Welcome back to the CAD Teacher VDCI video course content for the BIM 322 course. In our previous session, we successfully placed our Revitized CAD Detail on a sheet and confirmed everything was production-ready. Now we'll leverage this foundational process to transform any AutoCAD DWG file in your library—a critical skill that separates proficient BIM users from true workflow architects.

This next phase demonstrates how seasoned professionals streamline their project delivery. Rather than recreating details from scratch for each project, experienced teams maintain a master library of fully Revitized details that can be strategically deployed across multiple drawings. This approach dramatically reduces project setup time while ensuring consistency across your firm's documentation standards. We're going to extract specific details from our master Revit library and integrate them seamlessly into our current project.

Let's execute this workflow efficiently. Navigate to the Insert tab in your ribbon interface, where we'll access Revit's powerful content sharing capabilities. The key here is selecting the right insertion method for maximum flexibility.

From the Insert options, select "Insert Views from File" rather than "Insert 2D Elements from File." This distinction is crucial: while 2D elements only transfer the raw linework and annotations, inserting full views preserves all the intelligent relationships, parameters, and organizational structure we've carefully built into our details. This means maintaining view templates, filters, and visibility settings—elements that make our details truly parametric rather than static CAD imports.

Before proceeding, synchronize with Central if you're working in a worksharing environment—this ensures you're working with the latest project state and prevents potential conflicts. The system will prompt you to navigate to your source file location.

Navigate to your C drive, then to the BIM 322 folder structure. Access the BIM 322 Details folder, then open the "Details and Schedules" file that you downloaded from the Student Information System. This master file contains our curated collection of industry-standard details that have been properly Revitized and organized for maximum reusability.

Now comes the strategic selection process. We're going to cherry-pick the specific views our current project requires, avoiding the common mistake of importing unnecessary content that clutters the project browser. For this demonstration, we'll select the AHU Mounting Detail, Air Distribution Connection Detail, Branch Duct Takeoff Detail, and Duct Through Roof Detail—each representing different aspects of our mechanical systems that require detailed coordination.


Additionally, we'll import both the Mechanical Legend and Plumbing Legend—these standardized legends ensure consistent symbol interpretation across all project sheets and are essential for code compliance and contractor understanding.

Our selection also includes the Roof Mounted Duct Detail, Reduced Pressure Backflow Detail, Typical FC Unit Mounting Detail, Water Hammer Arrester Assembly Detail, and Typical Manual Volume Damper Locations. Each of these details addresses specific installation challenges that frequently arise in MEP coordination, and having them readily available prevents delays during the construction document phase.

To summarize our strategic imports: AHU Mounting Detail, Air Distribution Connection Detail, Branch Duct Takeoff Detail, Duct Through Roof Detail, Mechanical Legend, Plumbing Legend, Reduced Pressure Backflow Detail, Roof Mounted Duct Detail, Typical FC Unit Mounting Detail, Typical Manual Volume Damper Locations, and Water Hammer Arrester Assembly Detail. Execute the import by clicking OK.

During the import process, you may encounter a notification about duplicate types—this is standard behavior when importing from master libraries. Revit intelligently preserves your current project's type definitions rather than overwriting them with imported versions, maintaining consistency within your active project environment. Accept this by clicking OK.

The import process typically completes within a few minutes, depending on detail complexity and system performance. You may see additional notifications, such as "Family View Title has been renamed to View Title 1"—this automatic renaming prevents naming conflicts and ensures clean project organization. These warnings are routine and don't indicate any issues with your content.

Once the import completes, dismiss any remaining warnings and examine your newly imported content. Notice how the Mechanical Legend Detail appears with full formatting and intelligence intact—this will be placed on our Mechanical Title Sheet during the sheet organization phase of our project delivery process.


Perform any necessary cleanup on imported content. In this case, select and delete the small notation in the upper corner—this was project-specific information from the source file that doesn't apply to our current project. This attention to detail ensures our drawings maintain professional standards and avoid confusion during construction.

The real power of this workflow becomes evident when examining the Project Browser organization. Notice how all imported content automatically inherits proper organizational structure—this occurs because the source project maintained disciplined view organization standards. This automated organization saves significant time compared to manually categorizing imported 2D elements.

However, some fine-tuning may be required. Expand the Mechanical section under Drafting Views to verify organizational accuracy. In this case, both the AHU Mounting Detail and Roof Mounted Duct Detail require sub-discipline assignment. Select each view and assign them to the HVAC sub-discipline for proper categorization.

Complete a final verification scroll through your Project Browser to confirm all imported content resides in appropriate locations. This organizational discipline becomes increasingly critical as project complexity grows and multiple team members access the model.

We've successfully established our detail library within the current project, creating a robust foundation for efficient sheet production. In our upcoming sessions, we'll demonstrate advanced sheet organization techniques and explore how to create intelligent callout relationships that automatically maintain coordination between plans and details—capabilities that truly distinguish BIM workflows from traditional CAD documentation methods.