How to add a corner that's different from the wall?

How to add a corner that's different from the wall?

hugo_mpt_almeida
Enthusiast Enthusiast
1,191 Views
9 Replies
Message 1 of 10

How to add a corner that's different from the wall?

hugo_mpt_almeida
Enthusiast
Enthusiast

hugo_mpt_almeida_0-1723415178922.png

 

Hey!

 

I'm new to Revit and 1) I'm trying to create someting like the above image, where the corner is a different color from its wall. What's the best way to do it? Should I just duplicate the wall type and change its color?

2) What if I wanted that corner to have more depth on the outside? In other words, it would extrude out.

 

Thanks!

0 Likes
Accepted solutions (1)
1,192 Views
9 Replies
Replies (9)
Message 2 of 10

ToanDN
Consultant
Consultant

You can add vertical wall sweep, an architectural column (then paint surfaces), a model in place component....

0 Likes
Message 3 of 10

vitorbortoncello
Advisor
Advisor

I would model using walls and columns, with customized material surface patterns or even just using the paint tool

vitorbortoncello_0-1723465309130.png

 

A resposta te ajudou? Não esqueça de curtir e aceitar como solução!


Vitor Bortoncello | Arquiteto | BIM Manager


dAutodesk Certified Professional

Message 4 of 10

hugo_mpt_almeida
Enthusiast
Enthusiast

Could you explain better the walls with customised material surface patterns? Thanks!

0 Likes
Message 5 of 10

hugo_mpt_almeida
Enthusiast
Enthusiast

With the vertical wall sweep there's a gap between the two perpendicular walls; I couldn't really work with the columns; the model in place doesn't move if I do chances to the model but seems to be the one that works the best assuming I don't change my project m

0 Likes
Message 6 of 10

vitorbortoncello
Advisor
Advisor

Yes. I'm referring to the Material Manager, where you can assign a surface pattern to your materials and then apply them to walls and columns. You can see "material" parameter when you select one of them, then choose the previous edited material. 🙂

vitorbortoncello_0-1723548910950.pngvitorbortoncello_1-1723548971825.png

 

A resposta te ajudou? Não esqueça de curtir e aceitar como solução!


Vitor Bortoncello | Arquiteto | BIM Manager


dAutodesk Certified Professional

Message 7 of 10

hugo_mpt_almeida
Enthusiast
Enthusiast
Accepted solution

For whoever lands here in the future,

As suggested above, I ended up addin a column. However, I had to make my own costum column family. It looks like this (floor view):

hugo_mpt_almeida_0-1723553283097.png

 

I then changed its material to the desired one.

 

To make your own column family go to File > New > Family > Metric Column.

 

You then add an extrusion and do it the way you desire.

This is how the final product looks:

hugo_mpt_almeida_0-1723553478937.png

 



0 Likes
Message 8 of 10

vitorbortoncello
Advisor
Advisor
That is actually a beam beneath a column. The classification (open BIM) would be incorrect. I am glad you got what you needed but i would model them separately.

A resposta te ajudou? Não esqueça de curtir e aceitar como solução!


Vitor Bortoncello | Arquiteto | BIM Manager


dAutodesk Certified Professional

Message 9 of 10

hugo_mpt_almeida
Enthusiast
Enthusiast

What do you mean by a beam beneath a column and modelling them separately?

0 Likes
Message 10 of 10

vitorbortoncello
Advisor
Advisor
Never mind. After a closer look, it seems like it's a thin wall, possibly painted or something similar. However, I still wouldn't use just a single column.

A resposta te ajudou? Não esqueça de curtir e aceitar como solução!


Vitor Bortoncello | Arquiteto | BIM Manager


dAutodesk Certified Professional