I'm looking to create a simple glazed canopy in Revit (2018) like the one I've attached. I used Sloped Glazing to define the angle of my canopy and I'm not sure how to create the supports. Is there a way to create them as a sort of mullion profile family and add them as mullions, or should I create them as a generic model family? I was hoping to find a way to create them in a way that they will be part of the canopy, so that if I change the slope angle, they will adjust to the new one and I won't have to go back in the family and edit them. Is it possible? I wouldn't want to spend too much time on it, as I just need to show design intent to the client/ structural engineer, not go into too much detail.
Looks like Enscape has been having issues with shadows for a while now, looking at some of the past threads. I have a tensile fabric shade canopy in Revit that should transmit 25% light. Revit can manage to figure out how to cast a partial shadow, but you can't? If I set Material Transparency to 5%, it casts a solid shadow in Enscape. If I bump it higher than 5%, it doesn't cast any shadow in Enscape. You've got 12 days to figure it out before the trial ends or I won't be purchasing. Tick tock...
Compact floodlight with mounting canopy for direct mounting to horizontal or vertical surfaces. Designed to illuminate architectural features, signage, landscaping, or to provide general illumination in a space. Pair with a variety of optical accessories.
These biological safety cabinets are designed to discharge HEPA-filtered exhaust air directly into the laboratory, or into an exhaust system through the optional Canopy Connection. When canopy-connected, the biosafety cabinets may be used for applications involving minute quantities of volatile toxic chemicals and tracer amounts of radionuclides as an adjunct to microbiological research.
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