Showing posts with label Autodesk Labs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Autodesk Labs. Show all posts

Monday, August 8, 2011

More API goodies

This is yet another subject I’ve been meaning to write about for some time now. Advanced Solutions’ BIMAssist is another set of tools made possible through the ever-expanding Revit API. I got very excited watching the video of the new feature “Room Surface Parameter Extractor”, which is not part of the tools available in IMAGINiT’s Utilities for Revit. It’s nice to actually see different tools packaged by each of these companies. Their main target audience however is their subscribers, and from what I’ve seen over the last years, pricing for non-subscribers could easily make Anderson Cooper’s The RiDicULiST.

The BIMAssist page contains video clips of each feature, which is probably what convinced me to try it. It was a period when I was struggling with finding an acceptable compromise (recently, the word of the day in politics) to documenting finish materials in Revit. Which reminds me that I really need to post my wrap-up thoughts on the subject from almost a year ago, but back to the subject…you can go and see each one for yourself.

My testing experience was somewhat conflicted. It took forever to get the 30 day trial license to function. And tanks to a busy schedule, it expired before I finished my testing, however they were extremely helpful in extending the license, so thanks a lot for that!

Unfortunately I was not as excited once I found out exactly how the room surface parameter extractor worked. Rather than bore you with a lot of writing, here is my list of notes I jotted down:

  • Door Mark Manager: Numbers doors based on the To/From Room number;
  • Project Cleaner is a very nice tool to have. Useful when sharing a 3d model and you want to make it lighter or remove sheets, views etc. without having to do it the manual way (such as grouping and saving out the group or linking the project into a new file and binding it);
  • Sheet Number update: Also quite nice when you need to renumber sheets without having to do it the long way (we usually have to rename it twice if the final sheet number is already in use: append a suffix, renumber the other sheet and renumber again by removing the suffix);
  • Fire Rating Coordinator: I was excited at first about this tool, but as I read the help, all excitement faded and turned to disappointment. This tool is making the wrong assumption that the door fire-rating will be the same as the partition fire-rating: Wrong! Take a look at (for example) IBC 2009 Table 715.4 and you'll notice only a handful of situations where that holds true. Also notice the importance of the partition/wall type: The fire-rating alone does not tell the whole story. So a 1 hour wall can mean a 1hr, 45min. or 20min. door depending on whether the wall is a Fire Barrier, a Shaft Enclosure/Exit Passageway, and Exterior wall or a Smoke Barrier. Clearly this tool does not address any of these issues;
  • Room Surface Parameter Extractor: I had really high hopes for this tool and was very excited. Unfortunately
    I'm a bit disappointed after testing:
    • Painted materials are not recognized. This is a big issue because creating unique wall types just to designate different colors is just not the way to go. This tool should be able to read the materials on the surfaces around the room and not just the ones in the definition of the element;
    • Only the material name is reported; why not give the user the ability to report certain material parameters instead, such as Type Mark? I also tried doing a thin finish floor above the floor slab and it worked if there was only one floor (finish) in the room. However if you had 2 floor finishes, there's no way to list only the finish materials of just those floors. The option "Comma Delimited List" in "Surface To Use" ends up reporting all the floor layers, which is not what we would expect of a “surface extractor”. I also found it to be a bit slow when running, even if I selected just one room.

Anyway, if you want to see these tools for yourself, you can participate in a free webinar coming up this Wednesday 10th August.

While we’re talking of tools, make sure to visit the ADN Plugin of the Month page at the Autodesk Labs site, where various tools are made available for free in exchange for user feedback. For example there is a Door and Room renumber tool that I find very easy to use, and recently they released another handy one called eTransmit. Finally, Jochen of b.i.m.m released the updated tools for the Revit 2012 version, so be sure to check those out too. So many tools, so little time to keep up with them all!


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Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Vasari and Autodesk Labs goodies

Have you heard about Project Vasari? I sure hope so! I have not posted anything about it here yet, but if you read Revit-related blogs, you have certainly crossed paths.

Project Vasari is a stripped down version of Revit. “Why would I want a stripped down version of Revit”, you might ask? Well, it’s really intended as a conceptual design tool, something extremely powerful yet not so intimidating to those newbies wanting to explore Revit’s way of working (I’m pointing at you, Mr. & Mrs. Designers-that-only-want-to-SketchUp!). So even though a lot of typical Revit functionality is not in it, everything to do with conceptual design (massing, panelization, etc.) is there in all its glory. And then some.

Vasari is also being used as a sort of sand-box to test new features, ideas and possible future functionality (ex: double click to enter edit mode). So if you do a lot of fiddling around with Fully-Fledged Revit, you might want to install this free tool and use that instead. After all, the files are fully compatible and can be utilized downstream in the full licensed version.

So head over to Autodesk Labs and download Project Vasari 1.1 Technology Preview. There are some very exciting new tools and features, such as two new Ecotect plugins, Nucleus form-finding tools and 3d printing. Another exciting thing about Vasari is it’s shiny, brand new community site: ProjectVasari.com. It is integrated with Facebook, Google and Yahoo identities to make it easy for you to get online. You can share comments and feedback, upload images and files and hear from the experts in the field. Who wouldn’t want to be logged in to the same site as Matt Jezyk, Zach Kron and the other bright stars that are behind Revit? (sorry, I wanted to name all of you, but my laptop battery is about dead and I don’t feel like getting up to plug in the adapter!)

Some other exciting projects in the Lab are Project Nucleus (now part of Vasari) and Project Galileo. There are other things you might be interested in, so visit often and poke around. Nucleus sure looks awesome and I can’t wait to play around with it (but I DO have to plug my adapter for that).


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