• Revit

Create structural floors in Revit

Create structural floors in your building engineering model.


Tutorial resources

These downloadable resources will be used to complete this tutorial:


00:03

In Revit, you create floors by defining their boundaries, either by picking walls or by using drawing tools.

00:10

When floors are created, they are offset downward from the level on which they are created.

00:16

Take note that architectural floors and structural floors are essentially created in the same way.

00:22

The main difference is that structural floors create analytical models and structural parameters,

00:27

and architectural floors typically have more finish information.

00:31

On the Structure ribbon, in the Structure panel, expand the Floor drop-down and click Floor: Structural.

00:39

When you do, the ribbon changes to the Modify|Create Floor Boundary contextual ribbon,

00:45

and in the Draw panel, Boundary Line is selected by default.

00:48

Expand the Type Selector and select the type of floor you want to create.

00:53

In the Draw Panel, Select Rectangle.

00:57

In the Properties palette, you can specify the Level and a Height Offset From Level, if necessary.

01:04

Also, since this is a structural floor, Structural is selected by default.

01:09

To define the floor, move the cursor into the drawing area and click grid intersection 1A to specify the first corner of the rectangle.

01:18

Then, click grid intersection 3C to complete the rectangle.

01:23

Notice the double lines on the top horizontal boundary edge.

01:27

This indicates the span direction of the floor, which you can change from the Draw panel by selecting Span Direction.

01:33

Once the sketch is complete and the floor is spanning in the proper direction, click Finish Edit Mode.

01:40

You now know how to easily create and modify structural floors in Revit.

Video transcript

00:03

In Revit, you create floors by defining their boundaries, either by picking walls or by using drawing tools.

00:10

When floors are created, they are offset downward from the level on which they are created.

00:16

Take note that architectural floors and structural floors are essentially created in the same way.

00:22

The main difference is that structural floors create analytical models and structural parameters,

00:27

and architectural floors typically have more finish information.

00:31

On the Structure ribbon, in the Structure panel, expand the Floor drop-down and click Floor: Structural.

00:39

When you do, the ribbon changes to the Modify|Create Floor Boundary contextual ribbon,

00:45

and in the Draw panel, Boundary Line is selected by default.

00:48

Expand the Type Selector and select the type of floor you want to create.

00:53

In the Draw Panel, Select Rectangle.

00:57

In the Properties palette, you can specify the Level and a Height Offset From Level, if necessary.

01:04

Also, since this is a structural floor, Structural is selected by default.

01:09

To define the floor, move the cursor into the drawing area and click grid intersection 1A to specify the first corner of the rectangle.

01:18

Then, click grid intersection 3C to complete the rectangle.

01:23

Notice the double lines on the top horizontal boundary edge.

01:27

This indicates the span direction of the floor, which you can change from the Draw panel by selecting Span Direction.

01:33

Once the sketch is complete and the floor is spanning in the proper direction, click Finish Edit Mode.

01:40

You now know how to easily create and modify structural floors in Revit.

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