BILT Speaker

BILT Speaker
RevitCat - Revit Consultant

Thursday, 11 October 2012

Revit Single Point Repeater Patterns

Sample Revit Repeater Patterns

At RTC 2012 (Revit Technology Conference) last June, I presented a session on the new Revit v2013 "Divide" and "Repeat" tools.  The first part of the talk was about how the repeat pattern behaves in different situations - so I wanted to share some of the typical repeater patterns for reference - see below.  The conference paper goes into more detail, and then explains how you can use these patterns in Revit in real building situations.

Single Point Repeaters on a Divided Surface


Below is a chart of the basic patterns that can be achieved using a single point adaptive component hosted on a divided surface.  The results are not always what you expect.


Notice that patterns 10, 11 & 12 do not actually create a visible pattern, but the repeater element is there, and can be selected – this is because the patterns go off the edge of the surface and cannot find nodes to repeat on.

 Single Point Multiple Repeater Patterns:

Once you have 3 or more of the original hosted components (eg. 4 square as below), Revit will no longer create one single repeater pattern, but will create a number of patterns that alternate with each other.  This will happen regardless of whether the originals are the same or different.  In the example below it actually creates 4 separate repeater patterns (see one of them highlighted in orange).  You can take advantage of this to create a repeater pattern on alternate nodes by deleting the repeaters that you don’t want – see end result to the right immediately below.




You can create less regular looking patterns by making the originals all different, or else you can create patterns that look right but are only achievable by “working the system” – eg. A tartan pattern by only changing the look of one of four hosted original components: 

Alternatively you may need to create multiple repeaters and then delete some of them to achieve the desired results, as shown in example 13.  If you generate a repeater that creates a pattern on nodes that are already occupied, Revit seems quite happy to do this.

More to follow on multiple point repeaters in another post . . . . . Multiple Point Repeaters on Divided Surfaces       Two-Point Repeaters on Multiple Hosts

Friday, 10 August 2012

Revit User Group Sydney 100th Meeting

On Tuesday 14th August 2012 will be the 100th meeting of RUGSyd (Revit User Group Sydney) - we think this is the oldest Revit user group, not just in Australia but in the world.  Autodesk have confirmed this, but who knows, there might be another group out there . . .

Initiated by Wesley Benn, the first meeting was held in May 2003 in North Sydney, in the offices of Benn Design & AEC Systems.  The second meeting in June 2003 had a formal agenda and a committee was elected:

The proposed agenda was as follows:
1. General Business
- Election of Chairperson and Secretary (3 month temporary posts)
- Format of Meetings
- Next Meeting
2. User Requirements for REVIT Localisation
- Levels to AHD
- Site Co-ordinate Systems (eg AMG)
- Metric Library Components
- Local Annotation Standards (eg Stair Arrows, Door Swings, Window Openings, Brick Sizes, etc)
- Other Issues as suggested by Users
3. Bug List
4. Enhancement Requests
5. Open Question and Answer Session


Original Committee:
Wesley Benn     – Chairman      - Benn Design
Rocco Raso       – Secretary       - Planahead
Adrian Esdaile  – Treasurer      - Benn Design
Michael Juda                              - Australia Wide Drafting
Gyula Toth                                 - Futurespace
Tim Bowland                              - Clarendon Property Group
Marina Radosevic replaced Gyula soon afterwards.

User Group charter in July 2004
The first RUGs social was Feb 11, 2005 at Fluid, in North Sydney.  This has become an annual event, more recently at The Oaks pub in Neutral Bay
RUGS Website was set up in August 2005 - with much ongoing hard work by Bo Zhen of Benn Design.

My first presentation was at meeting #26, August 2005 (Tim Waldock User story - Penrith football stadium refurbishment).

A new committee took over in 2008, and RUGSyd became fully multi-disciplinary:
Toby Maple             – Chairman        - AEC Consulting; then Hassells
John Hainsworth     – Secretary       - Arups (Structural)
Tim Waldock           – Treasurer        - PTW (Architecture)
Wesley Benn                                      - Benn Design (Architecture)
Brendan Upton                                   - Hyder Consulting (MEP)

The venue was then changed to be held alternately at the three Revit reseller's offices in Sydney, until a fixed home was found at the Sydney TAFE, Ultimo (Level 3 Marcus Clarke Building, 827-837 George Street, Broadway) - our present venue, for which we are very grateful.  Many thanks to Tom Hoare of Sydney TAFE for allowing us to use the venue.

Current Committee (2012):
Steve Fiorio             – Chairman        - Hassells
Chris Mawson         – Secretary        - Arups (Structural)
Tim Waldock           – Treasurer        - PTW (Architecture)
David Foley                                          - NDY (MEP)