i am part of a team at our firm that is beginning our first hotel in revit. there is a debate as to have the different room types as model groups or as linked models. i would love to hear everyone's pro's & con's for both.
i am part of a team at our firm that is beginning our first hotel in revit. there is a debate as to have the different room types as model groups or as linked models. i would love to hear everyone's pro's & con's for both.
Let me throw this into the discussion: Groups can be turned into Links later on.
...Links can be turned into Groups too.
...point is: the decision as to whether or not to use Links can come later. You don't need to break up the Project initially -- if at all.
Let me throw this into the discussion: Groups can be turned into Links later on.
...Links can be turned into Groups too.
...point is: the decision as to whether or not to use Links can come later. You don't need to break up the Project initially -- if at all.
Is this going to be a worksharing project where you'll be working and developing the room types simultanously? Because then there's something to be said for using links I think. You have plenty of options to control visibility graphics for the linked files also. In a central file though groups are very similar actually, I think above remark is a good one 🙂 But you can control VG for links easier/better then groups I think? FWIW Groups might be easier to edit in the project depending how comfortable you are with working with linked files. You could always start Revit twice though to open linked file simultanously on one station as the main project.
Is this going to be a worksharing project where you'll be working and developing the room types simultanously? Because then there's something to be said for using links I think. You have plenty of options to control visibility graphics for the linked files also. In a central file though groups are very similar actually, I think above remark is a good one 🙂 But you can control VG for links easier/better then groups I think? FWIW Groups might be easier to edit in the project depending how comfortable you are with working with linked files. You could always start Revit twice though to open linked file simultanously on one station as the main project.
I would give preference to Links and Worksets…
Whichever workflow you decide to adopt, do it at the early stage of the design and do not wait till a late stage of the project in order to avoid tedious and redundant work
YOUTUBE | BIM | COMPUTATIONAL DESIGN | PARAMETRIC DESIGN | GENERATIVE DESIGN | VISUAL PROGRAMMING
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I would give preference to Links and Worksets…
Whichever workflow you decide to adopt, do it at the early stage of the design and do not wait till a late stage of the project in order to avoid tedious and redundant work
YOUTUBE | BIM | COMPUTATIONAL DESIGN | PARAMETRIC DESIGN | GENERATIVE DESIGN | VISUAL PROGRAMMING
If you find this reply helpful kindly hit the LIKE BUTTON and if applicable please ACCEPT AS SOLUTION
Sorry I forgot to mention that YES it is a worksharing model. the co-worker who started the project created the rooms as revit links. I have found it time consuming to go back an forth between the room links and the central model. I believe the group method is the way to go. I need some pro's and con's for each to sell to the team.
Sorry I forgot to mention that YES it is a worksharing model. the co-worker who started the project created the rooms as revit links. I have found it time consuming to go back an forth between the room links and the central model. I believe the group method is the way to go. I need some pro's and con's for each to sell to the team.
@jledgewood409 wrote:I have found it time consuming to go back an forth between the room links and the central model.
You can open Revit twice to open the room next to the central model, without unloading.
@jledgewood409 wrote:I have found it time consuming to go back an forth between the room links and the central model.
You can open Revit twice to open the room next to the central model, without unloading.
This is a topic which can take hours of discussions...and there several factors to consider such as the workflow of different disciplines in your firm/department, the size of the project...etc. Some advantages of Links:
Side Note: if you are using model groups and later in the future you decide to switch to links watch out for the annotation and tags (you will lose them)
….Maybe someone else who recommends Model Groups can tell you the cons of that workflow
YOUTUBE | BIM | COMPUTATIONAL DESIGN | PARAMETRIC DESIGN | GENERATIVE DESIGN | VISUAL PROGRAMMING
If you find this reply helpful kindly hit the LIKE BUTTON and if applicable please ACCEPT AS SOLUTION
This is a topic which can take hours of discussions...and there several factors to consider such as the workflow of different disciplines in your firm/department, the size of the project...etc. Some advantages of Links:
Side Note: if you are using model groups and later in the future you decide to switch to links watch out for the annotation and tags (you will lose them)
….Maybe someone else who recommends Model Groups can tell you the cons of that workflow
YOUTUBE | BIM | COMPUTATIONAL DESIGN | PARAMETRIC DESIGN | GENERATIVE DESIGN | VISUAL PROGRAMMING
If you find this reply helpful kindly hit the LIKE BUTTON and if applicable please ACCEPT AS SOLUTION
I'd say definitely no to groups - Revit does not handle groups very well and the "fix group error message" can drive one crazy.
I'd say definitely no to groups - Revit does not handle groups very well and the "fix group error message" can drive one crazy.
- Room interior partitions, ceilings, finish flooring, doors, windows, fixture, equipment, furniture... can be kept in a link. You can have one link for each unit type.
- Exterior walls, corridor walls, demising walls, and doors/windows in those walls should be in the main model(s).
- Room interior partitions, ceilings, finish flooring, doors, windows, fixture, equipment, furniture... can be kept in a link. You can have one link for each unit type.
- Exterior walls, corridor walls, demising walls, and doors/windows in those walls should be in the main model(s).
@Anonymous wrote:Who won?
SPOILER ALERT...
Rocky Balboa won.
@Anonymous wrote:Who won?
SPOILER ALERT...
Rocky Balboa won.
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