Friday, January 25, 2008

Structural Integrators is seeking beta testers.

From our friends over at BIM and BEAM


Interface between Revit® Structure and STAAD.Pro

Structural Integrators is currently developing an interface between Revit® Structure, and STAAD.Pro. The initial version of the link will be free to registered users of Structural Integrators, and will be a one-way link from Revit Structure to STAAD.Pro. Future releases will provide full bi-directional integration between these two products.

In anticipation of the 2008 Q1 release of the link, Structural Integrators is seeking beta testers. If you already own Revit® Structure and STAAD.Pro and would like to be a beta tester for this interface, please go to http://structuralintegrators.com/staad.php

Thursday, January 24, 2008

New Revit Subscription Tools - Part 2

For those Revit users that are also subscription customers, Autodesk has released several new tools that can be downloaded at the subscription site. The second of these tools is the Batch Print Utility for the Revit 2008 product line. The tool can be downloaded after logging into the subscription site and then go down to "Product Information & Downloads" section. There is a link for "AEC Product Modules & Add-Ons". This link will bring you to the download page.

The new Batch Print Utility for Revit 2008 subscription customers allows you to print a large number of drawings from you Revit project unattended.

For more information, David Light has done a great job documenting the Batch Print and Worksharing monitor and you can find that information on his Revit blog.

Monday, January 21, 2008

New Revit Subscription Tools - Part 1

For those Revit users that are also subscription customers, Autodesk has released several new tools that can be downloaded at the subscription site. The first of these tools is the Worksharing Monitor for the Revit 2008 product line. The tool can be downloaded after logging into the subscription site and then go down to "Product Information & Downloads" section. There is a link for "AEC Product Modules & Add-Ons". This link will bring you to the download page.

From the Revit Worksharing Monitor help file.

The Worksharing Monitor for Revit 2008 facilitates the use of Revit software in a worksharing environment, in which multiple people work on one project. For workshared projects, the Worksharing Monitor answers questions like the following:

Who is currently working on this project?
Is my local copy of the project up to date?
When will my Save to Central operation finish?
Has my request to borrow elements been granted?
Are any issues interfering with my work on a Revit project?

Note: The Worksharing Monitor is not useful for standalone Revit projects, which do not use worksharing to divide the work for a project among several people. The Worksharing Monitor works with all Revit products, including Revit Architecture, Revit MEP, and Revit Structure. If you are working on one or more workshared Revit projects, install the Worksharing Monitor on your computer. When you open a workshared project in the Revit software, also start the Worksharing Monitor. (Using the Worksharing Monitor with worksharing projects is not required, but it is strongly recommended.)

For information about setting up, using, and managing workshared projects, as well as terminology and concepts related to worksharing, see “Working in a Team” in the Revit help.

Sunday, January 20, 2008

New RISA/Revit Structure Link Now Available

RISA Tech has released version 6 of the RISA-3D & RISAFloor link with Revit Structure. This new version now supports a full two-way link which RISA Tech is reporting that you can start modeling in RISA-3D or RISAFloor and then push the model to Revit Structure. Modeling in Revit Structure first is still supported.


For more information visit RISA Tech for the link to download the new Revit Structure link.

Saturday, January 19, 2008

Revit Warnings - What's the Big Deal

With the help of a formal colleague and friend Daniel Hurtubise (see his French RevitIt blog) we are documenting a number of Revit Warnings. But the question I get both at work and via this blog is, "What's the Big Deal with Warnings". Which is usually followed by, "They don't prevent me from doing something and my sheets still print". So, I think it is important to discuss how important it is to address warnings sooner than later (or not at all).

I think the first and foremost reason to address warnings is that they can have a huge impact on the file size and performance of a project. This is especially true with warnings that have to do with overlapping items such as walls, room separations lines and duplicated instances.

The first time you encounter a warning is really the best time to address it. So if Revit thinks you are doing something it does not like, Revit will throw up an alert explaining what it thinks you have done wrong. I'll be the first to admit that sometimes when that dialog appears, I just hit the "OK" button and pretend like I saw nothing and this is the case when helping with a deadline. Daniel on the other-hand is what I refer to as a Warnings Nazi wanting to address every warning as they appear. That's probably the best way to handle them, but sometimes whether we like it or not, we take shortcuts to meet a deadline.

There will be times when you are under pressure for a deadline and taking the time to address all the warnings that are coming up is just not feasible. After all, most Project Managers will not understand why it is important to fix something that they do not see on their printed sheets. But at some point it is absolutely necessary to come back and review all your warnings.

The next question is what type of warnings need to be immediately addressed, what can wait and what can be ignored. Every project is different, so your results will vary, but here are a couple of guidelines which should be helpful. Any warnings relating to Rooms, Joins, Overlapping Lines and area warnings should be a priority. This is by no means an exclusive list, just something to get you started if you have been ignoring the warnings.

To review past warnings, simply go to the Tools pull-down menu and select Review Warnings near the bottom of the screen. If Review Warnings is not greyed out, then you have warnings. If you want to see how many unresolved errors there are, you can do this by scrolling down to the last displayed category, expanding that and scrolling down again. That will give you the total number. I've seen as many as 1200 or more in a single file. Each one of them is a potentially serious problem in your model somewhere that needs to be resolved.

Resolving some Revit Warnings can take a lot of investgation to track them down. As you first begin to do this, it can seem a little overwhelming. But as you track down these Warnings, you will find that it is usually (emphasis on usually) not to difficult to track down the problem.

The first thing that you should do when select a warning and click on the "Show" button. Revit will then try to find a view that shows the problem elements and highlight them for you. Keep in mind that the first view that Revit provides you, may not be the best view. If this first go-around does not help you find the issue, then select one of the elements that are listed in the Warning and click the "Show" button again. This will usually help you locate the problem, but not always. If this doesn't, then you need to use the element ID and use the "Select by ID" tool to locate that element that is causing or part of a warning.

Once you start working on resolving Warnings, you will find that the performance of your projects will be much better.

One thing that I would be nice is if Autodesk would provide some kind of mechanism to schedule Warnings. Unfortunetly, the only way to do that now is to use a screen capture utility.

This has just been a 20,000 feet overview of how to address Revit Warnings. In a following Blog, I hope to have Daniel Hurtubise write a more detailed document on addressing Warnings.

Friday, January 18, 2008

Best Practices for Content Creation and Management - Part 2

In a previous post on Best Practices for Content Creation and Management, we discuss the definition of a family and how important it is to do some planning before you dive into creating or modifying a family. Now that we have the basic understanding, we can start the process of actually creating a family.

Rule #1 is to use the correct template. For example, a curtain wall is not a window. This can cause issues with scheduling.


Rule #2: What to modify in the Out-of-the-Box templates

* Host and Face based family templates should be modified by adding hosts and dimensions

* All the family templates should be modified to add company specific parameters (which will be discussed further in Management)


As before, I want to make sure I give credit to Daniel Hurtubise of Revit It! and Katherine Meeder, BIM Specialist at HNTB Architecture for all their work in putting together this document.

Thursday, January 17, 2008

Revit Warnings - Wall is slightly off axis and may cause inaccuracies.

This can usually happen when are are picking geometry from an AutoCAD file. Revit will report this error when a wall is drawn at an angle at a with a fractional degree, such as 95.1 degrees. To correct the problem, either redraw the wall or change the angle. You can sometimes verify the angle by creating a 3-4 decimal point dimension style.

Special thanks to Daniel Hurtubise, aka the Revit Warnings Nazi for his help on documenting Revit warnings. Check out his RevitIt blog. (in French)

Revit Warnings - Highlighted walls are attached to, but miss, the highlighted targets

This means that you have a wall that is attached to a floor, roof etc. but the wall does not physically attach or touch the roof or floor. This warning can generally be corrected by “detaching” the wall from the floor or roof.

Special thanks to Daniel Hurtubise, aka the Revit Warnings Nazi for his help on documenting Revit warnings. Cehck out his RevitIt blog. (in French)

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

New Structural Content at Subscription Center

If you are a Revit subscription customer, then the Revit Structure team has uploaded some new structural .rfa content in the Subscription Center for download. The new content includes some AISC 13th Editions steel sections, Joist Girders, many UK Metric families and Finland ones, etc.

To access the new content, log into the Subscription Center, scroll down to "Product Information & Downloads" section and click on "Building Solutions: Product Modules & Add-Ons". Under "Structural Engineering Solutions" click on "Subscription Structural Library".

For more information, check-out the BIM and Beam blog.

Monday, January 14, 2008

Network Deployment Failure

If you are attempting to create a network deployment and it fails this LINK at Microsoft seems to correct the problem in most cases.

This problem popped up with the last build and has been discussed on AUGI and Steve Stafford's Revit OpEd.

Sunday, January 13, 2008

Professional Development Podcasts

If you are reading this blog, then chances are you also own either a MP3 player or iPod. And if you do, then you might want to consider looking at an alternate form of professional development, the Podcasts. Podcasts are either audio or audio-video files that are typically free, portable and can provide and alternate form of professional development. There are Podcasts for every subject under-the sun. Some good, some not-so-much. I have listed a few that I think are worth looking at for the AEC community. If I left one out you think should be mentioned, drop me an email at pdavis at hntb dot com

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