Gelöst! Gehe zur Lösung
Gelöst von lucdoucet_msdl. Gehe zur Lösung
Gelöst von barthbradley. Gehe zur Lösung
Sounds like the surfaces are misaligned. That's a hard one - if not near impossible - to fix (e.g. align).
...I don't see what you are referring to in your screenshot. Can you point it out?
...regarding aligning 2 surfaces, the main problem is that there is no edge to work with. But, depending on the situation, Export surface to DWG and Insert back into Revit, might give you the edge you need to align to.
Hello Barthbradley,
Thank you for getting back to me. I circled two spots on the image that are random holes that came up after I align other points on the street (topography) to the frontage of the cottages.
Before two holes appearing, the street level (topography) was higher than the doors of the cottages. Does this make sense?
Many thanks,
Monsicha
Looks to me like you have some interior Points with the wrong elevation value (probably zero). That's an easy fix. Edit Toposurface and find and remove, or correct the Elevations, of those Points.
@Anonymous
Can you confirm that you split the original toposurface first then you edited the points after?
What would help visualize the problem would be to isolate the toposurface with the glasses tool.
From the contour lines visible in the circled regions, I agree with @barthbradley that the holes seem to be caused by points having a low or zero elevation. Can you confirm you edited the toposurface points in a 3D view and there are no points below?
-luc
Hello lucdoucet_msdl
Can you confirm that you split the original toposurface first then you edited the points after?
Me: Yes.
Can you confirm you edited the toposurface points in a 3D view and there are no points below?
Me: I found the point below it in 3d view. I now corrected it. Thank you.
regards,
monsicha
monsicha
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