I recently discovered yet another obscure, hidden away setting in Revit - when I was investigating the "Room Bounding" property of different elements.
It seems that some structural columns have a "Room Bounding" property - but not all.
This has to be one of the weirdest, arbitrary decisions made by the Revit programmers:
Material for Model Behaviour
Structural columns have a weird property - so obscure and arcane, not to mention hidden away.'Material for Model Behavior'
This property that can only be set in the Family Editor – in ‘Family Category and Parameters’: ‘Material for Model Behaviour’.
It can be one of 5 settings, each of which enables different properties and behaviour in the model:
- Steel
- Concrete
- Precast Concrete
- Wood
- Other
- Steel has Connection properties
- Concrete & Other have Rebar properties
These settings are hidden away behind the 'Family Category and Parameters' settings - in the project there is no way to tell which setting the family has, apart from the specific properties displayed.
You would have thought that this only affects structural engineers?
But wait. It affects architects too . . . . .
- Concrete has ‘Room Bounding’ properties (it is the only one that does)
Why, oh why are wood and precast concrete not room-bounding? There are a huge number of timber structures around the world that provide perfectly good enclosures.
Wouldn't it just have been easier to make all columns potentially enclose rooms, instead of hard-coding someone's bizarre ideas about how a building might work?
Room-Bounding
When working in a project, and you discover that a 'Room' is not enclosed when you expect it to be, this is one of many things to check.There are some other quirky Room-Bounding behaviours in Revit, to be detailed later . . .
Hello Tim,
ReplyDeleteSo we use Timber columns that think they are Concrete, or use little Room Separator lines all over the model.
Anthony
brilliant, i understand many weird situation with column right now. Thank you
ReplyDelete