With the Feature Line created from our previous workflow, we're now ready to refine it through strategic editing. Since we haven't assigned elevations yet, and may need additional control points for precise grading, this editing phase becomes crucial for achieving professional results.

Start by selecting your target Feature Line. Civil 3D automatically opens the Contextual Ribbon Bar, presenting comprehensive editing options tailored to Feature Line workflows. You may notice that Edit Geometry or Edit Elevations tabs aren't immediately visible—this is intentional design to reduce interface clutter. Access these critical tools by clicking the show tab options for Edit Geometry and Edit Elevations respectively.

The editing paradigm mirrors Civil 3D's alignment and profile workflows, providing consistency across the platform. Horizontal Control governs your Feature Line's plan view behavior, while Edit Elevations manages the vertical profile and elevation assignments. This dual-control system allows you to maintain precise geometric relationships while independently adjusting vertical design elements.

Within the geometry editing tools, you'll find comprehensive point management capabilities. Insert or delete Points of Intersection (vertices) as needed, though if you've converted a carefully constructed polyline into your Feature Line, additional vertex manipulation may be unnecessary. The key advantage here is surgical precision—you can add control exactly where needed without compromising existing geometry.

Advanced editing operations include Breaking Feature Lines for segmented design approaches, Trimming for precise endpoint control, and Joining separate Feature Lines into unified design elements. These tools become particularly valuable when coordinating multiple design phases or integrating with existing site conditions.

The Reverse function controls Build Direction—analogous to alignment station progression. Your initial Build Direction runs from start to endpoint, but design requirements may necessitate reversing this flow. This affects station references, grading calculations, and downstream corridor modeling, so consider these implications before applying the reverse command.

Curve editing tools provide sophisticated geometric control. Modify radii directly, create fillets between intersecting Feature Lines, and apply curve fitting algorithms based on vertex relationships. The Spline and Smooth functions are particularly useful for creating natural-looking contours that integrate seamlessly with existing topography.

The Weeding function addresses a common challenge in survey data integration—excessive point density. When Feature Lines contain redundant vertices clustered too closely together, Weeding intelligently removes superfluous points based on configurable tolerance factors, streamlining your geometry without sacrificing design intent.

Finally, the Create Feature Line from Stepped Offset tool provides rapid access to offset geometry creation directly from your selected Feature Line context—equivalent to accessing the same function through the Home tab's Feature Line dropdown, but with streamlined workflow integration.


Transitioning to elevation management, the Elevation Editor becomes your primary interface for vertical design control. The Panorama Window integration provides tabular access to all elevation data, enabling precise numerical input and systematic elevation management across complex Feature Line networks.

The Insert Elevation Points function deserves particular attention, as it's frequently the most practical approach for Feature Line elevation control. Unlike Points of Intersection, elevation points modify only vertical geometry, leaving your horizontal design locked and protected. This is especially valuable when working with polyline-derived Feature Lines where horizontal geometry is already optimized, but vertical definition requires enhancement.

When placing elevation points within Civil 3D, the software displays a dynamic circle cursor indicating valid placement locations. Target strategic locations—pad corners, grade breaks, and transition points—for maximum design control. The snapping behavior may require adjustment, as you'll need to position points close to desired locations rather than relying entirely on object snaps.

During elevation point placement, Civil 3D prompts for elevation values. Accept the default zero elevation initially, or press 'S' to assign elevations based on existing surface data. For controlled grading projects, manual elevation assignment typically provides superior results compared to surface-derived elevations.

Exercise patience during point placement, especially in complex geometry areas where the perpendicular snap may toggle between adjacent segments. The software calculates optimal placement perpendicular to the Feature Line, but dense geometry can create ambiguous snap conditions requiring manual precision.

The Delete Elevation Points function provides reciprocal control, allowing removal of incorrectly placed or redundant elevation points. This maintains clean geometry while preserving design flexibility throughout the iterative design process.

Beyond basic insertion and deletion, Civil 3D offers comprehensive elevation editing tools. Quick Elevation Edit enables rapid identification and modification of elevations and grades. While the Elevation Editor provides superior workflow integration, these quick tools excel for minor adjustments and spot corrections.

Advanced elevation tools include grade setting between points, high/low point insertion for drainage control, and bulk elevation adjustments by reference values. The Extend Grades function propagates consistent slopes beyond defined points, while surface-based elevation setting provides integration with existing topographic models.


When working within the Elevation Editor's Panorama interface, expand the window for comprehensive data visibility. The Build Direction determines station progression, with 0+00 representing your starting point. Visual feedback includes triangular markers for vertices and circular markers for elevation points, with marker scaling adjusted dynamically based on zoom level.

For systematic elevation assignment, work methodically along your Build Direction. Input known elevations directly, or utilize grade-based calculations where Grade Ahead references the next point and Grade Back references the previous point. This approach maintains consistent slopes and eliminates calculation errors.

Iterative design becomes particularly valuable for transition areas where multiple grade requirements intersect. Experiment with different elevation values while monitoring Grade Ahead and Grade Back calculations to achieve optimal slope transitions. Target grade percentages between adjacent points that satisfy both drainage requirements and constructability constraints.

Professional practice suggests establishing primary control points first—major grade breaks, pad elevations, and critical drainage points—then refining intermediate elevations to achieve smooth transitions. This hierarchical approach ensures design intent is preserved while maintaining flexibility for fine-tuning.

With elevation assignments complete, save your work to preserve these critical design decisions. The refined Feature Line now contains both precise horizontal geometry and comprehensive vertical control, ready for integration into your broader site design workflow.

In our next session, we'll explore how these elevation-enhanced Feature Lines integrate with surface modeling and grading object creation to complete your site development design.