From the course: Revit 2022: Essential Training for Structure (Metric)

Adding grids to the model

From the course: Revit 2022: Essential Training for Structure (Metric)

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Adding grids to the model

- [Illustrator] With a traditional structural plan, you're not going to get very far without a grid system. This video's objective is to use our architectural underlay to set up a grid system. We'll add grids to the core center line of the exterior architectural walls, then we'll add some grids to some of the major demising partitions within our model. In Revit, I'm going to go to Open, I'm going to browse to Chapter 2 this time, and I'll grab my Structural 04 model. Of course, you can use any model that you want to put grids in. I'll click open. In the project browser, let's go to Structural Plan Level one. In our properties of our view, let's scroll down till we find View Template. Let's go Floor Plan Coordination, we'll click on that. And I want to set my detail level, instead, of course, we'll click the drop down here and we'll set it to fine. Let's click Apply, let's click Okay. Let's add some grids. Zoom in on this corner of the building, go to the Structure tab, click the grid button right here. On the Draw panel, click the Pick Lines button. If we hover over the exact center line of this wall, notice that we get a little blue, temporary alignment line. Once you see that right in the core center pick it. Similar to our levels, we have a little grip that we can pick, and we can drag up. We'll drag our bubble up to about here. If we go down to the bottom of our building, we have another grip. We can grab it, and we can drag it down. Now, we can click on the little show bubble button, just like we did on our level, and there's grid one. Hit Esc a couple of times, select Grid Line One, and we're going to click the copy button right here. Let's make sure we constrain it, which is kind of like turning the Ortho line on and AutoCAD, and we'll click Multiple. I'm going to zoom in. I don't want to pick a point down in here 'cause we might get the wrong snap point. So, I'll pick a point just above our building, right on our grid line right here. Good. Now, if I scroll in a little bit, I can grab the center line of this wall. Notice, that it gives me column line two. Grab the center line of this wall, grab the center line of this wall, grab the center line of this wall, and zoom in, and grab the center line of this wall. Hit Esc a few times. Now, I want to select the grid line six, right click and create similar. Now, scrolling to here, and I want to select the end point of where our curved wall meets our straight wall right here. This one's a little tricky, like that point there. Now, just like our levels, if we pull it up to here, it aligns with it, pick that. And we have a grip on the bottom, and we can drag that down. We can turn on our bubble here, hit Esc a couple of times. Now, it's put in our horizontal grids. Right click on column line one and create similar. On the Draw panel, click the Pick Lines button, and select the midpoint of your horizontal wall here. Grab your grip, drag it out, and we can turn on our bubble. I don't want that to be eighth though, so select the blue eight, and type in a capital A, and click off of it. Hit Esc a few times, select column line A, click the copy button. Constraint and multiple should be on by default now. I'll click a base point here, pick a spot along that wall, a spot along this wall, a spot along this wall, and this one, and then the center line of this wall here, then we'll hit Esc a couple of times. On the opposite, I noticed that we can select the grid bubble, pick it and let's drag 'em all out, so they're out past a building a decent amount. Hit Esc a couple of times. Now, I want to put a radial grid line here. Right click on grid B, create similar. On the Draw panel, click the Pick lines button. Now, I want to create another grid, it's going to be a radial grid that goes in here. If I select column line B, I'm going to right click and Create Similar. On my Draw panel, I'll click my Pick Lines button, and for my offset, I'll type 152. Zoom in to this wall, and I'm going to offset this down like that. Notice that I have the grip the same as I had on the other ones, I can drag this in, and Revit's going to just position it kind of right there. I'll grab this one, I'll drag that in, and I'm going to turn on that grid. There we go! Let's add two more, hit Esc a couple of times, right click on column line B or any column line will work. Now, I'm going to go down to Create Similar. Now, I want it to be at the very center line of this grid, but notice that Revit kind of jumps around and makes it hard to select. So, if I type SC for Snap Center, and hover over grid line G, notice that I get a little center line snap. So, once I see that, I'm going to select column line G, and I can track it up to 45 degrees. See how it kind of snaps in? So, I have my comm line H here, I'll pick this spot rate here, hit Esc a couple of times. Now, I'm going to change this instead of H, I'm going to call this B, capital B.1 click off of it, hit Esc a couple of times. Now, I'm going to select B 1, and I want to mirror it. So, I will click on Mirror, Draw Axis, and I'll come down to either the center or the end point, whatever shows up first for you, pick a base point, move your cursor out horizontally, and then pick this point, hit Esc a couple of times. I just want to relabel this to D.9. You can just click off of it, hit Esc a couple of times, let's zoom out, there it is, and save your model. That's how you create a Structural Grid.

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