"If I were in your shoes, I would be utilizing workplanes for hosting platforms and cranes. They are much more flexible, but, hey, that's just me. I only try to make the program work for me and not let it make me work harder."
Reading this after your conversation earlier this year- Just adding this because some of us work on weird projects where Revit just doesn't support what we're doing very well.
I like the idea of just setting our floor levels the way we would like and that would be convenient.
Wish it were that simple.
I'm an architect in an engineering firm where the building levels/views are set by the mechanical discipline before we start working on the project.
Sometimes the level our floor plan is based on is not even a floor, but we work with what they've given us.
And then the scope will change around 90% and the whole building elevation will move up maybe 4', and if the room height hadn't been adjusted, now the rooms are not enclosed and there is no way to move them up to the new level without just starting over.
This may not be as much of an issue on commercial/residential projects, but on industrial , where the building is often not the primary concern of the BIM leadership, being able to change the level of a view would help a lot. It's one of many challenges though, and I'm not sure if I would rank it as most important, but it's one that is a challenge just the same.
Revit is not very supportive of iterative design, in my opinion.