

Sweeeeet!Īnyway, hoping for a better answer, but finding cool new ways to do things is also nice. To join walls you must intersect them, and use Geometry > Join. The new join type is expected to be different from the current.
#Revit wall join windows
Because the doors and windows where grouped, when the single level wall went away, the group automatically excluded the doors and windows, but then I could just Restore All Excluded and Ungroup. This property allows to get join type of wall and concrete beam and to set walls join type. The default wall join is set to butt join (see Figure 12.4). Then I went and deleted all the single floor walls. With the Wall Joins tool, you can edit wall join configurations. Then in section I pulled the first floor wall up to the top of the third floor walls, ignoring all the warnings. Smart Walls is a powerful add-on for managing walls in Autodesk® Revit®, empowering you to rapidly disassemble layers into different wall types, fully control joins and gap distances, split walls into separate panels with predefined settings, insert gravity points, and manage information with an export-to-Excel feature. In this case there are groups for the second and third floors. I put all the doors and windows and such on each floor that was going to "loose" a wall in a group. So, is there a way to join those walls vertically so that the hosting is maintained? This would be a lot faster than the alternative.īut if not, the approach I am finding useful is this, which is pretty cool. But there are a bunch of doors and windows that we really don't want to redo. When walls intersect, Revit Architecture creates a butt join by default and cleans up the display in plan view, removing visible edges between the joined. Now we have decided to do a brick facade, and we would like to join all the walls to make the brick hatch easier to deal with, to manage the wall in Revit the way it will be built, etc. A project was started (in SD) and the exterior walls where done on a floor by floor basis, with doors and windows added. But two identical walls stacked vertically? Can I join them? It seems not, tho' if that is true it seems like a good wishlist item. If I draw a wall in plan, then draw a second identical wall with identical alignment off the end, Revit magically joins the two into one wall.
