JayCon
2012-12-27, 03:25 PM
Hey everyone,
Hope you've all are having(or had) a good holiday season thus far, but I have a question that may be best discovered via message board polling. Basically, I've been out of school now for a year and while I've found myself employed for over half a year(:mrgreen:), I have noticed quite a few differences from my scholastic practicing and the office's applications of certain Revit features. One thing I found most intriguing was the Firm's use of a wall that scales the entire outside shell(something stretching from the ground all the way to the 4th floor for instance) where as school had us apply the walls per level(first floor wall was based on the first floor and only extended up to the second floor level, then the second floor wall was based on the second floor and stretched up to the third floor level, and so on).
I'm sure I'll do exactly what my firm asks of me, but I can't help but think of a discussion I had with one of my technology proficient teachers and them having solid reasoning for applying the walls the way we were taught. Since we are still discovering the optimal uses of Revit, I wouldn't mind finding out how you apply this tactic and why, or what your experiences have shown. I'll admit, the "real world" has been teaching me new aspects of architecture, however, when it's come to revit, my school did a fine job of preparing me for it's use.
PS: I'll try our poll option too, but I'd love to see feedback as well:
First Option: One Exterior Wall stretching the height of the building
2nd Option: One Exterior Wall per level
Third Option: Other?
Hope you've all are having(or had) a good holiday season thus far, but I have a question that may be best discovered via message board polling. Basically, I've been out of school now for a year and while I've found myself employed for over half a year(:mrgreen:), I have noticed quite a few differences from my scholastic practicing and the office's applications of certain Revit features. One thing I found most intriguing was the Firm's use of a wall that scales the entire outside shell(something stretching from the ground all the way to the 4th floor for instance) where as school had us apply the walls per level(first floor wall was based on the first floor and only extended up to the second floor level, then the second floor wall was based on the second floor and stretched up to the third floor level, and so on).
I'm sure I'll do exactly what my firm asks of me, but I can't help but think of a discussion I had with one of my technology proficient teachers and them having solid reasoning for applying the walls the way we were taught. Since we are still discovering the optimal uses of Revit, I wouldn't mind finding out how you apply this tactic and why, or what your experiences have shown. I'll admit, the "real world" has been teaching me new aspects of architecture, however, when it's come to revit, my school did a fine job of preparing me for it's use.
PS: I'll try our poll option too, but I'd love to see feedback as well:
First Option: One Exterior Wall stretching the height of the building
2nd Option: One Exterior Wall per level
Third Option: Other?