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Share your favorite tips, tricks and workflows in Revit!

Viveka_CD
Autodesk Support

Share your favorite tips, tricks and workflows in Revit!

Viveka_CD
Autodesk Support
Autodesk Support

Hello Awesome community! Smiley Happy

 

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,

Reply
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100 Replies
Replies (100)

Anonymous
Not applicable
Accepted solution

How to advance your firm to Revit from AutoCAD? Unfortunately, the answer is much longer than this post. However, I would like to offer you a tool I created to help mitigate the transition - Quick Commands Search for Autodesk’s Revit is a plugin which enables users to find and run commands by typing the command’s name in an autocomplete box.

 

Quick Commands Search is designed for:

 

The plugin is super easy to use and install:

  1. Download it here: http://bit.ly/Quick_Commands_Search and run the installer.(Revit App Store)
  2. As you open Revit, press F3 and the commands box will open on top of your main screen. You can also open it by clicking on its icon in the Add-Ins ribbon

Best,

Viveka_CD
Autodesk Support
Autodesk Support

Hi @Anonymous

 

Thanks for sharing the 'Quick Commands Search' tools with the community!

 

Regards,

Anonymous
Not applicable

If you are doing detailing in Revit there is always a challenge of keeping the 2D and 3D elements matching and up to date.

 

I don't think we are really following the one source of truth BIM principle if we are doing our details as Drafting Views or if we do our detail views completely hiding the 3D elements in that view. I think some times we can / have to hide the 3D elements but I could share a tip of something I use when doing details.

 

Check the short tutorial HERE

 

Vasco

 

planner_matlabi
Advocate
Advocate

Hi

 

Tutorial show room and Color Scheme in 3D View

Thank YouUntitled.jpg

Sahay_R
Mentor
Mentor

Creating weird shaped window families - 


Rina Sahay
Autodesk Expert Elite
Revit Architecture Certified Professional

If you find my post interesting, feel free to give a Kudo.
If it solves your problem, please click Accept to enhance the Forum.
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planner_matlabi
Advocate
Advocate

Place Spot Slop on Ramp

0 Likes

Sahay_R
Mentor
Mentor
Did you know that you can change Spot Slpes to percentage?

Rina Sahay
Autodesk Expert Elite
Revit Architecture Certified Professional

If you find my post interesting, feel free to give a Kudo.
If it solves your problem, please click Accept to enhance the Forum.
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barthbradley
Consultant
Consultant

@planner_matlabi wrote:

Place Spot Slop on Ramp


@planner_matlabi: Was that a question? 

 

To place a Spot Slope on a Ramp in Plan View, go to a 3D View and place a Model Line, aligned and locked to one edge of the Ramp. If done correctly, the Model Line will flex with the Ramp. Confirm that it does. If so, go to Plan View and place Spot Slope Annotation on the Model Line (Tab-Select Ramp edge to find it). Now you have Spot Slope Annotation in Plan View, and if the Ramp's Slope changes, the Model Line will follow, and its hosted Spot Slope Annotation will update to reflect the new slope of the Model Line/Ramp. 

planner_matlabi
Advocate
Advocate

Sorry

in previous post , Don;t Sent My screenCasts in this and it incomplet posted


planner_matlabi
Advocate
Advocate

Sorry

I wanted to teach, but an incomplete post was sent

 

Thank you for your attention

0 Likes

barthbradley
Consultant
Consultant

Cool, @planner_matlabi. That's a new one for me.  

planner_matlabi
Advocate
Advocate

This is a more convenient way , I'm right?

0 Likes

barthbradley
Consultant
Consultant

@planner_matlabi wrote:

This is a more convenient way , I'm right?


Yes, it seems to be. But I don't understand it. It's not logical. 

0 Likes

planner_matlabi
Advocate
Advocate

Yes that's right But Applicable and simple

This may happen because both face are known to be copied

0 Likes

PrathapSekar
Collaborator
Collaborator

Thanks for this nice thread, 

 

Here I would like to share my small tip, somebody may known.

 

Attached my screencast to show how to change material image quickly in Appearance tab of Material browser.

Thank You! and please 'Accept As Solution' when you found a solution, to help others.

Viveka_CD
Autodesk Support
Autodesk Support

Hi @PrathapSekar

 

Thank you! Your contribution makes this thread look nicerSmiley Happy

 

That was a nice tip, thanks for sharing!

 

Regards,

0 Likes

Viveka_CD
Autodesk Support
Autodesk Support

Hi @planner_matlabi

 

No worries, I added a tag to your screencast! Thanks for sharing your tip on how to place a Spot Slope on Ramp!

 

Regards,

0 Likes

joemcninch
Contributor
Contributor

What are some things you have developed to increase productivity and efficiency in the modelling process?

 

One of the ways I can think to decrease the amount of time people may be spending looking for the proper model components is create a model component library Revit file sorted by spec section or room type.  Take toilet rooms / bathrooms for example, everything that a designer may need to develop a toilet room would be in one model file. The user could open it, copy and paste the components they would need and close it, as opposed to navigating to the model component library on our server and pulling out the necessary models one at a time. There could be multiple examples of efficient and accessible layouts in there as well that users could reference as a basis of design. This same concept could be used for kitchens, locker rooms, office layouts, and on and on.

 

We have already developed a similar Revit model containing our detail component library in a single Revit model.  We have sorted these components by spec section so that our users can find what they need quickly while our younger staff can become better acquainted with CSI Masterspec format.

 

Another way we have considered increasing efficiency is by creating separate standard templates by building type and add more common model components that may be applicable, but with that comes increased model sizes, and a more difficult time keeping them all maintained and up to date.

 

Do you all have any tips you would be willing to share or other ways to look at this?  Much appreciated.

Anonymous
Not applicable

Thanks for the awesome thread of information!

 

Wanted to share a tool that really helps speed up the process of building walls, floors, ceilings, and/or roofs. It's called BIMsmith Forge and let's you build and visualize the assemblies in the cloud before downloading them as a system. Saves so much time if you're looking to get specific because it compiles everything you need automatically. Take a look below to see what it looks like to use a pre-formatted flooring assembly (but it works for walls and ceilings and roofs too). https://forge.bimsmith.com is this tool, but they also have a free marketplace to download specific loadable families too at https://market.bimsmith.com.

 

Happy building!

 

 BIMsmith ForgeBIMsmith Forge

 

Viveka_CD
Autodesk Support
Autodesk Support

Hi @Anonymous

 

I see that you are a new visitor. Welcome to the Autodesk community!

 

Thanks for taking time and sharing the BIMsmith Forge tool which will benefit others! Smiley Happy 

Looking forward to your continued participation.

 

Regards,