Strategy to design MEP in Revit while architects refuse to use Revit
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I usually design my entire project (Mechanical, Plumbing, Electrical) inc. architectural design fully in Revit and can figure everything out. But now I'm designing a remodel project where architects in our office are supposed to design architecture in Revit. The problem is, they don't use Revit (and the main person openly said will never use it). One of them maybe wants to learn Revit, but doesn't have time. They also don't have much design experience (they usually manage consultant-lead designs).
So to get this project started I just took it on to start the existing model and start the architectural design base don what they started in CAD. My plan was to assist with all BIM issues (creating schedules, walls, parameters, modeling complex things and so on) and have the architects move walls around and ease them into Revit. However, they still use their own AutoCAD design. They plan to at some point maybe implement that design in Revit. This creates the problem I can't start much of my MEP design since their iteration of walls etc. won't be in Revit. And I also have the suspicion I will end up having to do everything architectural in Revit (just based on the fact the lead architect refuses to even install Revit). It probably is better if I do everything, but I also will not have all information and someone has to coordinate architectural specifications, annotations and so on. This really should be done by the person doing the architectural design. It is a big mess... I don't see this refusal to use Revit to go away. I set that up as a central model hoping this is the best way to help them. This creates issues as well since someone not knowing Revit can mess things up. It also is hard to do their architectural design in Revit since it is hard to get clear answers about specifics I need to know for that.
I had worked with them on past projects. For those they did everything in AutoCAD and I just built my own model and gave them my PDF of sheets and specifications. That was wasteful since I had to build my own architectural part of the model. But after my above experience, this doesn't look like a bad option anymore.....
How would I complete a project like this and future ones in the least painful manner? I know in the real World I would use the Architect's Revit model and link it in my model. But this isn't going to happen here. Should I just let them do everything in AutoCAD and do my own model (like on past projects)? This still leaves me modeling much of the architecture, but leaves the responsibility for all details and annotations etc. with the architects.
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