I'm not a Autodesk developer, IIRC initially Revit only worked on basic massing forms and space elements. Space elements depending on room boundaries to exist and spaces define the usable parts of the building. The analysis tools that predate Revit, that they used as a frame of reference or to import/export to/with, are "simple" abstractions of a building as well...some based on providing room data without any 3d geometry at all.
Later Revit started offering the option to do calculation on model elements instead of the simpler mass/space abstraction. For this to work those elements still need to define spaces to be able to express how the calculations related to each room as well as the building overall. However Revit isn't really looking at the individual walls (layers etc)...it's looking the construction settings that are defined and those have "meaningful" names/descriptions but ultimately the "u" value assigned is the more important measure.
Short answer...like @barthbradley wrote, "what would they calculate against if not room bounding?" The room bounding behavior is already a critical part of the puzzle to define rooms/spaces, which are part of the reporting function, AND it helps differentiate meaningful from irrelevant to calculations. The calculations are also an abstraction, guestimate...the more accurately the model is created the higher the probability the results are but often the return on investment for that detail isn't significantly different from a seat of the pants estimate provided by someone with experience, total area and geographical location.
If this requirement means you can't do things you want or need to for other reasons then they recommend creating/placing a simplified version on a side track to run calculations so that doesn't interfere with your other model requirements. FWIW, I don't do it much these days, but in the past I haven't encountered many models that can run calculations on the model elements successfully. It's difficult to create a truly "tight" model that generates a result that is significantly (meaning worthwhile, worth the effort) different, different in important ways, from one based on the simpler model.
Steve Stafford
Did you find this post helpful? Feel free to Like this post.
Did your question get successfully answered? Then click on the ACCEPT SOLUTION button.