jameswest77
2010-10-26, 03:53 PM
Our office has five employees with limited Revit experience. We can make a good model, but we lack a deeper understanding of many of Revit's more powerful production tools- which is where my question to you comes in.
We're tasked with the preliminary design phase of a number of highrise apartments. In the end, there will only be three unique floors: the bottom one, the middle 30, and the top one. We are wrapping up the floor plans, in Revit, that make up the middle of the highrises, and have yet to complete the upper and bottom floors.
This is schematic design, meaning all the basic components will be on the plans: walls, doors, windows, furniture, appliances, casework, etc- but no utility or or anything structural. The elevations will be fully flushed out with a neoclassical style full of multi-story columns, cornices, pediments, balustrades, etc.
My question to you is: what would be the most efficient way to put all this together? We have the skills to make the plans and elevations for the whole thing, but I have to think with either workgroups, linked files, or some other method there would be a better way to do it. Besides, we'd like to get multiple people working on this at the same time. Additionally, if each floor could be worked on separately then it'll be a lighter load on the workstations, which are pretty powerful, but get bogged down with dozens of linked files.
So, what do you think? What approach would you take?
Thanks,
James West
Willamette Architecture 360
We're tasked with the preliminary design phase of a number of highrise apartments. In the end, there will only be three unique floors: the bottom one, the middle 30, and the top one. We are wrapping up the floor plans, in Revit, that make up the middle of the highrises, and have yet to complete the upper and bottom floors.
This is schematic design, meaning all the basic components will be on the plans: walls, doors, windows, furniture, appliances, casework, etc- but no utility or or anything structural. The elevations will be fully flushed out with a neoclassical style full of multi-story columns, cornices, pediments, balustrades, etc.
My question to you is: what would be the most efficient way to put all this together? We have the skills to make the plans and elevations for the whole thing, but I have to think with either workgroups, linked files, or some other method there would be a better way to do it. Besides, we'd like to get multiple people working on this at the same time. Additionally, if each floor could be worked on separately then it'll be a lighter load on the workstations, which are pretty powerful, but get bogged down with dozens of linked files.
So, what do you think? What approach would you take?
Thanks,
James West
Willamette Architecture 360