If the whole floor is one material, then your best solution is to set up different floor types. Just edit each floor, duplicate the type and change the material. You can also paint each floor with a different finish but this is not as nice of a solution because it is hard to see in properties. If you have different areas on a floor with different finishes, I suggest using a thin floor over your structural floor. But you can also split the face of the floor and paint on different finishes in each split area.
For more information, visit this website.
If the whole floor is one material, then your best solution is to set up different floor types. Just edit each floor, duplicate the type and change the material. You can also paint each floor with a different finish but this is not as nice of a solution because it is hard to see in properties. If you have different areas on a floor with different finishes, I suggest using a thin floor over your structural floor. But you can also split the face of the floor and paint on different finishes in each split area.
For more information, visit this website.
You can create parts.
Another option is to have different floor types just for finishes. Draw a floor finish on top of a floor, then use join geometry tool to override the finish of a floor.
Andrej Ilić
phonetical: ændreɪ ilich
MSc Arch
Autodesk Expert Elite Alumni
You can create parts.
Another option is to have different floor types just for finishes. Draw a floor finish on top of a floor, then use join geometry tool to override the finish of a floor.
Andrej Ilić
phonetical: ændreɪ ilich
MSc Arch
Autodesk Expert Elite Alumni
After 11 years, the poster has probably found the solution already.
After 11 years, the poster has probably found the solution already.
or quit trying... 🙄
or quit trying... 🙄
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