Thursday, June 27, 2013
CASE Interoperability: Structural Framing
The guys over at Case have not ceased to amaze me yet. Watch this...
http://youtu.be/mssTdaQcXM8
Nathan, from CASE is taking his Rhino/grasshopper formulaic/programmable structure and porting it to Revit using their plugin, that then builds the structure using Revit Structural components, including the Revit structural model.
Sunday, June 9, 2013
A work-around: Revit Renders smooth curves with facets, and other revelations.
I've been consulting recently and in doing so I came across two things that I find bothersome with Revit, one which I have a work-around for and the other just sucks.
First let's talk about the one I have a work-around for, and that is the lack of smoothing of curves in renderings. Here is my example:
This isn't a new issue. It's been around for quite a while, per this AUGI post from 2008. So the work-around I came up with was to use the split tool:
and split the circle in their sketches in the family editor so there are more divisions to the curve. This forces Revit to render more accurately, although still faceted.
Here's how it's done in Maya with great realism. So the message is, if you need to render your project's Kitchen with it's Stainless steel appliances, use Maya, or fudge it in Photoshop.
Here's my draft with Photoshop:
So, lesson is, Revit is not so much a product design application and I should use Maya or Max or Inventor :P
Cheers,
Craig
First let's talk about the one I have a work-around for, and that is the lack of smoothing of curves in renderings. Here is my example:
In the render, you can clearly see that what should be a smooth circle, is rendered as faceted. |
Here you can see it in Realistic view in Revit to the left and being edited to the right and the circle appears as it should. |
and split the circle in their sketches in the family editor so there are more divisions to the curve. This forces Revit to render more accurately, although still faceted.
Here's how it's done in Maya with great realism. So the message is, if you need to render your project's Kitchen with it's Stainless steel appliances, use Maya, or fudge it in Photoshop.
Here's my draft with Photoshop:
So, lesson is, Revit is not so much a product design application and I should use Maya or Max or Inventor :P
Cheers,
Craig
Tuesday, June 4, 2013
Product Design Suite Test Drive -- Revit - Inventor BIM Exchange
This is a short demonstration from Autodesk of the BIM exchange from Inventor to native Revit family file. Manufacturers take note! Architects and Engineers don't need intricately detailed virtual products as Revit families. We need simplified generalizations of the products extents and clearances. The Inventor BIM exchange looks like it's made your work much simpler.
Cheers,
Craig Barbieri
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