Now let's create the sheets for our demo views using a more efficient approach. Rather than building sheets from scratch, we'll leverage the placeholder sheets we've already prepared. Navigate to View > Sheet, and you'll see our pre-configured placeholder sheets ready for selection from the dropdown menu.
From our prepared library, I'll select the first floor demolition plan, second floor demolition plan, and roof demolition plan. Here's a critical detail that can save hours of reformatting later: ensure you're selecting the correct title block for your project standards. In this case, I'm using the VDCI title block, which maintains consistency across all three sheets we're about to generate.
Click OK, and the sheets populate instantly. This upfront investment in creating standardized placeholder sheets delivers immediate returns—what could have taken 30 minutes of manual setup is now accomplished in seconds. This workflow becomes even more valuable on larger projects with dozens of sheets.
Before placing views on sheets, we need to establish the appropriate scale settings. Scale selection often involves both experience and educated guesswork, depending on the building size and level of detail required. The industry standard rule of thumb calls for 1/8" scale for overall building views, stepping up to 1/4" scale when additional detail clarity is essential.
For this project, I'm standardizing on 1/4" = 1'-0" across all demolition plans. This building's compact footprint demands the larger scale to ensure demolition details remain clearly readable for contractors in the field. You can adjust scale either directly within the active view through the Properties panel, or by selecting the view name in the Project Browser—both methods yield identical results, so choose based on your current workflow position.
Next, we'll activate the crop region and refine our view boundaries. Enable crop region visibility, then drag the boundaries closer to the building footprint to eliminate excessive white space. If you've been following this series across multiple projects, you've likely noticed this manual cropping process becomes tediously repetitive. More problematic: maintaining consistent crop boundaries across multiple views proves nearly impossible through manual adjustment alone.
The result is often misaligned sheets where Level 1 crops tightly to the building while Level 2 extends far beyond, creating unprofessional presentation inconsistencies. Professional firms solve this challenge using scope boxes—a powerful but underutilized Revit feature that ensures geometric consistency across all project views.
A scope box functions as a three-dimensional boundary element that defines consistent extents across multiple views. Once created, any view assigned to that scope box automatically adopts its crop boundaries, ensuring perfect alignment across floor plans, sections, and elevations. Access this tool through View > Scope Box, then draw a rectangular boundary around your building footprint.
Pay attention to the vertical extents of your scope box—it's a 3D element, not just a plan outline. Set the bottom boundary slightly below your lowest floor level, and keep the top boundary reasonably close to your highest relevant level. Excessive vertical extents will create problematic cropping in section and elevation views, potentially cutting off important building elements or including unnecessary empty space.
With the scope box established, return to your demo Level 1 view and locate the Scope Box parameter in the Properties panel. Change the setting from "None" to "Scope Box 1" (or whatever name you've assigned). The crop region immediately snaps to match the scope box boundaries—any future adjustments to the scope box automatically propagate to all associated views.
Here's a practical workflow tip: scope boxes are often difficult to select and modify within plan views because they're not prominently visible. I recommend making scope box adjustments in the 3D view, where you can clearly see and manipulate the boundary box. If you need to fine-tune boundaries while viewing a specific plan, temporarily disassociate the view by setting the scope box back to "None," make your adjustments, then reassociate the view to the updated scope box.
Apply this same scope box assignment to Level 2 and roof views. Simply open each view, access the Properties panel, and assign "Scope Box 1" to the Scope Box parameter. This ensures perfect alignment across all demolition plans—a detail that distinguishes professional documentation from amateur work.
With our views properly scaled and cropped using scope box consistency, we're positioned for the final step: placing these views onto our prepared sheets for final deliverable preparation.