I’m trying to understand the most effective way for a beginner to learn Revit workflow step-by-step starting from its installation.
Based on what I’ve seen and done, a structured approach could look like this:
00:00:00 - Introduction
00:02:50 - Revit Installation
00:03:55 - All-important settings
00:14:08 - Unit settings
00:24:09 - Complete interface
00:34:23 - All about levels
00:44:07 - Creating & editing walls & wall profiles
01:20:22 - Creating plan
01:35:15 - Adding doors
01:52:29 - Adding windows
02:03:46 - Curtain walls
02:42:49 - Rooms tags
02:58:13 - Adding components (furniture plan)
03:20:19 - Kitchen plan
03:36:47 - Modify panel
03:58:49 - Dimensioning
04:16:31 - Adding floor
04:44:06 - Adding roof & dormers
05:21:15 - Selection methods – Hide/show elements
05:31:16 - Stairs- editing stairs- L type- spiral- junction
06:22:44 - Adding & editing railings
07:01:43 - Grid- Structure (level- column- beam- foundation)
07:29:28 - Adding rebars & schedules
07:58:16 - Openings
08:11:46 - Visibility graphics
08:37:17 - Multi-storey building
09:04:40 - Model in place (various types of chajjas)
09:40:44 - Parapet wall designs (Model in place)
09:58:51 - Export to pdf, jpeg etc.
10:17:33 - Toposolids- Import dxf
10:35:34 - Toposolid- Create from sketch
10:56:38 - 3D Views & Walkthrough
11:12:29 - Schedules- Doors-Windows-Walls
11:36:06 - Applying paint & render
12:08:52 – AI rendering (mnml.ai)
12:10:32 - Sheet generation & Creating template
Does this sequence make sense from your experience, or would you suggest a different order for beginners?
Just trying to understand the most practical learning flow.