Hello Awesome community!
I wanted to make a thread about sharing your favorite tips, tricks, or workflows found within Revit. From hotkey combos to those really essential tools that everyone may not know about, this is the place to share!
I've set the ball rolling below with some simple cool tidbits 'using formulas in fields' that people may not be aware of.
If you have a requirement to reduce the size of an architectural element, maybe a wall which needs to be cut down to half its size - you can use a formula in the 'unconnected height' field, input =20' 0"*.5 and yes the wall's height is reduced by half! Don't forget to use the '=' sign in front of your formula!
Please, share your tips too! Feel free to use images and screencasts!
Best Regards,
Viveka CD
Designated Specialist - AEC, AR/VR Research
Autodesk playlists| Find Recommended Hardware| System requirements for Revit products| Contact Autodesk Support| Autodesk Virtual Agent| Browse Revit Ideas| Revit Tips/Tricks| Revit Help| Revit Books
Solved! Go to Solution.
Hello Awesome community!
I wanted to make a thread about sharing your favorite tips, tricks, or workflows found within Revit. From hotkey combos to those really essential tools that everyone may not know about, this is the place to share!
I've set the ball rolling below with some simple cool tidbits 'using formulas in fields' that people may not be aware of.
If you have a requirement to reduce the size of an architectural element, maybe a wall which needs to be cut down to half its size - you can use a formula in the 'unconnected height' field, input =20' 0"*.5 and yes the wall's height is reduced by half! Don't forget to use the '=' sign in front of your formula!
Please, share your tips too! Feel free to use images and screencasts!
Best Regards,
Viveka CD
Designated Specialist - AEC, AR/VR Research
Autodesk playlists| Find Recommended Hardware| System requirements for Revit products| Contact Autodesk Support| Autodesk Virtual Agent| Browse Revit Ideas| Revit Tips/Tricks| Revit Help| Revit Books
Solved! Go to Solution.
Solved by Viveka_CD. Go to Solution.
Solved by Viveka_CD. Go to Solution.
Solved by Viveka_CD. Go to Solution.
AutodeskHelp is proud to present Karam Baki, a young Expert Elite member hailing from Jordan, in this edition of Expert Elite Highlight series. At 21, Karam is already recognized as a top user and expert of Revit. Follow along the videos created by Karam on integrating Revit, Fusion 360 and Dynamo to create a fluid workflow of a Voronoi pattern
INTRODUCTION
The aim of this workflow is Freedom.
The freedom of designing free-forms and organic, fluid Architectural forms.
It's true that Revit can design it, but let's face it, when it comes to Fluidity, it's trickier to achieve them in Revit without incorporating a lot of formulas and a lot of calculations.
But this is where the help of other tools can come in handy. Using Fusion 360's T-Spline environment can be valuable in these situations.
This workflow explains how to properly link Fusion 360's forms with Revit.
In addition, the infamous Voronoi pattern is pretty difficult to achieve using Dynamo's out-of-the-box nodes,
I'm sharing with you a workflow that contains a custom-made package (Synthesize toolkit) to help achieve the great results.
EXAMPLES
Please refer to some samples below, each example completed within 10 minutes.
HIGHLIGHT
I will be going through the main topics below:
Let's get started!
1. SOFTWARE REQUIREMENTS
I will be utilizing the different software below in this workflow:
Commercial version: http://www.autodesk.com/products/revit-family/free-trial
Student version: http://www.autodesk.com/education/free-software/revit
Commercial version: http://www.autodesk.com/products/fusion-360/overview
Student version: http://www.autodesk.com/products/fusion-360/students-teachers-educators
Official website: http://dynamobim.org/
Note: Revit 2017 now ships with Dynamo,so it should already be installed by default. However you can update it optionally from its website or inside Dynamo when it first launches inside Revit directly
2. PACKAGES REQUIREMENTS
Synthesis Toolkit in Dynamo
i. Start a Project, then open Dynamo from the 'Manage' tab inside Revit.
ii. From the Menus inside Dynamo, you will find Packages on the Menu bar
iii. Search for Package : Synthesize. Click on it then install the latest version (Dynamo will notify you about any updates if needed)
3. Understanding the Praxis chart
Here I have utilized Autodesk Praxis tool to help visualize the workflow. You can understand it by watching this quick 5 minute video (It's easier to explain it verbally than writing it down):
Open the Praxis chart HERE.
Follow along in this YouTube video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IZHJvQu8N-k
PRAXIS CHART:
4. EXERCISES
EXERCISE 1:
Using the Revit way with Dynamo (approx: 25 minutes)
Watch the YouTube video here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R5cOxBHqIpc
EXERCISE 2:
Using the Fusion 360 with Dynamo and Revit (approx: 20 minutes)
EXERCISE 3:
General troubleshooting and Bugs, along with some tips and tricks (5 minutes)
Watch the YouTube video here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7goQpkMAur4
That's it from me, hope you've enjoyed my video blog on creating Voronoi patterns using Revit, Fusion 360 and Dynamo!
About KARAM BAKI
Karam Baki is an Architect currently studying in the University of Jordan.
He started his Revit journey in 2009 when he was only 16 years old.
Now when he's 21, he became an Autodesk ExpertElite,
He's one of the Top StudentExperts at the StudentExpert Network.
Also, Autodesk have requested a step-by-step of his rendering technics regarding to 360 Cloud Rendering to be classified as "360 RenderingPro"
Karam has been invited to participate in the Inside The Factory "Gunslinger" Events for Revit Architecture, to meet and work with the creators of Revit.
He's also considered a leading expert in Jordan for Revit, instructing at the University of Jordan while still a student in it. Karam has created many projects for various clients as well, although he still has not graduated.
Check his students' work at this facebook page : https://www.facebook.com/revitelites
Check his own work at Autodesk Gallery : https://gallery.autodesk.com/users/BPT3NVQXP4A2
Please join us in praising Karam for his excellent work using Autodesk tools. We'd like to thank Karam for the workflow he's created for the AutodeskHelp Expert Elite Highlight series, and for his contributions in the Revit community. We hope his work will inspire many more young folks to explore and test out the creative world of architecture.
For more articles like these, please subscribe to the AutodeskHelp blog to learn about helpful product tips and updates.
AutodeskHelp is proud to present Karam Baki, a young Expert Elite member hailing from Jordan, in this edition of Expert Elite Highlight series. At 21, Karam is already recognized as a top user and expert of Revit. Follow along the videos created by Karam on integrating Revit, Fusion 360 and Dynamo to create a fluid workflow of a Voronoi pattern
INTRODUCTION
The aim of this workflow is Freedom.
The freedom of designing free-forms and organic, fluid Architectural forms.
It's true that Revit can design it, but let's face it, when it comes to Fluidity, it's trickier to achieve them in Revit without incorporating a lot of formulas and a lot of calculations.
But this is where the help of other tools can come in handy. Using Fusion 360's T-Spline environment can be valuable in these situations.
This workflow explains how to properly link Fusion 360's forms with Revit.
In addition, the infamous Voronoi pattern is pretty difficult to achieve using Dynamo's out-of-the-box nodes,
I'm sharing with you a workflow that contains a custom-made package (Synthesize toolkit) to help achieve the great results.
EXAMPLES
Please refer to some samples below, each example completed within 10 minutes.
HIGHLIGHT
I will be going through the main topics below:
Let's get started!
1. SOFTWARE REQUIREMENTS
I will be utilizing the different software below in this workflow:
Commercial version: http://www.autodesk.com/products/revit-family/free-trial
Student version: http://www.autodesk.com/education/free-software/revit
Commercial version: http://www.autodesk.com/products/fusion-360/overview
Student version: http://www.autodesk.com/products/fusion-360/students-teachers-educators
Official website: http://dynamobim.org/
Note: Revit 2017 now ships with Dynamo,so it should already be installed by default. However you can update it optionally from its website or inside Dynamo when it first launches inside Revit directly
2. PACKAGES REQUIREMENTS
Synthesis Toolkit in Dynamo
i. Start a Project, then open Dynamo from the 'Manage' tab inside Revit.
ii. From the Menus inside Dynamo, you will find Packages on the Menu bar
iii. Search for Package : Synthesize. Click on it then install the latest version (Dynamo will notify you about any updates if needed)
3. Understanding the Praxis chart
Here I have utilized Autodesk Praxis tool to help visualize the workflow. You can understand it by watching this quick 5 minute video (It's easier to explain it verbally than writing it down):
Open the Praxis chart HERE.
Follow along in this YouTube video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IZHJvQu8N-k
PRAXIS CHART:
4. EXERCISES
EXERCISE 1:
Using the Revit way with Dynamo (approx: 25 minutes)
Watch the YouTube video here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R5cOxBHqIpc
EXERCISE 2:
Using the Fusion 360 with Dynamo and Revit (approx: 20 minutes)
EXERCISE 3:
General troubleshooting and Bugs, along with some tips and tricks (5 minutes)
Watch the YouTube video here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7goQpkMAur4
That's it from me, hope you've enjoyed my video blog on creating Voronoi patterns using Revit, Fusion 360 and Dynamo!
About KARAM BAKI
Karam Baki is an Architect currently studying in the University of Jordan.
He started his Revit journey in 2009 when he was only 16 years old.
Now when he's 21, he became an Autodesk ExpertElite,
He's one of the Top StudentExperts at the StudentExpert Network.
Also, Autodesk have requested a step-by-step of his rendering technics regarding to 360 Cloud Rendering to be classified as "360 RenderingPro"
Karam has been invited to participate in the Inside The Factory "Gunslinger" Events for Revit Architecture, to meet and work with the creators of Revit.
He's also considered a leading expert in Jordan for Revit, instructing at the University of Jordan while still a student in it. Karam has created many projects for various clients as well, although he still has not graduated.
Check his students' work at this facebook page : https://www.facebook.com/revitelites
Check his own work at Autodesk Gallery : https://gallery.autodesk.com/users/BPT3NVQXP4A2
Please join us in praising Karam for his excellent work using Autodesk tools. We'd like to thank Karam for the workflow he's created for the AutodeskHelp Expert Elite Highlight series, and for his contributions in the Revit community. We hope his work will inspire many more young folks to explore and test out the creative world of architecture.
For more articles like these, please subscribe to the AutodeskHelp blog to learn about helpful product tips and updates.
Thanks Autodesk for this, I only shared a thing that I found useful for Architects to improve Revit's ability of designing, instead of just drafting,
Thanks Autodesk for this, I only shared a thing that I found useful for Architects to improve Revit's ability of designing, instead of just drafting,
Great article and videos...I followed all the YouTube videos you posted...lots of possibilities with this new found understanding of Revit, Dynamo anf Fusion 360...Thanks!
Dzan Ta, AEE, ASM, ACI.
Win 11 Pro/DELL XPS 15 9510/i9 3.2GHz/32GB RAM/Nvidia RTX 3050Ti/1TB PCIe SSD/4K 15.4" Non-Touch Display
Great article and videos...I followed all the YouTube videos you posted...lots of possibilities with this new found understanding of Revit, Dynamo anf Fusion 360...Thanks!
Dzan Ta, AEE, ASM, ACI.
Win 11 Pro/DELL XPS 15 9510/i9 3.2GHz/32GB RAM/Nvidia RTX 3050Ti/1TB PCIe SSD/4K 15.4" Non-Touch Display
this is another great share! keep up the good work buddy!
Charles Berteaux Iv
EDT BIM/VDC/Technology Department Manager | SSOE Group | Hillsboro
www.ssoe.com
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Did your question get successfully answered? Then click on the ACCEPT SOLUTION button.
this is another great share! keep up the good work buddy!
Charles Berteaux Iv
EDT BIM/VDC/Technology Department Manager | SSOE Group | Hillsboro
www.ssoe.com
Did you find this post helpful? Feel free to Like this post.
Did your question get successfully answered? Then click on the ACCEPT SOLUTION button.
Thank you for your comments dzanta and CHBIV007, am glad that you liked it 🙂
Thank you for your comments dzanta and CHBIV007, am glad that you liked it 🙂
Congrats Karam!! What a great workflow. We are proud to have such great Student Experts share their knowledge with the community.
Congrats Karam!! What a great workflow. We are proud to have such great Student Experts share their knowledge with the community.
Karam
Masha'Allah awesome job.!
Also if you can fix the hyper link in Exercise 2
https://www.youtube.con>m/watch?v=r_cgeGa1Qmg
when you click there is a > sign and it says page not found.
Thanks
Karam
Masha'Allah awesome job.!
Also if you can fix the hyper link in Exercise 2
https://www.youtube.con>m/watch?v=r_cgeGa1Qmg
when you click there is a > sign and it says page not found.
Thanks
Salam @BIMologist_ - Thank you for pointing out the link error, I have made the correction.
We are very happy that you've enjoyed Karam's article! We value the contributions. Best, Azmeera
Salam @BIMologist_ - Thank you for pointing out the link error, I have made the correction.
We are very happy that you've enjoyed Karam's article! We value the contributions. Best, Azmeera
Thank Bjoern (wittenb), am pleased to share knowledge and inspire other Expert Elites and Student Experts around the globe,
And Nauman, thank you for pointing this out,
Glad you liked it, there's also an update to this, am publishing it soon on the Youtube channel, which allow fully manual control in addition to automatic layout of the Voronoi and Delaunay grids, stay tuned for it 🙂
Also thanks Mokhtaa for the correction
All the best,
Karam
Thank Bjoern (wittenb), am pleased to share knowledge and inspire other Expert Elites and Student Experts around the globe,
And Nauman, thank you for pointing this out,
Glad you liked it, there's also an update to this, am publishing it soon on the Youtube channel, which allow fully manual control in addition to automatic layout of the Voronoi and Delaunay grids, stay tuned for it 🙂
Also thanks Mokhtaa for the correction
All the best,
Karam
Hello! Thanks for all the support on the forum, really appreciate it.
I completed my first project(there is always more you can do but...) .
I am reviewing my workflow, how I did things and any way I could be more efficient and effective.
I was making a steel portal frame. For me there were 4 processes.
1. Understanding the brief and drawing every single component out on paper.
2. Making the components as revit families using metric generic models and reference planes
Also doing little things like rotation, void extrusion etc.
3. Fitting in
This was where I had to adjust the familes fitting them together on a project
4. Making it buildable
This was where I added the sections, schedule etc to my work
So far some of the ideas I have had to improve my workflow have been:
+Focus on doing a few main objects accurately and be rough with the others so I can get on to stage number 3 quicker.
+Using less reference planes
+Using the wall feature and roof feature in projects
+Figuring it how to use the beams in projects - but it is not at the right size
I would be grateful for any hints and tips and resources into how I could make any of the four processes faster.
Also find my screencast below where I talk a bit more about the process I went through.
Thank you in advance!
Hello! Thanks for all the support on the forum, really appreciate it.
I completed my first project(there is always more you can do but...) .
I am reviewing my workflow, how I did things and any way I could be more efficient and effective.
I was making a steel portal frame. For me there were 4 processes.
1. Understanding the brief and drawing every single component out on paper.
2. Making the components as revit families using metric generic models and reference planes
Also doing little things like rotation, void extrusion etc.
3. Fitting in
This was where I had to adjust the familes fitting them together on a project
4. Making it buildable
This was where I added the sections, schedule etc to my work
So far some of the ideas I have had to improve my workflow have been:
+Focus on doing a few main objects accurately and be rough with the others so I can get on to stage number 3 quicker.
+Using less reference planes
+Using the wall feature and roof feature in projects
+Figuring it how to use the beams in projects - but it is not at the right size
I would be grateful for any hints and tips and resources into how I could make any of the four processes faster.
Also find my screencast below where I talk a bit more about the process I went through.
Thank you in advance!
Alright Viveka, I’ll help you to get your thread going here with one that always pleases.
Is anybody out there bothered by an ugly Thumbnail Preview for a family they built? Did you know that you can change it quickly and easily?
Here’s how:
Open the family and create the View you’d like to see as the Thumbnail Preview Image. Name that view something snappy like “Thumbnail”, and then…now follow closely; this is the tricky part…open the “Save As: Family” Dialog box, and press the “Options” button in the lower-right corner. This will open the “File Save Options” dialog box. There you will see “Thumbnail Preview” with a “Source” drop-down box listing all the views in the Family. Select the view you just created. Press “OK” and then “Save”. That view is now the Thumbnail Preview Image for that family.
Wicked cool, huh? I know somebody out there thinks it is.
Enjoy!
Alright Viveka, I’ll help you to get your thread going here with one that always pleases.
Is anybody out there bothered by an ugly Thumbnail Preview for a family they built? Did you know that you can change it quickly and easily?
Here’s how:
Open the family and create the View you’d like to see as the Thumbnail Preview Image. Name that view something snappy like “Thumbnail”, and then…now follow closely; this is the tricky part…open the “Save As: Family” Dialog box, and press the “Options” button in the lower-right corner. This will open the “File Save Options” dialog box. There you will see “Thumbnail Preview” with a “Source” drop-down box listing all the views in the Family. Select the view you just created. Press “OK” and then “Save”. That view is now the Thumbnail Preview Image for that family.
Wicked cool, huh? I know somebody out there thinks it is.
Enjoy!
Hello,
We recently posted an article and Dynamo graph on how to align text or labels with detail lines onto our blog. For those who are interested how to do this you can view it here: Revit Dynamo Graph to Align Text or Label with Detail Lines.
Any feedback is appreciated!
Thanks 🙂
Hello,
We recently posted an article and Dynamo graph on how to align text or labels with detail lines onto our blog. For those who are interested how to do this you can view it here: Revit Dynamo Graph to Align Text or Label with Detail Lines.
Any feedback is appreciated!
Thanks 🙂
My two cents.
1) Anyone frustrated with the fact that Revit only creates sweeps in one direction? Here's what you can do - divide up the curve, create smaller sweeps in individual families, nest into a final family, tweak the assembly. Do remember that the resulting product may not be absolutely precise and applying parameters may not be an option! For anything too complex, 3DS Max may be the best option......
2) The big three of creating complex families - lock to reference planes NOT geometry, nest families, associate parameters.
My two cents.
1) Anyone frustrated with the fact that Revit only creates sweeps in one direction? Here's what you can do - divide up the curve, create smaller sweeps in individual families, nest into a final family, tweak the assembly. Do remember that the resulting product may not be absolutely precise and applying parameters may not be an option! For anything too complex, 3DS Max may be the best option......
2) The big three of creating complex families - lock to reference planes NOT geometry, nest families, associate parameters.
Hello Community!
I wanted to share this awesome post by @italonge on Dividing a Mass Surface
Here you go:
Set 3 planes to work.
So I draw the lines, Spline, I guess. Place several points. Draw one line then copy and paste it.
Form created!
And move each point from XYZ axes. New mass ... tweak the edges using the edge point ...move X and Y axes to make a rounded line.
Image below with edges moved above and the original points without X and Y axes moved.
I moved others points above, I guess If I had more points it would be easier to reach the form that I wanted... Finally, I divided it and selected the hexagonal pattern. Few distortions but can fine tune them.
Kudos @italonge and thanks for sharing this!
Regards,
Viveka CD
Designated Specialist - AEC, AR/VR Research
Autodesk playlists| Find Recommended Hardware| System requirements for Revit products| Contact Autodesk Support| Autodesk Virtual Agent| Browse Revit Ideas| Revit Tips/Tricks| Revit Help| Revit Books
Hello Community!
I wanted to share this awesome post by @italonge on Dividing a Mass Surface
Here you go:
Set 3 planes to work.
So I draw the lines, Spline, I guess. Place several points. Draw one line then copy and paste it.
Form created!
And move each point from XYZ axes. New mass ... tweak the edges using the edge point ...move X and Y axes to make a rounded line.
Image below with edges moved above and the original points without X and Y axes moved.
I moved others points above, I guess If I had more points it would be easier to reach the form that I wanted... Finally, I divided it and selected the hexagonal pattern. Few distortions but can fine tune them.
Kudos @italonge and thanks for sharing this!
Regards,
Viveka CD
Designated Specialist - AEC, AR/VR Research
Autodesk playlists| Find Recommended Hardware| System requirements for Revit products| Contact Autodesk Support| Autodesk Virtual Agent| Browse Revit Ideas| Revit Tips/Tricks| Revit Help| Revit Books
Another one. If you have too many Annotation families cluttering up your Project Browser, try nesting similar families into one as Types. Easy-peasy. Less scrolling!
Another one. If you have too many Annotation families cluttering up your Project Browser, try nesting similar families into one as Types. Easy-peasy. Less scrolling!
Here is a tutorial to export your level curves (contours) to .DWG format from google earth
exportar sus curvas de nivel al formato .DWG desde google earth
Hoy les traigo un tutorial para que exporten sus curvas de nivel al formato .DWG desde google earth, el cual les va a servir para levantar su terreno en revit .... mas preguntas me las dejan abajo y por favor delen muchos kurdos !!!!
Here is a tutorial to export your level curves (contours) to .DWG format from google earth
exportar sus curvas de nivel al formato .DWG desde google earth
Hoy les traigo un tutorial para que exporten sus curvas de nivel al formato .DWG desde google earth, el cual les va a servir para levantar su terreno en revit .... mas preguntas me las dejan abajo y por favor delen muchos kurdos !!!!
Hi @Sahay_R,
Is it possible to share a video, to explains the workflow to achieve this.
Hi @Sahay_R,
Is it possible to share a video, to explains the workflow to achieve this.
Can't find what you're looking for? Ask the community or share your knowledge.