Tim Slazinik

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  • #174421
    Tim Slazinik
    Participant

    this already exists in civil 3D. there are many ways to go back and forth between the civil CAD plans and Revit fairly seemlessly. the problem lies in the fact that the civil engineers i deal with are not using civil 3D to its full capacity and thus the integration with BIM or Revit, is lost. Our in house Civil engineer hads explored this and it has made for a much better design precess from all three disciplines.

    #174431
    Tim Slazinik
    Participant

    I am currently completing a landscape project in Revit. I work at a multidisciplinary firm and decided to dive into the Revit Deep End and after a lot of on the fly training and figuring stuff out on our own, we are now at 50% CD’s and nearing completion. We have had to work around some thing but I have really like the plant scheduling and rendering capabilities. Its nice that when i move a detail or delete a plant, my callouts and schedules automatically update themselves. There is a LOT of up fron work and your project will be weighted heavily towards the front end. (Just getting all the info in there) but CDs are much simpler and coordination with in house architecture is very simple. We have our files linked together so she get my updates and vice versa. I also imported all of our site furnishings from sketchup and cad so that they are included in the renderings and such. Converting the CAD details to Revit was a large task but now they are all here so the next project will go much more smoothly.

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