Evening all,
I have another (probably beginners query, as I've only been using Revit a few weeks).
I just installed a stairs which needs to cut into the first floor slab, such that a section of the floor slab follows the pitchline of the stairs. Does anyone know how i get a portion of the first floor slab to follow the pitchline of the stairs. There is a 2.0m head height betwwen the stairs going and sloped ceiling as shown in the AutoCad section which also eats into the height of the bedroom wall also shown in the AutoCad Section. Any help as always is appreciated.
I was flirting with the idea of creating a void extrusion to remove some of the FF slab and wall, but was just wondering if there was a simpler work around.
Regards
Thomas.
Gelöst! Gehe zur Lösung
Gelöst von barthbradley. Gehe zur Lösung
Gelöst von ToanDN. Gehe zur Lösung
A void extrusion to cut the floor at that angle is my first thought as well (in concept, a "Shaft" opening).
...what to post that AutoCAD drawing (or picture) you're referencing? It might spark other ideas from us.
Are you talking about two things: cutting a piece of the slab where the stair runs into it; and creating a sloped ceiling underneath the stair?
1. You are on the right track with using a void. Simple and done.
2. Either model the sloped ceiling in place, or use the floor or roof tool instead of the ceiling tool to create the ceiling in order to have it sloped.
2. You can define the ceiling slope by editing the sketch boundary.
Hi @barthbradley, I tried posting up some screenshots of the issue along with my updated Revit file but for some reason they didn't attach to my previous post. I'll try and attach them again. Hopefully it works this time round.
Oh, I get it. Forget the shaft. Frame the opening by redefining the floor sketch boundary to remove that section of floor above the stairs and the create other sloping floor above the stairs just like @ToanDN described. Kind of weird though. A sloping floor in the bedroom?
....I don't think it builds though. How are the walls erected? This is what I'd do:
@barthbradley wrote:
....I don't think it builds though. How are the walls erected?
The sloped floor spans the opening over the stair and the wall set on top of it?
Yeah really weird alright. But hey, I'm not the architect (
) just helping out a client with some Revit Models for some houses that are going out to tender. Certainly wouldn't be my choice to be putting a sloped section of floor in a bedroom even if it is the box room in the house.
Cheers for the help.
Regards
T
@Anonymous wrote:
Yeah really weird alright. But hey, I'm not the architect (
) just helping out a client with some Revit Models for some houses that are going out to tender. Certainly wouldn't be my choice to be putting a sloped section of floor in a bedroom even if it is the box room in the house.
Cheers for the help.
Regards
T
It's more likely a sloped ceiling under a stepped floor if the architect has any sense of practicality.
@Anonymouswrote:Yeah really weird alright. But hey, I'm not the architect (
) just helping out a client with some Revit Models for some houses that are going out to tender. Certainly wouldn't be my choice to be putting a sloped section of floor in a bedroom even if it is the box room in the house.
Cheers for the help.
Regards
T
Cheers to you too. Throw some solution credits our way. Alright? ![]()
Interesting "procedure" to make sloped ceiling. Thank you Toan, what you said I didn't know, but needed it
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