I have sent a few emails through your website to inquire about your Revit courses. Is there a better way to connect with someone regarding questions before I enroll in a course?
I don't see any good reason of using Revit for interior designers .. all mentioned features can be done inside Sketchup and layout with much much easier and fun way .
Modeling existant building is a pain in sketchup, plus you can use points clouds in revit, that's used more and more, I personnaly had the chance to work with it several times and it's a real time saver ! It's also not really professionnal to give layout plans to professionnals, especialy if there are structural elements. I also cannot imagine how it's possible to draw them with sketchup (like floor/walls intersections in bioclimatic buildings sections). BUT you can use Vray in sketchup and 3D warehouse is a time saver too (at least on your first projects, before you have 90% of the assets you'll need in your server).
@@dirtyandnasty9011 excuses me , u can't give layout drawings cuz it's not professional , what r u talking a bout so how do u summit from revit or Autocad ( not a pdf ) and yet I can export Dwg from sketchup layout , second regarding walls , slabs .. etc u can use so many BIM plugins for sketchup such as Plusspec . I think u should inform yourself more and more about sketchup .
@@faresjawad3096 lol imagine you do a large scale project in SU layout. SU layout just lack a lot of features, its slow as well if you want to sync it with your 3d model. the dimension system is slow and inefficent, however, everything beats autocad, because auto cad is pos.
@@faresjawad3096 why u here assuming people on youtube leaving comments aren't professional as well. lmao, I'm pretty sure the project I was involved in was much larger than what he showed, and do u even own an architect license? or are you just an architect student who never work in this field before? lmao. while SketchUp is my favourite software, I could not agree with mostly what you have mentioned. have a nice day. cheers/ ps, I have used sketch up layout for more a 1000 hours, so I clearly understand its pros and cons, so I know what I'm talking about. while I'm not sure about you.
I have sent a few emails through your website to inquire about your Revit courses. Is there a better way to connect with someone regarding questions before I enroll in a course?
I don't see any good reason of using Revit for interior designers .. all mentioned features can be done inside Sketchup and layout with much much easier and fun way .
Modeling existant building is a pain in sketchup, plus you can use points clouds in revit, that's used more and more, I personnaly had the chance to work with it several times and it's a real time saver !
It's also not really professionnal to give layout plans to professionnals, especialy if there are structural elements. I also cannot imagine how it's possible to draw them with sketchup (like floor/walls intersections in bioclimatic buildings sections).
BUT you can use Vray in sketchup and 3D warehouse is a time saver too (at least on your first projects, before you have 90% of the assets you'll need in your server).
@@dirtyandnasty9011 excuses me , u can't give layout drawings cuz it's not professional , what r u talking a bout so how do u summit from revit or Autocad
( not a pdf ) and yet I can export Dwg from sketchup layout , second regarding walls , slabs .. etc u can use so many BIM plugins for sketchup such as Plusspec . I think u should inform yourself more and more about sketchup .
@@faresjawad3096 lol imagine you do a large scale project in SU layout. SU layout just lack a lot of features, its slow as well if you want to sync it with your 3d model. the dimension system is slow and inefficent, however, everything beats autocad, because auto cad is pos.
@@youtubeadsarecancer785 th-cam.com/video/vbuPrgf8J4c/w-d-xo.html
The answers are here from a professional architect .
@@faresjawad3096 why u here assuming people on youtube leaving comments aren't professional as well. lmao, I'm pretty sure the project I was involved in was much larger than what he showed, and do u even own an architect license? or are you just an architect student who never work in this field before? lmao. while SketchUp is my favourite software, I could not agree with mostly what you have mentioned. have a nice day. cheers/
ps, I have used sketch up layout for more a 1000 hours, so I clearly understand its pros and cons, so I know what I'm talking about. while I'm not sure about you.
Interior architects* lol