![]() You could go into each object (floor, wall etc) and make sure all the materials are the same. The problem is that Revit only wants to join surfaces correctly IF they are the same material. You do everything right, join the two adjacent surfaces – and there is still an ugly join line! When you use the Join Geometry tool in Revit, you may notice that it sometimes just doesn’t seem to ‘work’. Not much more work than the old in-place deal. Ours are Generic models (on a subcategory called Casework) so we can successfully use the join tool, and line based for ease of use…Īh youze guys are chickens I made this one in less than five minutes from scratch. AC’s are nice, but since they havent made one that is multiple point with point number dictated on the fly, im not making 7 different families so i can have a 2, 3, 4, 5 and so on.Īlex Page (Generic Model, but using subcategory): It reports quantities correctly but conservatively, since a mitered corner reports both full lengths. Ours are generic models, non-line based, and we join geometry. From RFO:Īaron Maller (using Generic Model, non adaptive): There are various opinions on how to handle this. Standard Casework families can not join geometry in the project environment, but Generic Models can. ![]()
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