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MASTERING AUTODESK REVIT ARCHITECTURE 2016: AUTODESK OFFICIAL PRESS
Título:
MASTERING AUTODESK REVIT ARCHITECTURE 2016: AUTODESK OFFICIAL PRESS
Subtítulo:
Autor:
VANDEZANDE, JAMES
Editorial:
JOHN WILEY
Año de edición:
2015
Materia
CAD
ISBN:
978-1-119-04461-1
Páginas:
1008
68,50 €

 

Sinopsis

The Autodesk-endorsed guide to real-world Revit Architecture mastery
Mastering Autodesk Revit Architecture 2016 provides focused discussions, detailed exercises, and compelling, real-world examples to help you get the most out of the Revit Architecture 2016 software. Information is organized to reflect the way you learn and implement Revit, featuring real-world workflows, in-depth explanations, and practical tutorials that help you understand Revit and BIM concepts so you can quickly start accomplishing vital tasks. The thorough coverage makes this book an ideal study guide for those preparing for Autodesk´s certification exam. The companion website features before-and-after tutorials, additional advanced content, and video on crucial techniques to help you quickly master important tasks.

This comprehensive guide walks you through the software to help you begin designing quickly.

Understand basic BIM concepts and the Revit interface
Explore templates, work-sharing, and project management workflows
Learn modeling, massing, and visualization techniques for other industries
Work with complex structures, annotation, detailing, and much more
To master what is quickly becoming an essential industry tool, Mastering Revit Architecture 2016 is your ultimate practical companion.



Table of Contents

Foreword xxiii
Introduction xxvii

Part 1  Fundamentals 1

Chapter 1  Introduction: The Basics of BIM 3

What Is Revit? 3

Understanding a BIM Workflow 4

Leveraging BIM Processes 5

Visualizing 6

Analyzing 10

Strategizing 11

Focusing Your Investment in BIM 11

Staffing for BIM 12

Understanding Project Roles 12

Establishing a BIM Execution Plan 15

The Bottom Line 17

Chapter 2  Applying the Principles of the User Interface and Project Organization 19

Understanding the User Interface 19

Accessing and Using the Application Menu 20

Using the Quick Access Toolbar 20

Using the InfoCenter 21

Getting to Know the Ribbon 21

Using Other Aspects of the UI 25

Navigation Methods 33

Defining Project Organization 36

Introducing Datum Objects (Relationships) 36

Using Content 48

Working with Views 50

Managing Your Project Model 65

The Bottom Line 66

Chapter 3  The Basics of the Toolbox 67

Selecting, Modifying, and Replacing Elements 67

Selecting Elements 67

Selection Options 69

Filtering Your Selection 70

Using Selection-based Filters 70

Selecting All Instances 70

Using the Properties Palette 71

Matching Properties 73

Using the Context Menu 73

Editing Elements Interactively 74

Moving Elements 74

Copying Elements 78

Rotating and Mirroring Elements 79

Arraying Elements 81

Scaling Elements 83

Aligning Elements 84

Trimming or Extending Lines and Walls 84

Splitting Lines and Walls 86

Offsetting Lines and Walls 87

Preventing Elements from Moving 88

Exploring Other Editing Tools 90

Using the Join Geometry Tool 90

Using the Split Face and Paint Tools 91

Copying and Pasting from the Clipboard 91

Using the Create Similar Tool 93

Using Keyboard Shortcuts (Accelerators) 93

Double-click to Edit 94

Modeling Site Context 95

Using a Toposurface 96

Creating a Toposurface from a Points File 100

Creating a Building Pad 104

Generating Property Lines 105

Cut/Fill Schedules 108

The Bottom Line 110

Chapter 4  Configuring Templates and Standards 111

Introducing Project Templates 111

Customizing Project Settings for Graphic Quality 112

Discovering Object Styles 113

Using Line Settings 114

Defining Materials 119

Defining Fill Patterns 128

Preconfiguring Color Schemes 135

Increasing Efficient View Management 138

Organizing Views 138

Creating and Assigning Filters 141

Using View Templates 143

Creating Custom Annotations 147

Introducing Tag Family Fundamentals 148

Creating a Custom Door Tag 149

Customizing View Tags 152

Starting a Project with a Custom Template 157

Strategies for Managing Templates 158

Aggregating Template Data 159

The Bottom Line 164

Part 2  Collaboration and Teamwork 165

Chapter 5  Working in a Team 167

Understanding Worksharing Basics 167

Enabling Worksharing on Your Project 169

Types of Worksets 171

Creating a Central File 171

Selecting a Starting View 174

Creating a Local File 175

Using Worksharing Usernames 178

Organizing Worksets 179

Moving Elements between Worksets 181

Managing Workflow with Worksets 184

Saving Work 186

Saving at Intervals 188

Loading Work from Other Team Members 188

Using Worksharing Visualization 189

Managing Workset Visibility in View Templates 192

Closing Revit 192

Disabling Worksharing 194

Understanding Element Ownership in Worksets 195

Understanding Editing Requests 197

Placing an Editing Request 197

Granting an Editing Request 199

Relinquishing Permission 200

Using the Worksharing Monitor 200

Collaborating in the Cloud 201

A360 Collaboration for Revit 203

The Bottom Line 203

Chapter 6  Working with Consultants 205

Preparing for Collaboration 205

Managing the Coordination Process 206

Using Linked Models in Revit 209

Shared Positioning 210

Using Project Base Point and Survey Point 213

Using Worksets to Organize Linked Models 219

Summarizing the Benefits and Limitations of Linked Models 221

Using Linked Models-Exercises 222

Using the Coordination Tools 225

Using the Copy/Monitor Command 226

Using the Copy/Monitor Command-An Exercise 228

Using the Coordination Review Tool 230

Using the Coordination Review Tool-An Exercise 232

Using Interference Checking in 3D Coordination 233

The Bottom Line 236

Chapter 7  Interoperability: Working Multiplatform 237

Examining Interoperability on a BIM Curve 237

Inserting CAD Data 238

Using Predefi ned Settings for Inserted CAD Data 238

Importing vs Linking 240

Using Options During Importing/Linking 240

Manipulating Inserted CAD Data 242

Using Inserted 2D Data 245

Setting Options for BIM Conversion 246

Using CAD Data for Coordination 247

Linking Details 247

Using Inserted 3D Data 250

Using CAD Data as a Mass 250

Using CAD Data as a Face 251

Using CAD Data as an Object 254

Exporting CAD Data 256

Preparing a List of Views for Exporting 257

Settings for DWG Exports 259

Exporting 2D CAD Data 264

Exporting 3D Model Data 266

Exporting to SketchUp 266

Using IFC Interoperability 269

The Bottom Line 276

Part 3  Modeling and Massing for Design 277

Chapter 8  Advanced Modeling and Massing 279

The Massing User Interface and Functionality 279

Creating Mass Geometry 282

Creating an In-Place Mass 283

Placing a Mass 289

Creating Mass Floors 290

Scheduling Masses 291

Massing Surfaces 293

Using Free-form Building Massing 298

Dissolving and Rebuilding 305

Creating Formula-dr