![]() ![]() This feature can enhance nearly any kind of communication-from details and presentation views to marketing brochures and even product design documents. This powerful tool is a great way to visualize any part of your Revit project. Using the new Displace Elements feature in Autodesk Revit-based software, we can create custom 3D views that “pull apart” our model to show how it fits together. Got your attention, didn’t I? Well thankfully, not that kind of explode, but rather “exploded” axonometric views. If you’re interested in historic architecture and/or classical form, or you just like pushing family editor to extremes, then this session is sure to please. I’ll show the final successful versions and a few not-so-successful earlier versions as well. In this session I’ll talk about scaling, content reuse, profiles, moldings, formulas, nested components, and complex forms in both the traditional and adaptive component family editors. ![]() This session is part case study (of the journey I took from the original idea all the way to the publication of a book) and part tutorial (to show the “nuts and bolts” of how we built the families), all demonstrated directly in Revit software. Challenges were many, but there were plenty of successes as well. ![]() Parametric families are the cornerstones of Revit software, and this project presented an ideal way to push Family Editor to its limits. Years ago I began exploring the possibilities of creating the classical orders of architecture in Revit software. ![]()
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