Form Modeling vs Architectural Designer tools

Newby advice please - what is the relationship between Form Modeling tools and Architectural Designer tools or perhaps I should say Building Designer tools incl Structural and the Services?

I have a clue/note: "Form modeling = older TF tools incl more flexible ones but you have to manually select attributes". So is Form Modeling being phased out in favour of Building Designer? When will the Building Designer toolset catch up with the capabilities of the older Form Modeling toolset?

Can the two toolsets be mixed and matched? Does use of Form Modeler tools create elements lacking in attributes or whatever, compared to elements created strictly by newer Building Designer tools? Should I try to use only the latter?

For example, out-of-the-box AD Composite Part (walls) don't include plaster or render; in Help Tip&Trick no.5 'Adding finish to a wall' says use Build Wall Assembly, which is a Form Modeling tool.

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  • Hi

    From my point of view, the use of Form modelling is used at the early stages of the design process i.e. where you do not know the make up of the walls.  So the form modelling tools are there to enable you to place walls and link doors and windows to them but have limited amount of Building data.  At some point in the future, you then substitute these walls for more defined walls via the Architectural walls tools using the apply part tool etc.

    HTH

    Ian

Reply
  • Hi

    From my point of view, the use of Form modelling is used at the early stages of the design process i.e. where you do not know the make up of the walls.  So the form modelling tools are there to enable you to place walls and link doors and windows to them but have limited amount of Building data.  At some point in the future, you then substitute these walls for more defined walls via the Architectural walls tools using the apply part tool etc.

    HTH

    Ian

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