This channel is dedicated to using BIM technologies in interior design projects. It mainly focuses on Revit. Revit is a BIM software created by Autodesk.
Note that this only works with plan views. It does not work with Sections, Elevations and so forth. The fact Autodesk actually put a 'Rotate Clockwise' and 'Rotate Anticlockwise' views with bothering to rotate the title of the view shows how bloody useless they are at fixing and developing stuff. Revit is the biggest piece of shit software I have ever used, you can tell it is a patchwork of different software and technology stitched together. The modelling power is shit (snapping is awful, there is no intelligent assist with what you are trying to achieve) and everything is pretty much counter-intuitive. Why on earth do you have to pick a plan every time you want to achieve something... because Revit was built like shit it is not smart enough to consider that whatever view cut you are in this is where you want to work from. Not mentioning reference planes are only good in straight lines and perpendicular stuff. Unless you design shoe boxes, you are going to work on curves eventually. You know the adage there is a gazillion way to skin a cat, well with Revit there might be 20 logical ways to achieve one goal that you might think of, but only 1 is going to work and more often than not it is one that literally makes zero sense. That again shows Revit was not developed by Architects for Architects it was stitched with different bits and pieces of companies bought over when they have not killed them off. It is a shit software, you have to learn to beat the software to be good at Revit not work with it.
Hey @BIMforInteriorDesign, it would be great if you could create more interior design videos using Revit LT. Looking forward to seeing more of your content! Your explanation is well-articulated and succinct, encompassing all the crucial aspects.
Hi, you would have to parametrize the ladder further. But this should not be too complicated. You can see how to create simple parametric family in this tutorial: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-v1mA2oJg2RM.htmlsi=8wXItwnPTjqS4UoE
I do not know about a way how to get the area to the schedule. That is a problem with this workaround - Revit by default does not put annotation objects to schedules.
Another thank-you... I was wondering how to set that default behavior. The code-writers for Revit are obviously not using their product, or they wouldn't hide these things so thoroughly! Thanks again.