DaveP
2008-09-09, 02:38 PM
Here's a slick way to show a Canopy or Mezzanine as an "Above" item:
Let's say you've got an entrance canopy that you'd like to show on your first level plan.
How do you make it show up, since it is above the Cut Plane?
Don't even think about using Detail Lines!
Here's a slick trick:
On your First Level Plan, go into View Properties and set the Underlay to Second Level.
You should now be able to see the canopy half-toned.
Next select the LineWork Tool (that's the Pen nib just above the Type Selector)
Set your LineType to <Overhead>
Trace the Canopy by picking each of it's lines.
When you're done, go back into View Properties and set the Underlay back to <none>
The Second Level goes away, but the Overhead lines remain.
Big deal, you say, Why is that any easier than Detail Lines?
It probably isn't any quicker to draw it in the first place. But remember, this is Revit! You didn't draw a new line, you just displayed the canopy in a different View. Any future changes you make to that canopy will also be updated on the First Level - WITHOUT ANY WORK BY YOU!
I'd like to take it further than that, however. This works great if you want to show something that's on a Floor Plan above, but I'd like to use the same technique for things like Soffits, Upper Cabinets & Equipment in the Ceiling. The problem is, you can't Underlay a Ceiling Plan on a Floor Plan. I suppose you could temporarily show those items by changing your View Range, but sooner or later someone is going to set it back to the wrong height, or forget to set it back at all.
Anybody got any ideas for how to "Underlay" a Ceiling Plan?
(BTW, the "put them both on a Sheet" trick won't work - the Linework tool doesn't see the other View)
Let's say you've got an entrance canopy that you'd like to show on your first level plan.
How do you make it show up, since it is above the Cut Plane?
Don't even think about using Detail Lines!
Here's a slick trick:
On your First Level Plan, go into View Properties and set the Underlay to Second Level.
You should now be able to see the canopy half-toned.
Next select the LineWork Tool (that's the Pen nib just above the Type Selector)
Set your LineType to <Overhead>
Trace the Canopy by picking each of it's lines.
When you're done, go back into View Properties and set the Underlay back to <none>
The Second Level goes away, but the Overhead lines remain.
Big deal, you say, Why is that any easier than Detail Lines?
It probably isn't any quicker to draw it in the first place. But remember, this is Revit! You didn't draw a new line, you just displayed the canopy in a different View. Any future changes you make to that canopy will also be updated on the First Level - WITHOUT ANY WORK BY YOU!
I'd like to take it further than that, however. This works great if you want to show something that's on a Floor Plan above, but I'd like to use the same technique for things like Soffits, Upper Cabinets & Equipment in the Ceiling. The problem is, you can't Underlay a Ceiling Plan on a Floor Plan. I suppose you could temporarily show those items by changing your View Range, but sooner or later someone is going to set it back to the wrong height, or forget to set it back at all.
Anybody got any ideas for how to "Underlay" a Ceiling Plan?
(BTW, the "put them both on a Sheet" trick won't work - the Linework tool doesn't see the other View)