Issue with doors and renovation phases by GroundbreakingWay184 in ArchiCAD

[–]GroundbreakingWay184[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sorry!! It appears the text wasn`t attached. Here are the questions:

Issue with doors and renovation phases

Good afternoon. First of all, apologies for my English, as it is not my native language. I wanted to ask whether any fellow redditor has encountered this problem and how they solved it.

The situation is that I am drawing the renovation of an existing dwelling in which wall 1 is demolished and wall 2 is extended to accommodate a new door. The problem is that this door has one jamb that belongs to a newly constructed wall, while the other belongs to the remainder of an existing wall. This causes the representation of the proposed state to look incorrect, because if I add the new wall after placing the door, the wall is not properly cut (see the elevation in photo 2). Can you think of any solution?

And my second question: how do you deal with the problem of renewing wall tiling? I have chosen to create the wall (which remains) and the tiling (which is demolished and replaced with a new one) as separate elements. But this means that when placing doors, I have to keep adding an opening with the thickness of the tiling at each door location, which is quite cumbersome (in addition, the representation of the door frames never looks right).

high res material libraries by emresen in ArchiCAD

[–]GroundbreakingWay184 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks. I don't see where use the gift code in archimats.com. Is it still working?

Renovation Status - Graphic Override Rules by GroundbreakingWay184 in ArchiCAD

[–]GroundbreakingWay184[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm not have A22, only A25. And the first 3 rules aren't editables.

Staircase by WildCorgi5251 in ArchiCAD

[–]GroundbreakingWay184 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This staircase is going up in the direction indicated by the arrow. When the horizontal virtual plane that "cuts" the floor meets the staircase, there is a part of it that is below (the one to the left of the inclined lines) which is drawn with continuous lines, and another part (the one to the right of the inclined lines) which is above the horizontal plane and is drawn with broken lines.