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Sweet Home 3D Forum » List all forums » » Forum: Features use and tips » » » Thread: getting the level on levels » » » » Post: getting the level on levels |
Print at Dec 18, 2025, 5:38:43 AM |
| Posted by archibaldtuttle at Feb 21, 2024, 2:41:49 PM |
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getting the level on levels I am making a plan in which the first level of a building drops a couple of feet a couple times as the property goes downhill and subsequent additions were built slab on grade below the original house. i created additional levels and set the elevation lower, i.e. with a minus sign, from the original. the top of the walls drops accordingly but the floor does not. so suddenly 8' walls look like 6' walls. from the outside the whole thing looks like it is sitting on a foundation at the level of the original house. but the drawing knows that the floor level is lower. when you put in furniture or stairs it creates a whole in the floor and they are set at the actual floor level. i would include a screen snap but i forget you have to have some kind of picture hosting site to put a photo link here. i'm used to forums where i just upload an .png or .jpg so i'm behind the time (what else is new). it also appears that level 0 is maybe a master level where all levels are visible and addressable. so i probably should take all the stuff from level 0 where i started with the old house and put it on another level. there is a floor thickness command which i guess is meant to substitute for joist and flooring thickness? I tend to actually make another level that is the floor framing and then I can have a plan with floor joists in it. (that requires a step and repeat command I haven't found yet. I usually create a floor joist as a wall having 1.5" thickness and say 9.25" height for a 2x10 and then create a number of repeats pasted at 16" intervals typically). in general i'm used to being able to set the z starting point of elements which doesn't seem to be a thing in vectorworks which is another way to address a few errant elements that don't really require another layer. whoops, vectorworks language. thanks for getting me on the level with and thoughts/tips brian |
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