Parametric frame

Parametric frame

Anonymous
Not applicable
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27 Replies
Message 1 of 28

Parametric frame

Anonymous
Not applicable

HI everyone
I want to ask about your opinion with my problem. I need to create simply frame from various profiles. 
I want to create axis frame. than to every axis assign corect profile ( which i draw). With changing of the axis frame the profiles are changig with it. Than i need to create for every profile parameter length and color a get the bill of material. 
I tried curtain walls, generic componet but i am new at revit and i need your advice what is the best way.
Thank you 

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Replies (27)
Message 2 of 28

Anonymous
Not applicable

Perhaps you don't need to create it.  Look in the families library for Structural framing, where there are trusses that have been built where you can add a profile.  If these frames are not the correct type, use one as a starting point.

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Message 3 of 28

Anonymous
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I think the structural frames are not good for me. look at my frame - every color means diferent profil with  

information about the length. Do you think i can make it with structural frame?

Ram.PNG

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Message 4 of 28

barthbradley
Consultant
Consultant

Is this for a school project or something else?  What's the purpose of the construct?  Does it got a name? Got pictures of the finished product? 

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Message 5 of 28

Anonymous
Not applicable

It is not a school project. It is a facade modul. I need to define basic geometry and then get bill of material. I need the amount for every single profile with length and colour. Curtain wall doesnt work for me because Revit devide every vertical and horizontal profile in croosection-than i can not get the right length for the profile. now i am trying the structural frame.

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Message 6 of 28

barthbradley
Consultant
Consultant

I still don't quite understand. Sounds like you want to subdivide components for more accurate accounting.  Maybe there is an application for Parts here?

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Message 7 of 28

martijn_pater
Advisor
Advisor

Just model it? Using the different frame profiles where you need them w. beams/columns. You can put it in an assembly or group then if you like also.

Using some sort of family and parts seems a bit farfetched tbh, but... maybe.

 

How do you want it to be parametric? It is a repeating frame in the project I suppose?

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Message 8 of 28

barthbradley
Consultant
Consultant

@martijn_pater wrote:

 

Using some sort of family and parts seems a bit farfetched


 

Parts seems farfetched? Really?  I'm talking specifically about Dividing Parts.  That's what it sounds like the OP is doing.  But, maybe I'm misreading.  

 

Divide Parts 2.png

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Message 9 of 28

martijn_pater
Advisor
Advisor

@barthbradley I know what you mean, i wasn't dismissing the idea. Just wondering about these questions above though, and if that would be the right approach. Edit: farfetched perhaps was not the right choise of words...

Message 10 of 28

ToanDN
Consultant
Consultant

Use a curtain wall.
- Create different mullion profiles and load in project
- Create different mullion types and assign profiles to them
- Create a curtain wall and assign different mullion types for borders and interior
- Draw curtain grid as you want
- if you want to change a specific mullion to a different type, select it, unpin and change

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Message 11 of 28

martijn_pater
Advisor
Advisor

...but then you can't create the mitered corners.
Maybe you can create a structural truss for it, unpin 1 of the profiles and change that & group it (will give inconsistent group error).

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Message 12 of 28

RDAOU
Mentor
Mentor

I have no clue what that kind of façade element is that but I think what @ToanDN suggested is the most practical. 

 

Looking at the image, it doesn't seem to have mitered corners … curtain wall with blank panels 100%

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Message 13 of 28

martijn_pater
Advisor
Advisor

It is practical, but I still have the question; how does it need to be parametric?

 

To just make a frame, with mitered corners, I think I would just model it using structural framing profiles, set justifications as depicted, and just make a group out of it probably...

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Message 14 of 28

martijn_pater
Advisor
Advisor

@AnonymousOw, actually you could load your structural framing profiles/families into a 'complex and truss' family, and model the frame there. Actually that's better then grouping and you could make it parametric also. Although I don't know about scheduling (parts?) for that, but should be doable?

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Message 15 of 28

RDAOU
Mentor
Mentor

@martijn_pater 

 

I did say I think...Practicality is something which is RELATIVE to the user and not a assertive benchmark. 

 

If you find working with structural framing profiles, setting justifications, using groups and nesting into other families for a one off set of elements, others  might jump in and say

  • Do it all using in-place components
  • Do it using an adaptive component
  • Do it using a pattern based family applied on a custom pattern (one guy asked about those sometime earlier this week)

I personally find it more practical to use an OOTB tool which can offer the same output without having to blow my head off wondering what I can do more for it to be more complicated. Hence, I second @ToanDN suggestions

 

Nothing personal 🙂 I like you and Toan eaqually

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


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Message 16 of 28

Anonymous
Not applicable

this solution is not good for me. revit devide all profile at the crossection. (I think they need it for the the glass and panel geomety). 

this is solution but it is to complicated. 

https://revitforum.org/showthread.php/18346-Mullion-length-schedule

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Message 17 of 28

martijn_pater
Advisor
Advisor

@AnonymousToan's suggestion is the most workable solution probably depending on what you need to do.

I tried to find another solution for you creating a frame as in my previous suggestion, loading four structural framing elements into a "complex and truss" family. But this is somewhat complex it seems.

Getting the materials from each profile doesn't seem that complicated, but I kind of got stuck with getting the structural framing properties from such a family for each profile, ie cut length. You could add more parameters to the family yourself for scheduling for that, but it would make sense that you could get these structural parameters for each profile from this family somehow... 

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Message 18 of 28

bin
Advisor
Advisor

01132020.PNG

Maybe structural columns and beams?

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Message 19 of 28

martijn_pater
Advisor
Advisor

@binYeah, suggested that in post #7, but it's still unclear to me how it needs to be parametric... It is possible to create a parametric frame using my above suggestion and then schedule everything through shared parameters... it is a complex solution though, if you want to do it this way... I can make a step-by-step later... BTW You could just use framing, no columns.

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Message 20 of 28

Anonymous
Not applicable

I try this solution. first i have to create my own profiles and then model the frames. 
Parametric - my first idea was to create lines grid and to every line assign a profile. There will be two variables length and high and with this variables change the whole geometry - geometry of profiles and glass/panel.

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