Mastering Revit Structure 2010 1st Edition, Kindle Edition
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- Length: 912 pages
- Enhanced Typesetting: Enabled
- Page Flip: Enabled
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Editorial Reviews
From the Back Cover
—From the Foreword by Nicolas Mangon, Building Industry Director, Autodesk, Inc.
Structure Your Designs the Revit Way
Whether you're a structural engineer, designer, or draftsperson, now you can become quickly productive in Revit Structure 2010 with this comprehensive guide. The expert author team combines years of engineering and Revit experience to give you detailed instruction in basic concepts and professional techniques, while also revealing Revit tricks, tips, and workarounds not well documented elsewhere.
Learn how to model structural elements, then delve into advanced family creation, standards development, modeling, visualizing, and analytics. Explore Revit Structure 2010's enhanced worksharing capabilities, the newly updated user interface, and improved interoperability with other programs. Packed with real-world solutions and striking examples in full color, this is your indispensable guide to Revit Structure.
Coverage includes:
- Understanding how parametric modeling frees you to focus on your designs
- Exploring the broad array of tools in Revit Structure's user interface
- Viewing and referencing plan, section, elevation, and model views—simultaneously—while you design
- Applying scheduling, annotation, and dimensioning info as you go, for speedier workflows
- Creating and presenting 3D visualizations that bring your designs to life
- Using analytical tools to test and simulate, then refine your designs
- Adding custom content and building your own component libraries
About the Author
About the Authors
Thomas S. Weir is Director of BIM and CAD operations at Brandow & Johnston in Los Angeles. He is co-chairman and founder of the L.A. Revit Users Group, moderates the Autodesk User Group International (AUGI) Revit Structural forum, teaches Revit Structure at Autodesk University, and wrote the first Autodesk Official Training Courseware for Revit Structure. Jamie D. Richardson is an associate and CAD/BIM Manager for Ericksen Roed & Associates in the Twin Cities area. He speaks at Autodesk University, is active in his local Revit User Group, and mentors students at local technical colleges. David J. Harrington, former president and former board member of AUGI, is currently a structural designer for Walter P. Moore. He writes for industry publications, is the technical editor for AUGIWorld magazine, teaches at Autodesk University, and maintains a popular blog (caddhelp.blogspot.com).
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.Product details
- ASIN : B004I6DDEM
- Publisher : Sybex; 1st edition (December 22, 2010)
- Publication date : December 22, 2010
- Language : English
- File size : 29081 KB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Not Enabled
- Print length : 912 pages
- Lending : Enabled
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Best Sellers Rank:
#2,498,811 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #320 in Computer Image Processing
- #587 in AutoCAD Books
- #631 in Architecture Drawing & Modelling
- Customer Reviews:
Customer reviews
Top reviews from the United States
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Fully met my expectations.
Packaging ok.
Deadline and delivery ok.
Continue using whenever the customs fees of Brazil permit.
Thank you.
second, I start reading it quite slow because I have no time left, anyway I found it very friendly and with useful topics just as if you are in a classroom with this guys giving you all this advice.
I hope I still enjoy it till it's last page. thks again. FH
The wonderful thing was the joy did not stop there. This book does not disappoint. Scattered throughout the book are "Real World Scenarios". Little vignettes of information that came from the practical minds of the authors. Things that they wanted to share apart from the systematic presentation of the topic. Also mixed in are questions that you should ponder - like "how much should I model?" that encourage you to think beyond the basics.
The book is also filled with step by step exercises. Each starts from a data set that can be downloaded from a companion website listed on page 51 (may be hard to find).
Insider tips and tricks are placed in the book to assist with the problems that you may encounter or to give you options. One that I found refreshing was the trick of using a wall to represent a column. They caution you that this may give the proper appearance but lack the property data you might need.
Each chapter ends with "the Bottom Line". A collection of reminders and questions that recall the content of the chapter and press you on to find new ways to use these tools. Clever idea.
One of the best chapters or sections is on worksharing and worksets. This presentation of the work flow and concepts is one of the best I have seen.
Just when you thought that the book was jammed with just about everything you could think of, there is a multi-page full color section on real projects. If you thought that structural work was all about square boxes, you need to look again. Seeing the bones of a facility in color is fascinating. No longer can you say "Revit can't do that" (well almost). There are small projects and very large projects shown.
Now you know that I am big on standards, so Chapter 17 is of great interest to me. Imagine a whole chapter on standards - GREAT!! Anyway, you can tell it is written by industry experts with many years of background in the trenches of CAD and BIM. Included in this chapter are tips on what to do and not do, how to make small changes that impact the whole team for the good and how to tweak Revit Structure to perform better.
To top it all off the Appendix is an escorted tour of the color gallery I mentioned above. These authors give you a personal guided tour of the projects they have worked on. Zooming in on details and explaining the nuances of the design and how they modeled it. What a value.
All in all, this book is a very valuable addition to your library. I would recommend it to novice and expert alike. The reward of digging into the meat of this book is that your Revit knowledge will expand and your ability to muscle the software into submission will increase.