Archicad Tutorial #94: Area Calculations for Wall Area by Zone

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  • čas přidán 25. 07. 2024
  • In the CZcams comments of my previous video on Area Calculations for Siding and Flooring, I was asked about calculating wall area by room. The way to do this in Archicad is by using Zones rather than Walls. Well technically it's both, since the Zones are reading Window and Door information from the Walls. Since this is such a great follow up question to my previous video, I decided to record a video walking through the process.
    00:00 Intro
    01:19 Basic Zone Schedule
    02:15 Improved Zone Schedule
    02:45 Data Verification
    04:01 Additional Notes and Comments
    04:52 Extra Zone Thoughts
    05:22 Outro
    The original blog post this video is here:
    www.shoegnome.com/2023/08/27/a...
    This video was created using the Shoegnome Open Template and the Shoegnome Work Environment for Archicad 26. Links below:
    www.shoegnome.com/template/
    www.shoegnome.com/work-environ...
    As always the template and work environment are free; a good Archicad template (and work environment) is too important to horde. If you want to click the PayPal button on the template or work environment pages to support my endeavors and encourage future development, that's wonderful. Whenever people do that, it makes my day.

Komentáře • 17

  • @user-uc2cx9km1z
    @user-uc2cx9km1z Před 4 měsíci +1

    Impressive as always, thank you very much for this amazing content.

  • @andriusvilcinskas7591
    @andriusvilcinskas7591 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Great tutorial! Will test it out for sure! My aim is to develop this example schedule so that it would also show the different surface types and areas if there are more wall fineshes than 1. Thanks for your imput!

    • @Shoegnome
      @Shoegnome  Před 11 měsíci

      Displaying the different Surface types in a room is going to be much more complicated. Let me know if you figure out how.

  • @geraldburwell7622
    @geraldburwell7622 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Thanks!

    • @Shoegnome
      @Shoegnome  Před 9 měsíci

      Thank you so much Gerald. You're the best.

  • @arthurfnarusberk
    @arthurfnarusberk Před 11 měsíci +1

    Thank you for the video.
    Is it possible to calculate zone perimeter/circumference excluding the doors? My colleague asked me if theres a way to schedule room perimeter/circumference for skirting board scheduling and I couldn't find an answer for that.

    • @Shoegnome
      @Shoegnome  Před 11 měsíci

      All the perimeter fields I looked at didn't factor in holes. You could probably create an Archicad property that does something like (zone perimeter - (total door area/door height)). Assuming all your doors are the same height, that'd work well. If it's possible to create that property. I suppose you could sum up the door widths by zone, but that total number could be used within Archicad for a calculation. It might be easier to model all the baseboard with beams and then do a schedule of beam length. For a typical house project of a certain level of detail, that'd be pretty easy. Or just assume room perimeter = baseboard length (inclusive of overage which is the door widths).
      Actually here's another solution. You'll need two schedules. 1) zone perimeter [assuming there's baseboard on all 4 sides of every room]. 2) door width schedule that sums all the door widths. Then you manually subtract the total from schedule 2 from the total from schedule 1. That'd give you perimeter, less doors.

  • @andrewsilipo
    @andrewsilipo Před 10 měsíci

    Is it possible to use zones to create finish schedules for interior trim? Thanks for the great videos!

    • @Shoegnome
      @Shoegnome  Před 10 měsíci

      A finish schedule using Zones is possible, but it wouldn't be reading the Surfaces of the walls. Instead you'd do it using Archicad Properties, which would involve manually setting the finishes in each room. Not ideal, but there's still some value to it.

  • @MorningThief_
    @MorningThief_ Před 11 měsíci +1

    thanks for the video.
    i've been racking my head trying to calculate the open area of a window & door for natural vent calculations. these should not take into account the size of the frame around the door/window -- just the actual opening. when we specify louvres, they can be 1 or 2-stage louvres, which will further reduce the open area calculations.
    i know i can do it using Properties, but i could never call up the thickness of the window/door frame in the Properties to reduce the overall size of the window/door. any ideas???

    • @Shoegnome
      @Shoegnome  Před 11 měsíci

      I think that the window/door area is calculated by the wall hole of the Object, so Archicad is not intelligent enough to figure out the actual opening, especially for louvers. You might be able to schedule area of glass and that'd get you closer (I need to look into that as it'd make a great next video). But to do the actual opening, you'll need to do some fancy work with Archicad Properties or do averaging calculations outside of Archicad using basic window schedule data you export.

  • @zsoltferenczy5487
    @zsoltferenczy5487 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Does this calculation take into account the wall / window reveals or wall / window inlets?

    • @Shoegnome
      @Shoegnome  Před 11 měsíci

      My initial tests suggest no. It appears that the window/door area is calculated by the wall hole of the Object.

    • @zsoltferenczy5487
      @zsoltferenczy5487 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@ShoegnomeWhy not calculate the wall / plaster area with a finishes schedule rather than a zone schedule then? I found that a surface finishes schedule takes into account the reveals as well.

    • @Shoegnome
      @Shoegnome  Před 11 měsíci

      @@zsoltferenczy5487 I've never used a Surface Schedule before, that's why! You're right though. With the right criteria, a Surface Schedule that looks at just Gyp. Bd. is probably the best answer. I'll have to do some more experiments and then do a 3rd video looking at Surface Schedules once I know I'm looking at the right information. Thank you for the suggestion.

    • @Shoegnome
      @Shoegnome  Před 11 měsíci

      Doing some additional quick tests, Surface Schedules are really powerful but they do require good modeling and some additional understanding of how elements relate. I could see how they are both more accurate and prone to error. I'm going to have to learn more and definitely record another video when I have time later this year.