Trouble with lattice work in the parametric window

Trouble with lattice work in the parametric window

tharushadd
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Message 1 of 16

Trouble with lattice work in the parametric window

tharushadd
Enthusiast
Enthusiast

Timber window.jpg

Hi,

I am very new to Revit.

Can anyone guide me how to model a parametric window family as in the attachment. I can model everything except for the timber lattice, there in the window as a component. I just want the lattice work to be 1"x0.5" timber stripes at an 45° angle ( That doesn't have to be parametric)

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Message 2 of 16

dzanta
Mentor
Mentor

I would create those 4 panels as a 4 separate extrusions with a wood lattice model pattern (diagonal lines).  Ensure you align and lock the 4 sides to the reference planes that control the framework too.


Dzan Ta, AEE, ASM, ACI.

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Message 3 of 16

barthbradley
Consultant
Consultant

Do you mean "muntins".  If so, Revit has a dozen or so Muntin Families in the OOTB library. Windows Folder=>Nested Families Folder=>Muntins Folder.

 

...you can also go to Pella or Marvin and download their Revit families.  Most have Muntins in them in all sorts of configurations (e.g. Prairie, Diamond, etc., etc.)

Message 4 of 16

tharushadd
Enthusiast
Enthusiast

Thank you very much, but how to have a 'wood lattice model pattern'...any video tutorial on internet...so that I can follow..

thanks again

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Message 5 of 16

dzanta
Mentor
Mentor

after you make the 4 extrusions, select them and go to properties palette...you will see material parameter.  click inside this to assign a Model material pattern....choose the diagonal line pattern


Dzan Ta, AEE, ASM, ACI.

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Message 6 of 16

barthbradley
Consultant
Consultant

Still trying to figure out what is being talked about here. 

 

Is it Lattice like this?

 

Lattice1.png

 

 

Or, Lattice like this (e.g. Muntins in a Diamond Pattern)?

 

Lattice2.png

 

Or, Lattice like this (e.g. Diagonal Crosshatch Surface Pattern)? 

 

Lattice3.png

 

Message 7 of 16

tharushadd
Enthusiast
Enthusiast

d.jpgActually something like this....as shown in the window drawing

 

T

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Message 8 of 16

barthbradley
Consultant
Consultant

I like the pattern. What is that? A screen?  

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Message 9 of 16

tharushadd
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Enthusiast

Yes a screen...

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Message 10 of 16

barthbradley
Consultant
Consultant

A screen???  Well now...isn't that special.  Smiley Wink

 

Church Lady.png

Message 11 of 16

Anonymous
Not applicable

Barthbradley,

How would you actually create a modeled parametric lattice like the wood one here?

Seems simple but anything on a diagonal always complicates things.  I need to model this exact thing for a rendering of a "lattice top wood fence" - I'm thinking it would be a nested adaptive component??

 

The 45 degree lattice work would need to fit inside a rectangular boundary.

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Message 12 of 16

ToanDN
Consultant
Consultant
I would use a material with a diagonal cross surface model pattern instead of modeling it.
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Message 13 of 16

barthbradley
Consultant
Consultant


 

Are you talking about the wood lattice I showed above?  You could do this with a curtain wall. No panels, just mullions.  Maybe 1" x 1/2" slats, with beefier border mullion frame.  But if you are talking about the Screen you showed above, I'd find an OOTB "Metal Screen" Appearance Asset for Rendering, and then use a plain old cross hatch Surface Pattern for Elevation Views, etc.  

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Message 14 of 16

Anonymous
Not applicable

Yeah, that's a bummer - I had my fence all parametric and ready to go, last was the parametric lattice.  If I had started it all as conceptual massing, I probably could have done it with dividing surfaces.  Oh well, that's a headache for some other time.  Guess I'll do a .PNG material with voids.

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Message 15 of 16

ToanDN
Consultant
Consultant

I thought you asked about windows.  If it is a fence, just use a curtain wall with panels by a different curtain wall type, and rotate the grids 45 degrees.

Still, there is no practical reason to model the lattice. A material with cut-out should work nicely.

 

Annotation 2019-03-01 155053.png

 

 

Message 16 of 16

barthbradley
Consultant
Consultant

I think he means Curtain Walls with Empty Panels -- which is what I suggested.  

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