DeDios
Guest
Good morning to all,
I would like to expose you some doubts and problems regarding the design of a building made with "dry" technology.
I am about to reproduce the building in revit, and I am preparing the stratigraphy of the walls and floors, and then continue in the real realization.
I have some very special stratigraphy, with some not regular layers. I'll get you a couple of pictures.
In the first case, the "irregular" layers are expanded polystyrene slabs for water collection and soft insulating in glass wool over the countertop.
In the second case, the irregular layers are the expanded polystyrene for radiant panels and the layer of iglù, with respective filling of reinforced concrete.
how would you proceed? I am thinking of leaving in the stratigraphy of the "holes" and then extruding inplace the particular elements and layers, but I do not know if it is correct to draw so. is there a way consistent with the philosophy of revit?
Thank you very much in advance,
Good work for everyone.
I would like to expose you some doubts and problems regarding the design of a building made with "dry" technology.
I am about to reproduce the building in revit, and I am preparing the stratigraphy of the walls and floors, and then continue in the real realization.
I have some very special stratigraphy, with some not regular layers. I'll get you a couple of pictures.

In the first case, the "irregular" layers are expanded polystyrene slabs for water collection and soft insulating in glass wool over the countertop.In the second case, the irregular layers are the expanded polystyrene for radiant panels and the layer of iglù, with respective filling of reinforced concrete.
how would you proceed? I am thinking of leaving in the stratigraphy of the "holes" and then extruding inplace the particular elements and layers, but I do not know if it is correct to draw so. is there a way consistent with the philosophy of revit?
Thank you very much in advance,
Good work for everyone.