What makes a good standard?

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Master Your Revit Templates and Standards 2/23/2011 Greg Hale, PE 1

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If the standard is “built-in” and does not require additional thought by the user, than it will be used. Systems that are simple, obvious, and straight forward will lead to greater adoption. Ie : IPOD. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of What makes a good standard?

Page 1: What makes a good standard?

Master Your Revit Templates and Standards

2/23/2011 Greg Hale, PE 1

Page 2: What makes a good standard?

Master Your Revit Templates and Standards

What makes a good standard?•If the standard is “built-in” and does not require additional thought by the user, than it will be used.

•Systems that are simple, obvious, and straight forward will lead to greater adoption. Ie: IPOD.

•As Phil Read puts it, every user wants “The quickest way to beer on Friday.” It’s that simple.

What does it mean to standardize Revit?•The majority of a company’s standard can revolve around a company template. Care should be taken to find the right balance between initial ease of use and your ability to update the standard.

•Not only are graphical standards set in a template, but project organization, presentation, materials, content, job tracking, material takeoffs, engineering, project defaults, and settings can all be predefined.

2/23/2011 Greg Hale, PE 2

Page 3: What makes a good standard?

Master Your Revit Templates and Standards

2/23/2011 Greg Hale, PE 3

Standards Categories

1 Views and Sheets2 Graphical Standards3 Annotation4 Content5 Parameters6 Miscellaneous

Questions to ask before creating a template.•Will you need multiple templates specific to disciplines, clients, or project types?

•Do you want to place all standard content into your template/s or keep them out to keep the file size down?

•How will you manage updates to the standards and templates.

Page 4: What makes a good standard?

Master Your Revit Templates and Standards

2/23/2011 Greg Hale, PE 4

Standards Categories

1 Views and Sheets2 Graphical Standards3 Annotation4 Content5 Parameters6 Miscellaneous

Some basics for project organization•Create all of your standard titleblocks•Decide how to standardize cover sheets•Create typical levels, views, and placeholder sheets.

•Establish standard schedules and legends•Define some typical browser and sheet organizations, types of views as well.

Project Browser•Revit Guidelines•Coordination•Exporting •Printing / Documentation

•Working / Modeling•Sheets by Discipline

Page 5: What makes a good standard?

Master Your Revit Templates and Standards

2/23/2011 Greg Hale, PE 5

Standards Categories

1 Views and Sheets2 Graphical

Standards3 Annotation4 Content5 Parameters6 Miscellaneous

Guidelines for graphical standards•Refine and test standard object styles•Customize Revit materials•Review linework settings•Adjust and standardize view settings

Linework Settings•Line styles, weights, and patterns

•Fill patterns and regions•Callout, Elevation, and Section Tags

Page 6: What makes a good standard?

Master Your Revit Templates and Standards

2/23/2011 Greg Hale, PE 6

Standards Categories

1 Views and Sheets2 Graphical

Standards3 Annotation4 Content5 Parameters6 Miscellaneous

View Settings•Visibility Graphics Settings•Color Schemes•View Filters•View Templates

Page 7: What makes a good standard?

Master Your Revit Templates and Standards

2/23/2011 Greg Hale, PE 7

Annotation Settings•Standard Text•Loaded Tags•Symbols•Keynotes (How do you approach these?)

Standards Categories

1 Views and Sheets2 Graphical Standards3 Annotation4 Content5 Parameters6 Miscellaneous

Page 8: What makes a good standard?

Master Your Revit Templates and Standards

2/23/2011 Greg Hale, PE 8

Standards Categories

1 Views and Sheets2 Graphical Standards3 Annotation4 Content5 Parameters6 Miscellaneous

Annotation Settings•Standard Text•Loaded Tags•Symbols•Keynotes (How do you approach these?)

Page 9: What makes a good standard?

Master Your Revit Templates and Standards

2/23/2011 Greg Hale, PE 9

Standards Categories

1 Views and Sheets2 Graphical Standards3 Annotation4 Content5 Parameters6 Miscellaneous

What content to put in your template• System Families (Walls, Floors, Ceilings, Roofs)• Loadable Families

• Generic or Detailed Content?• Do not use families derived from AutoCAD in template

• Source files specifically for client, discipline, or building type (3 ways to import)

• Transfer Project Standards• Insert from Views• Copy and Paste

Page 10: What makes a good standard?

Master Your Revit Templates and Standards

2/23/2011 Greg Hale, PE 10

Standards Categories

1 Views and Sheets2 Graphical Standards3 Annotation4 Content5 Parameters6 Miscellaneous

Why are parameters important?•Project Parameters

•Allow us to assign and organize data•Shared Parameters

•Allow us to assign and organize data consistently across files and projects

•This is especially important for firms sharing a certain scope of work.

Page 11: What makes a good standard?

Master Your Revit Templates and Standards

2/23/2011 Greg Hale, PE 11

Standards Categories

1 Views and Sheets2 Graphical Standards3 Annotation4 Content5 Parameters6 Miscellaneous

Miscellaneous items to consider•Track template changes•Keyboard Shortcuts•Considerations for upgrading templates

•Default Export Settings

•Leave some default values for tags•Grids, sheets, doors, windows, rooms, text styles, dimension styles

•Leave default object types•Walls, Floors, Ceilings, Roofs, etc.

•Run a purge and organize (minimize) the project browser