 2- the second floor is same as first but with added 5mm of carpet above the tile. if I create two floors next to each other with each floor type on the same level; their top will align, meaning that one of them will have 5mm concrete below the other when in reality the core boundary (the 200mm concrete) should be aligned not the finishes. And yes Ik i can do it with offsets or align tool manually, but I'm looking for a better option. picture
Gelöst! Gehe zur Lösung
Gelöst von barthbradley. Gehe zur Lösung
Gelöst von jay_colcombe. Gehe zur Lösung
Canät really say anything else than model it as it would be built.
Where the boundaries will differ you should model them individually. Where a Slab may be under walls this should be a Structural Floor build-up and for Finishes which may be inside walls they have a different Floor for the Finishes and build them up this way with offsets from the level to stack them on top of each other to get the overall desired build up
There is no one click solution for this you either use offsets from Level or the Align Tool to match the individual elements to each other and you can lock them together for future reference so they move as one.
@46b002b9363c wrote:
Ik i can do it with offsets or align tool manually, but I'm looking for a better option. picture
There is no better option. Period.
Model the structural slab(s) separate from finishes. Model finish floors separately from structure, and other finish floors, adjust their offset "up" so they sit on top of the structural slab and disable "room bounding" for each.
Steve Stafford
Did you find this post helpful? Feel free to Like this post.
Did your question get successfully answered? Then click on the ACCEPT SOLUTION button.
Do you want the finished align or the core align? Practically, it is one floor and you add a carpet over a portion of the area. No?
I want the core to align. Yes in same cases you have a small carpet somewhere in the room but yk its the idea of it; maybe not carpet, for example where I live for bathroom and toilets; they give it like 10mm of depth so liquids (water) stay inside the bathroom.
My primary motivation is it imitates life, we don't build little chunks of structural floors with different finishes applied. We build a structural floor and then add finishes on top of that. Also the finishes don't usually go under walls or cabinets. So the finish floors make it easier to just put down the finish where it will really be needed.
Also separate finish floors make it easier to schedule them. Tagging is already easy but you can show plans without finish floors and with a bit easier using Filter that looks for floors that have a prefix of Finish- for example. It's important to disable the room bounding setting for finish floors if you're going to share your model with other Revit using disciplines.
Steve Stafford
Did you find this post helpful? Feel free to Like this post.
Did your question get successfully answered? Then click on the ACCEPT SOLUTION button.
Then model it as one floor and add a thin carpet finish floor with 5mm offset from level on top. You can model finish floors using roof above structural floor because roof aligns at the bottom, no need to offset from level.
yes, although it is a floor finish it can still be set with the core boundary
Sie finden nicht, was Sie suchen? Fragen Sie die Community oder teilen Sie Ihr Wissen mit anderen.