For those who were wondering, you can download all of the project files and access 100+ Revit tutorials on my website successfularchistudent.com/revit/ Otherwise, feel free to follow along with the free videos here on UA-cam. I appreciate your support!
Kyle Kyle Kyle you just saved me man, i started taking revit and lets just say my Prof isnt the best. This is just my second video but you got me feeling myself, this is amazing thank you!!
Seconded... This is not a class... It's a study hall. 😒((All this tuition and travel just to watch youtube videos from someone else)) So I am glad to have found a good in depth and non-boring person to watch.
I watched so many and ended up learning nothing, im just on the second video yet I started to like revit and want to learn more about it. You made it look so easy, the tutorial is very informative, well explained and interesting, keep up the good work!
Enjoying the course so far, I'm picking up Revit for a new position with really no prior experience in CAD software. You're touching on some stuff the other courses glossed over, very nice. Would like it if you would slow down a little bit after entering in some of the info to give people following along a little more time to see what you're doing. A specific example for some context is when you were adjusting some of the flooring layer thickness. An extra second or two on that screen after you enter the last measurement before you hit 'OK' and close the screen would be great.
One thing that may need mentioning is that in order to create continuous lines without having to select or pick up from the previous point, you need to check the "chain" box under the tool set bar. I couldn't figure that out for days and it was driving me nuts.
Hey Kyle, thank you so much for these videos. I was wondering before starting the model, can i just built/duplicate all the floor types that I'd be using and then start modeling and change the floors as I go?
I'm an experienced HVAC guy (with a dollop of other MEP trade understanding as a result) and have 2 questions as a result, 1) Does going from square one give me foundational knowledge, or is it superfluous? (as in, should I focus on MEP?) , and, 2) Between you, Ascent (book training), and a tutor once a week sufficient, or am I (for resume purposes as well) benefited by a $4000 (VDCI etc) school as well? (using the previous 3 examples as "pre-learning") I need to make a career change. Thanks so much.
@@raindogs451 Hi Matt. Thanks for the questions. Going from square one is a great way to go. Having foundational skills are key for understanding the user interface and the projects/models you work on. It would be very difficult to use only the MEP tools without having an understanding of how the overall model works. I do recommend going through the whole course. As for your second question, I think UA-cam alone would suffice. There's enough content to answer any and all your questions. The book training and tutor are also invaluable resources that I highly commend you using. If you are worried about your resume, a school course on Revit would be helpful, but it's an expensive way to add "skilled with Revit" on your cover letter, when you'll learn all the skills doing what you are now. Cheers Kyle
Im starting to learn revit from your videos. I have a question on the part when you changed the properties on floor i searched timber but it didnt give me that material, do you perhaps know or what can i do when i search for specific materials and dont find them? Thanks in advance
Revit usually calls it “wood” which always annoys me. If you can’t find it though, you can make your own materials. I believe I cover that in this course I just don’t remember at what part 😅
So I'm trying to learn Revit for structural engineering and hoping the basics will translate. Are there major differences with how I will approach the software? Or should I still get a good handle with these videos?
These videos will cover all the basics that translate across all disciplines. You can probably skip a few parts if you find them not relevant, such as rendering at the end. After this course I'd suggest checking out a specific engineering course though
Hi, thankyou for these informative videos. i'm drawing the floors out but keep hitting this awful error "Lines cannot intersect each other. The highlighted lines currently intersect.@ Altho, ive tried the split tool, this error can be quite tiring. is there a quick way to go about it to avoid the overlapping?
Without having the floor plans it is imposible to draw anything. It is ok to include ad free videos, textures and more resources in your web, but I feel that you should probably at least give us the floor plans for free, because if not it is imposible to work so we have to buy it, hence it is not a free course. Beside that great videos, thanks
Hello Kyle, Thank you for creating these Revit tutorials. I purchased your entire begginers package. I have come across a problem where my floor doesn’t show if i phase it in existing and then create it. It is visible when phasing is set to new construction. Kindly help me solve this query. Kind regards
great work. although it kind of bothered me that you drew the slabs under the walls with their finishes, it makes no sense to have a tile or oak flooring under a wall right? i guess in that case you’d have to draw these floors without including the walls and then later draw the floors under the walls as just concrete slabs, which is more time consuming 😅
I wonder when designing the floor, isn't it more pratical to add a layer of concrete flooring (considering the entire floor is probably mate out of 1 material) and then adding the 'pieces' of finish as an other layer on top? As an exercise and explanation it was great though
hi, i´m learning a lot with your videos but i was wondering if i can skip the part when you put materials on the floor and do this on sketchup or directly on a rendering software?
You can definitely do it on a rendering software but Revit is quite smart and will show the materials in all your plans, section, elevations etc as well as renders in enscape and rendering plugins. It’s a much simpler workflow for everyday drawing sets but if your focus is to have a nice rendering you can definitely do this in another software
When i was editing the hatch the scale was jacked and i cant seem to fix it i am doing the same thing as you but the preview window is 1:1 while yours is 1:20 and then in the project the hatch doesnt show up unless i change the viewing scale to 1:1. how do i fix this ?
THe voice got some reverb around halfway through and became distracting when trying to listen, just for future refernce :) but thanks for the awesome information
My microphone cut out for a moment when filming the course :( I only noticed after filming the entire thing! Appreciate your comment, I've made it a habit to check my mic's levels when recording now
Hi, I know I'm a bit late on this video. On the last part of the tutorial where you pasted a clipboard to align the 2nd lvl floor, don't you think you've created a different reference point and possibly made everything out of alignment? I don't have revit experience, I'm talking base on actual construction experience where out of alignment problems start when projecting upper levels. Please enlighten me. Thank you!
Hey, I'm not quite sure what part of the video you're referring to but I can't see there being an issue from doing what you've mentioned. If you can refer to the particular timecode I do this it may help. Cheers & I appreciate your curiosity
Thank you so much for this. I’m curious, why do you start by drawing floors instead of walls? I see so many other videos where people start by drawing the walls, it makes me curious about your approach.
I suppose either way would work, but I find it easier building the slab first as this is the approach in real life. The slab gets poured and the walls are built on top of the slab. For me, it helps set a boundary for the walls to be placed in Revit.
@@kylesinko Just trying to understand, isn't better or right to built first the whole concrete floor of each elevation (instead of each room separately) and walls and after the main concrete structure is built to start adding specified floors of each room (wood, rock etc)?
@@kylesinko im a second year TU Delft archi student i just wanna say thanks for al your videos. Im starting working for a archiburoo this week and i didn't learn revit at uni (they use rhino) your videos are amazing to get learn revit.
@@Archiischool haha it comes out in 7 days! If I can explain it here, what you need to do is move the elevation markers in a ground floor plan view. Be sure to click the arrow on the marker to reveal the elevation view's depth/width. You'll see a long bar appear. Anything in front of that is shown in the elevation, anything behind is not. Hopefully that helps
I just started learning and following your videos but I'm using Revit 2025 and many of the icons you mention are not the same on my computer, what should I do?
Hi! I did all the steps along with the video, although I'm working on something different. I still am not able to get the floor texture to show up. Do you have any suggestions for that? Thanks!
Hey, sorry for the late response. Hopefully you worked it out. It depends if you're using a model or drafting pattern. A drafting pattern only shows in 2d views whereas a model pattern shows in all views, including 3ds.
@@kylesinko I was having the same issue too, and switching from model or drafting didn't change the visibility issue. I was able to fix it by doing the following: On the properties window, go to the Visibility/Graphics line and click [Edit...] A pop up window will appear - scroll down to Floors and under the Patterns column, click the button that says [Hidden] A new pop up window will appear - select the box for Visible on Foreground and Background
When I turn my view to 3d, all I can see is the hatch’s on the floor but everything else is just white and not grey like yours, is there a setting that you changed to get that?
You might have been using drafting patterns instead of model patterns. The latter shows up in all views and the model, whereas drafting patterns only show in 2D drafting views.
I was having the same issue too, I was able to fix it by doing the following: On the properties window, go to the Visibility/Graphics line and click [Edit...] A pop up window will appear - scroll down to Floors and under the Patterns column, click the button that says [Hidden] A new pop up window will appear - select the box for Visible on Foreground and Background
Do you always do floors before walls or is it just because to are modelling an existing building. When I design from new I always go walls first on auto but now this dinosaur has to get relevant and learn revit
I'm confused why you started with a floor plan instead of a blank canvas; I'm trying to model my house from scratch. Did I miss something in the first video?
Hi I bought your course online and I'm having a hard time adding the balcony around 34:00. My balcony is only visible in plan but not 3d. Do you have any idea why this is happening? Is there some sort of visibility setting that affects this? Thanks.
Well done figuring it out yourself! And thank you for purchasing the course Isabella. 9 times out of 10 when you can't see something in 1 view but can another, the problem is the phasing. Good luck :)
HELP! the textures don't appear on top of the floors when i follow the tutorial on editing them and giving them patterns. i can't find anything on google. someone help.
nvm figured it out. If any of you are having the same problem just go to view > graphics > visibility and you can search floor there and then there's patterns column and if its hidden it'll say there. click on it and change it. make sure to check visibility and choose No Override.
Thank you for tNice tutorials video! I just got soft softs today, and even with the guidebook, I was lost. TNice tutorials video taught even better than
Yes, but not like you would in Rhino or Sketchup. They're not called U or V values, but you can change the dimensions of a texture in the material editor under the appearance tab
Hi Sohan, my courses are available on my website successfularchistudent.com/courses-for-architecture-students/ Prices are listed in USD but let me know if you have any issues ordering. You can contact me at kyle@successfularchistudent.com Cheers! Appreciate your support
maybe I run to the conclusion, but we don't place tiles and timber on the floor beneath the wall, not sure if we gonna address this later, but it bothers me, will the wall remove it?
hi, i´m learning a lot with your videos but i was wondering if i can skip the part when you put materials on the floor and do this on sketchup or directly on a rendering software?
If you're only doing a sketch design/visualisaiton, yes, absolutely. However, the reason for doing it in Revit is because you're able to assign intelligent information to the model (the "I" in "BIM").
For those who were wondering, you can download all of the project files and access 100+ Revit tutorials on my website successfularchistudent.com/revit/
Otherwise, feel free to follow along with the free videos here on UA-cam. I appreciate your support!
Kyle Kyle Kyle you just saved me man, i started taking revit and lets just say my Prof isnt the best. This is just my second video but you got me feeling myself, this is amazing thank you!!
Glad to hear Hamza! Cheers man and all the best
Seconded... This is not a class... It's a study hall. 😒((All this tuition and travel just to watch youtube videos from someone else)) So I am glad to have found a good in depth and non-boring person to watch.
I watched so many and ended up learning nothing, im just on the second video yet I started to like revit and want to learn more about it. You made it look so easy, the tutorial is very informative, well explained and interesting, keep up the good work!
That is so kind of you! Thank you very much. I'm glad you're enjoying the course.
Cheers
Thanks for the content mate. 1st time I don't fall asleep during a Revit video
Glad to hear mate! Cheers
@@kylesinko going through all of them atm. Definitely makes a difference modelling a building and learn commands needed along the way.
really appricate this dude actually saved my degree lol
You're so welcome, glad to hear ahaha. Cheers James & good luck
Enjoying the course so far, I'm picking up Revit for a new position with really no prior experience in CAD software. You're touching on some stuff the other courses glossed over, very nice. Would like it if you would slow down a little bit after entering in some of the info to give people following along a little more time to see what you're doing. A specific example for some context is when you were adjusting some of the flooring layer thickness. An extra second or two on that screen after you enter the last measurement before you hit 'OK' and close the screen would be great.
Thank you so much for the feedback Duncan! I will keep that in the back of my mind when editing courses in the future. Cheers!
One thing that may need mentioning is that in order to create continuous lines without having to select or pick up from the previous point, you need to check the "chain" box under the tool set bar. I couldn't figure that out for days and it was driving me nuts.
Much love from The United States :)
Cheers!
You are brilliant Kyle
Thank you!
Absolutely amazing! Your way of teaching is really what i was looking for.
Thank you, it was sooo useful. You are an amazing teacher.
Thank you so much! I'm glad you found it useful. Cheers
nice, so much better than the linkedin learning course
Very glad to hear! Thanks a lot Tom
2 videos down and more to go your videos are very helpful to do in practical level.
Hey Kyle, thank you so much for these videos. I was wondering before starting the model, can i just built/duplicate all the floor types that I'd be using and then start modeling and change the floors as I go?
I'm an experienced HVAC guy (with a dollop of other MEP trade understanding as a result) and have 2 questions as a result, 1) Does going from square one give me foundational knowledge, or is it superfluous? (as in, should I focus on MEP?) , and, 2) Between you, Ascent (book training), and a tutor once a week sufficient, or am I (for resume purposes as well) benefited by a $4000 (VDCI etc) school as well? (using the previous 3 examples as "pre-learning") I need to make a career change. Thanks so much.
I should add, commercial MEP is my focus.
@@raindogs451 Hi Matt. Thanks for the questions. Going from square one is a great way to go. Having foundational skills are key for understanding the user interface and the projects/models you work on. It would be very difficult to use only the MEP tools without having an understanding of how the overall model works. I do recommend going through the whole course. As for your second question, I think UA-cam alone would suffice. There's enough content to answer any and all your questions. The book training and tutor are also invaluable resources that I highly commend you using. If you are worried about your resume, a school course on Revit would be helpful, but it's an expensive way to add "skilled with Revit" on your cover letter, when you'll learn all the skills doing what you are now.
Cheers
Kyle
@@kylesinko Thanks so much for taking the time, Kyle!
@@raindogs451 My pleasure! All the best
Mate you skipped a massive part at 14:49. How did you get to the Select File window to open the material.
Hey Kyle, I appreciate the videos. I wish the US would adopt the metric system so I wouldn't be thrown off every time you say millimeters. 😒
Haha sorry! I should really include a conversion whenever I mention a dimension. Hope you're able to still follow along
hi ,I m just on a second video but i couldent find the photo of plan.where is it?and thanks for your the great lesson
Whenever I put floors I cant see them they become invincible
Im starting to learn revit from your videos. I have a question on the part when you changed the properties on floor i searched timber but it didnt give me that material, do you perhaps know or what can i do when i search for specific materials and dont find them?
Thanks in advance
Revit usually calls it “wood” which always annoys me. If you can’t find it though, you can make your own materials. I believe I cover that in this course I just don’t remember at what part 😅
So I'm trying to learn Revit for structural engineering and hoping the basics will translate. Are there major differences with how I will approach the software? Or should I still get a good handle with these videos?
These videos will cover all the basics that translate across all disciplines. You can probably skip a few parts if you find them not relevant, such as rendering at the end. After this course I'd suggest checking out a specific engineering course though
Hi, thankyou for these informative videos. i'm drawing the floors out but keep hitting this awful error "Lines cannot intersect each other. The highlighted lines currently intersect.@ Altho, ive tried the split tool, this error can be quite tiring. is there a quick way to go about it to avoid the overlapping?
Without having the floor plans it is imposible to draw anything. It is ok to include ad free videos, textures and more resources in your web, but I feel that you should probably at least give us the floor plans for free, because if not it is imposible to work so we have to buy it, hence it is not a free course. Beside that great videos, thanks
hi you can full screen and screen shot it, eitherway it is low res
It doesn't have to be the same plan
I got a one from Pinterest and working on it
Hello Kyle,
Thank you for creating these Revit tutorials.
I purchased your entire begginers package.
I have come across a problem where my floor doesn’t show if i phase it in existing and then create it.
It is visible when phasing is set to new construction.
Kindly help me solve this query.
Kind regards
great work. although it kind of bothered me that you drew the slabs under the walls with their finishes, it makes no sense to have a tile or oak flooring under a wall right? i guess in that case you’d have to draw these floors without including the walls and then later draw the floors under the walls as just concrete slabs, which is more time consuming 😅
I wonder when designing the floor, isn't it more pratical to add a layer of concrete flooring (considering the entire floor is probably mate out of 1 material) and then adding the 'pieces' of finish as an other layer on top? As an exercise and explanation it was great though
hi, i´m learning a lot with your videos but i was wondering if i can skip the part when you put materials on the floor and do this on sketchup or directly on a rendering software?
You can definitely do it on a rendering software but Revit is quite smart and will show the materials in all your plans, section, elevations etc as well as renders in enscape and rendering plugins. It’s a much simpler workflow for everyday drawing sets but if your focus is to have a nice rendering you can definitely do this in another software
When i was editing the hatch the scale was jacked and i cant seem to fix it i am doing the same thing as you but the preview window is 1:1 while yours is 1:20 and then in the project the hatch doesnt show up unless i change the viewing scale to 1:1. how do i fix this ?
THe voice got some reverb around halfway through and became distracting when trying to listen, just for future refernce :) but thanks for the awesome information
My microphone cut out for a moment when filming the course :( I only noticed after filming the entire thing! Appreciate your comment, I've made it a habit to check my mic's levels when recording now
Can we just draw one big slab then add a fill for the floor material in each room kind of like in archicad?
Great content! you make it very easy to watch. Thank you so much
In the video when you say 'stud', you actually mean 'joist' correct? Since its a video on floors and not walls? Just kept me confused
Correcto, I made an oopsie
What subjects did you need to have do architecture
hi where is the what is a floor plan video you refer to (cut plane) in this video. i cannot find it on your website.
Maybe is because I have the Revit LT (light version) but I just cant find the scale icon to scale the floor plan image
Thank you very much bro. Much love. Peace.
thanks for your hard work mate
You are so welcome, thank you!
Do you maybe got the floor plan that you use for me? that would help a lot because i dont have a good floor plan of my house
Sure thing, you can grab it from my website: successfularchistudent.com/courses/revit/
Cheers
Nice lessons,thank you
Hi I'm a beginner in Revit architecture and will want you to send me more tutorial videos that are easy to understand
Plenty more to come! Stay tuned
@@kylesinko ok thanks
where can i find the img he is drawing over??? cant find it anywhere. or how do you guys do it?
If you make the walls, do you automatically make the floor?
Thanks Kyle :D
why I don't have several floor presets like you do? My revit version is 2017
Thanks
You're welcome :)
Hi, I know I'm a bit late on this video. On the last part of the tutorial where you pasted a clipboard to align the 2nd lvl floor, don't you think you've created a different reference point and possibly made everything out of alignment? I don't have revit experience, I'm talking base on actual construction experience where out of alignment problems start when projecting upper levels. Please enlighten me. Thank you!
Hey, I'm not quite sure what part of the video you're referring to but I can't see there being an issue from doing what you've mentioned. If you can refer to the particular timecode I do this it may help. Cheers & I appreciate your curiosity
Hello, thank you, this will be fun😁👍😊
Glad to have you on board :D
Thank you😇
Thank you so much for this. I’m curious, why do you start by drawing floors instead of walls? I see so many other videos where people start by drawing the walls, it makes me curious about your approach.
I suppose either way would work, but I find it easier building the slab first as this is the approach in real life. The slab gets poured and the walls are built on top of the slab. For me, it helps set a boundary for the walls to be placed in Revit.
@@kylesinko Just trying to understand, isn't better or right to built first the whole concrete floor of each elevation (instead of each room separately) and walls and after the main concrete structure is built to start adding specified floors of each room (wood, rock etc)?
can i access your floor plan without paying because i would love to practice with it.
Unfortunately not sorry, but you are welcome to follow along with these videos for free! Cheers
i bought the course but where do i actually watch it/ acces the materials and floor plan and such
Thanks a lot Axel! You can find and download all the resources under the first lesson named "Introduction".
@@kylesinko im a second year TU Delft archi student i just wanna say thanks for al your videos. Im starting working for a archiburoo this week and i didn't learn revit at uni (they use rhino) your videos are amazing to get learn revit.
That’s awesome! Thanks so much for your support. All the best with the new gig!
In Revit, I can view my South and West elevations correctly, but when I click North or East elevations I actually see a section. How do I change this?
This is actually shown in part 9! Elevations are controlled with the elevation markers. Stay tuned, it's well demonstrated in the video
@@kylesinko Perfect. Its the last bit to complete for a competition so hurry up bro 😂
@@Archiischool haha it comes out in 7 days! If I can explain it here, what you need to do is move the elevation markers in a ground floor plan view. Be sure to click the arrow on the marker to reveal the elevation view's depth/width. You'll see a long bar appear. Anything in front of that is shown in the elevation, anything behind is not. Hopefully that helps
I just started learning and following your videos but I'm using Revit 2025 and many of the icons you mention are not the same on my computer, what should I do?
The tutorials will still make sense, it may be worth I update this course down the track. Potentially in the new year
Hi!
I did all the steps along with the video, although I'm working on something different. I still am not able to get the floor texture to show up. Do you have any suggestions for that?
Thanks!
Hey, sorry for the late response. Hopefully you worked it out. It depends if you're using a model or drafting pattern. A drafting pattern only shows in 2d views whereas a model pattern shows in all views, including 3ds.
@@kylesinko I was having the same issue too, and switching from model or drafting didn't change the visibility issue. I was able to fix it by doing the following:
On the properties window, go to the Visibility/Graphics line and click [Edit...]
A pop up window will appear - scroll down to Floors and under the Patterns column, click the button that says [Hidden]
A new pop up window will appear - select the box for Visible on Foreground and Background
this was my problem too, and i expirement, discovered that the patterns was hidden in the floorplan properties
@@chrismorris1201this is much helpful Thank you
When I turn my view to 3d, all I can see is the hatch’s on the floor but everything else is just white and not grey like yours, is there a setting that you changed to get that?
You might have been using drafting patterns instead of model patterns. The latter shows up in all views and the model, whereas drafting patterns only show in 2D drafting views.
I was having the same issue too, I was able to fix it by doing the following:
On the properties window, go to the Visibility/Graphics line and click [Edit...]
A pop up window will appear - scroll down to Floors and under the Patterns column, click the button that says [Hidden]
A new pop up window will appear - select the box for Visible on Foreground and Background
@@chrismorris1201 awesome! Thanks so much
why are my materials in revit doesn't have like yours, I downloaded all the contents in revit website
Do you always do floors before walls or is it just because to are modelling an existing building.
When I design from new I always go walls first on auto but now this dinosaur has to get relevant and learn revit
Nowadays I tend to do walls first but either way works fine
I'm confused why you started with a floor plan instead of a blank canvas; I'm trying to model my house from scratch. Did I miss something in the first video?
In the company that you work for usually start a project doing the floors first, or is this just for the tutorial?
It’s pretty common to do it this way, I’ve seen people to do it other ways but yes at work we start with the levels and floors
Hi I bought your course online and I'm having a hard time adding the balcony around 34:00. My balcony is only visible in plan but not 3d. Do you have any idea why this is happening? Is there some sort of visibility setting that affects this? Thanks.
Never mind just figured it out!!! turns out I was drawing the balcony as a new construction instead of an existing one.
Well done figuring it out yourself! And thank you for purchasing the course Isabella. 9 times out of 10 when you can't see something in 1 view but can another, the problem is the phasing. Good luck :)
Thanks so much !!!!!!!!
You're most welcome! Thanks for watching
thanks, you so important for me
Nice shirt. Up the irons!
🤘🤘
Hello there, I purchased the Revit Classes and none of the zip folders work. I cannot extract them. I don’t know how to get into contact with you.
I've emailed, snapchat you and still have not received any responses.
HELP! the textures don't appear on top of the floors when i follow the tutorial on editing them and giving them patterns. i can't find anything on google. someone help.
nvm figured it out. If any of you are having the same problem just go to view > graphics > visibility and you can search floor there and then there's patterns column and if its hidden it'll say there. click on it and change it. make sure to check visibility and choose No Override.
Thank you for tNice tutorials video! I just got soft softs today, and even with the guidebook, I was lost. TNice tutorials video taught even better than
When importing textures can you change U values for materials?
Yes, but not like you would in Rhino or Sketchup. They're not called U or V values, but you can change the dimensions of a texture in the material editor under the appearance tab
my system is not showing generic 150mm wall
Thnks kyle❤
good stuff .. keep it up
Thanks a lot! Will do
I am in Bangladesh how can I purchase your course.
Hi Sohan, my courses are available on my website successfularchistudent.com/courses-for-architecture-students/
Prices are listed in USD but let me know if you have any issues ordering. You can contact me at kyle@successfularchistudent.com
Cheers! Appreciate your support
how to download the floor plan?
You can access it by purchasing the course on my website: successfularchistudent.com/revit/
Cheers Amien
maybe I run to the conclusion, but we don't place tiles and timber on the floor beneath the wall, not sure if we gonna address this later, but it bothers me, will the wall remove it?
Correct. This is usually solved in the detailing of the project at a later stage. For now it's just important to get the walls and floors in.
Hi Your website down
Sorry for late response. Resolved a few hours later. Cheers
25:22
floor view 28:00
How to make portfolio for desings
I an like if you make it on there
first course i can actually pay attention to. go to sleep in the others
Website is opening but there is no video is playing
Anyway plss come fast with a new coarse (Intermediate level)
Please come fast broo 🙁🙁
mac
GOOD JOB. LOVE IT
hi, i´m learning a lot with your videos but i was wondering if i can skip the part when you put materials on the floor and do this on sketchup or directly on a rendering software?
If you're only doing a sketch design/visualisaiton, yes, absolutely. However, the reason for doing it in Revit is because you're able to assign intelligent information to the model (the "I" in "BIM").