miroslav_s Posted January 1, 2016 Share Posted January 1, 2016 Hello to you all and Happy New Year. To my question. I started drawing my house, just for fun in Autocad Architecture. I created levels since my house has 3 floors. Every level represents one floor. For each floor or level I created separate drawing of course. What I was wondering is how you do it when you draw external walls. Do you draw for each floor external walls or do you place your external walls to cover hole building on one drawing/level. Hope you understand what I am asking. Best regards to you all. Miro Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BIGAL Posted January 2, 2016 Share Posted January 2, 2016 Have a look at this uses "thickness". As it has z values you can draw each floor at correct "elevation" you can then join together. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Andrew1979 Posted January 2, 2016 Share Posted January 2, 2016 I'm not sure I am 100% clear. But here goes. You have 3 levels to the building. Each level will have its own floor plan in a seperate AutoCAD .dwg file On each floor plan you will have the walls for each floor shown, not just one floor. The reason you always show the walls for each level is because each levels walls might change. But even if the building was just a rectangle box for 3 levels, you still show the external walls on each floor plan. Is that what you were asking? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
miroslav_s Posted January 3, 2016 Author Share Posted January 3, 2016 Hello Andrew1979, And YES! This is exactly what I was asking. I have 3 floors building where every construct is representing each floor. This is how I did it: 1. Basement (including internal walls, doors,windows and external walls) 2. First floor (including internal walls, doors,windows and external walls) 3. Second floor (including internal walls, doors,windows and external walls) 4. roof BUT Somewhere on internet I saw one ACA project showing building with several floors where external walls for hole building were shown on one construct and not seperatly. Like this: 1. Basement (including internal walls, doors,windows and external walls for all floor levels) 2. First floor (including internal walls, doors,windows) 3. Second floor (including internal walls, doors,windows ) 4. Roof Thanks again for helping me and HAPPY NEW YEAR. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
miroslav_s Posted January 3, 2016 Author Share Posted January 3, 2016 Ohhh I forgot to ask also regarding stairs settings. I can´t find on ACA (edit style) where I can change some settings for my stairs. The link is showing what I mean. http://prntscr.com/9lkazp Thanks in advance. Best regards to you all Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RobDraw Posted January 3, 2016 Share Posted January 3, 2016 You should not leave off any of the walls on any level, even if they are typical. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
authma Posted January 4, 2016 Share Posted January 4, 2016 This guide is a great place to get started if you just completed your initial training, or to refresh your memory if you use AutoCAD only occasionally. The included commands are grouped together according to types of activity, and are arranged to follow a general workflow. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RobDraw Posted January 4, 2016 Share Posted January 4, 2016 Something has me confused. Why do you have the floors in separate drawings (files)? You are drawing in 3D, so the exterior walls should be as high as the entire building. If you don't draw the exterior walls all the way up, your elevations will look like sections anywhere above the first floor. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
miroslav_s Posted January 4, 2016 Author Share Posted January 4, 2016 Hello, well I haven´t gotten so far as drawing sections and elevations on my project but I think you are right because I just did quick elevation drawing command from ACA and by the look it seems to show lines where external walls on each level begins and ends. I don´t want it to look that way so I guess the only right way is to draw external walls all the way up from ground to roof as one single external wall and not separate them for each level as I did. Look at the link here http://prntscr.com/9ly3nz so you can see what I mean. Answer to your question: yes I am drawing in ACA and 3D. You asked me also why do I have separate drawings for each floor. Well , I thought that is the right way, I don´t know. Something has me confused. Why do you have the floors in separate drawings (files)? You are drawing in 3D, so the exterior walls should be as high as the entire building. If you don't draw the exterior walls all the way up, your elevations will look like sections anywhere above the first floor. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RobDraw Posted January 4, 2016 Share Posted January 4, 2016 Okay, I thought you meant separate files. you should probably use more appropriate terminology. "Drawing" is a bit ambiguous as it can refer to files or layouts. I thought you were drawing the floors in separate files. To answer your question. The exterior walls should be drawn continuous until there is a change. You are trying to draw a model of the house. If it doesn't look right, it probably needs to done differently. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
miroslav_s Posted January 4, 2016 Author Share Posted January 4, 2016 Hi, Ok thanks for the advice. Okay, I thought you meant separate files. you should probably use more appropriate terminology. "Drawing" is a bit ambiguous as it can refer to files or layouts. I thought you were drawing the floors in separate files. To answer your question. The exterior walls should be drawn continuous until there is a change. You are trying to draw a model of the house. If it doesn't look right, it probably needs to done differently. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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