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Revit Architecture 2010: No Experience Required |  | Author: Eric Wing Publisher: Sybex Category: Book
List Price: $39.99 Buy New: $26.39 as of 11/21/2009 12:01 EST details You Save: $13.60 (34%)
New (32) Used (9) from $22.21
Seller: Amazon.com Rating: 8 reviews Sales Rank: 9313
Media: Paperback Pages: 984 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 3.1 Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 7.4 x 2.2
ISBN: 0470447222 Dewey Decimal Number: 720.285 EAN: 9780470447222 ASIN: 0470447222
Publication Date: May 11, 2009 Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Author and Revit Architecture expert Eric Wing walks you through designing, documenting, and presenting a four-story office building. The continuous tutorial begins with the Revit interface and standard conventions for placing walls, doors, and windows, then progresses through the buildings design as would happen in the real world. Youll learn how to work with structural grids, beams, and foundations; add text and dimensions; build floors layer by layer; join exterior and interior walls; and create roofs and ceilings as well as stairs, ramps, and railings. Youll also be introduced to using embedded families and formulas, crucial site considerations, and importing and exporting to various formats.
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| Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 8
Good first start but beware of the ERRORS November 8, 2009 Patrick W. Langford 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Book is layed out pretty well and is easy to read. The sample project is good because it takes you through a lot of the everyday work you'll do with Revit at the office. The main problem I had with this book is that there are a lot of errors. In the project there is an East wing and a West wing. The book confuses itself by mixing these labels back and forth so you don't know where you are. Also, some of the step by step commands they take you through are well planned out, but some are calling out the wrong term for the command or button or miss steps that you have to figure out for yourself. I really think that someone should take at least a paid beginners course before jumping into this book like I did. It will real help. Another problem I had with the sample project was the floor levels. They have you copy the first floor and create 4 more. That's fine until you label doors. Every floor labels the doors with 100, 100AAA, 100BBB. It drives me nuts. I have to go into every door and change the mark manually. The book should have covered room names and door numbers right at that point. Instead it goes into schedules where every door is 100+. I haven't used any other book, so I can't compare. I like this book in general and would still use it as a reference at work. I wish they would go back and edit through this book and correct all the mistakes. I got to the point where I wanted to highlight and correct everything and send them the book when I was done. Fire the editor / proofchecker.
So far so good.......... November 4, 2009 R. Rodpracha (NYC) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Although I'm just about 60 pages into this ginormous book, I very pleased with the way the author breaks down the various explanations and exercises used to get accustomed to the Revit interface. The previous posters are right about the author's confusion about north/south/east/west directions but there are plenty of screen shots that compensate for that. Definitely good for people who just wanna get right into modeling!!!
I had previously bought 'Mastering Revit Architecture 2010' and found it to be inappropriate for newbies, like myself, who want more of hands on training with the software.
Great Beginners Guide August 13, 2009 HFK (Manorville, NY USA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
As a Revit beginner, I find this book extremely helpful. The directions are very explicit, with frequent images and excellent tips for unexperienced users. It might not cover all of the advanced capabilities possible within the Revit software, but it definitely gets you going on all the issues you need to start using Revit in the workplace.
The only issue with this otherwise great tome is a bewildering confusion of cardinal directions - at first, the project is referred to with south facing up (why?), but then it starts to become muddled, with east and west switching and flip-flopping, sometimes section by section. I don't know why there is this unfortunate error, but thanks to the many images, you can follow what the author wants you to do anyway.
Up and Running Immediately July 8, 2009 Jean Tracy (Tiburon, CA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Eric Wing's superb book had me up and running on Revit immediately. His approach makes it easy to ingest information, building on skills as you go. You jump in and start to create a model right away. Each exercise builds upon the same model. The saving grace of this book is the easy access to support files. If you don't get the exercise just right you can start with one of Eric's files at the next exercise and move on.
I'm an experienced AutoCad user and have been resisting Revit for quite awhile. (The thought of moving architectural design to a data based software process destroys all hope for the future of design.) Eric takes the sting out of the learning curve and sets you up for confidence in facing the inevitable.
Mistakes, Mistakes.... June 14, 2009 Meghan 2 out of 4 found this review helpful
Definitely not for someone who has never used a drafting program. There are quite a few mistakes. Often reverses East and West, which caused some confusion. Also confuses right and left when instructions are given. Will refer to the right in the text, but then the picture will show the left.
However, over all, it is relatively inexpensive compared to other books of it type. Just have to decipher what a few things actually mean.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 8
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