Welcome back to the CAD Teacher VDCI video course content for the BIM 321 course, Introduction to Revit MEP. In our previous session, we established the foundational connections for our domestic water plumbing system. Now we're ready to tackle the critical next phase: strategic pipe routing that ensures efficient water distribution while avoiding conflicts with other building systems.
Our immediate priority is creating the proper working environment for ceiling-level pipe routing. Since our domestic water lines will run above the suspended ceiling system, we need to establish a reflected ceiling plan view that gives us clear visibility of this coordination space. Navigate to View, then Plan Views, and select Reflected Ceiling Plan to access this essential view type.
You'll notice we don't currently have reflected ceiling plans for our project levels—a common oversight that can complicate MEP coordination later in the design process. We need to create a reflected ceiling plan specifically for Level 1, which will serve as our primary coordination view for the domestic water distribution. When the "Do not duplicate existing views" option appears checked by default, uncheck this setting to allow view creation. Select Level 1 as your target level and click OK to generate the new view.
Proper project organization becomes crucial as your BIM models grow in complexity. The newly created reflected ceiling plan needs to be properly categorized within our Project Browser hierarchy. Make this reflected ceiling plan your active view so it appears in the Properties palette. Set the Discipline to Plumbing and the Sub-Discipline to Plumbing as well. This disciplinary organization becomes invaluable when coordinating with other trades and managing view filters in larger projects.
Notice how the Project Browser now displays a ceiling plans category with our Level 1 view. Let's establish a clear naming convention that will scale with project complexity. Select the view, press F2 to rename, and change it to "1-Plumbing." This naming structure immediately identifies both the level and the trade responsible for the systems shown. When prompted about renaming the corresponding level, decline—we only want to rename the view itself, not the building level reference.
Now we'll optimize our view settings for maximum coordination efficiency. Scale the view appropriately and change the detail level to Fine, which reveals all the geometric detail necessary for accurate pipe routing. Switch the visual style to Wireframe mode—this transparency allows you to see centerlines, pipe inverts, and potential conflicts that might be hidden in shaded views. These visibility settings are essential for professional-grade MEP coordination.
The most effective approach to complex pipe routing involves working simultaneously in both plan and section views. This dual-view methodology allows you to coordinate horizontal routes while maintaining constant awareness of vertical clearances and elevation conflicts. We'll be routing these domestic water lines above the ceiling system, but we must ensure adequate clearance from structural elements, ductwork, and other utilities that share this coordination space.
Plumbing systems typically offer more routing flexibility than rigid ductwork or structural elements, so we'll navigate around existing obstacles rather than forcing other trades to relocate. Close any hidden windows to maximize screen real estate, then double-click into the section view. Use WT (Window Tile) to arrange both views optimally for simultaneous coordination work. Extend the section view to cover your routing area—this comprehensive visibility prevents costly coordination conflicts during construction.
From the plan view, begin extending your cold water line systematically. The routing appears to have adequate clearance, which simplifies our coordination efforts significantly. Extend the hot water line as well, maintaining consistent spacing between the parallel runs. This organized approach to pipe routing reflects professional MEP design standards and facilitates future maintenance access.
Switch the section view to wireframe mode as well for complete visual coordination. This transparency reveals the complete three-dimensional relationship between all building systems in the coordination space.
Elevation coordination becomes critical at this stage. Ensure both domestic water lines run at consistent elevations by using Revit's alignment tools. Select the first pipe, press TAB to highlight the bottom reference line, then repeat for the second pipe. This elevation consistency simplifies support design and maintains professional appearance throughout the installation.
Begin creating your vertical connections by selecting connection points and right-clicking to access Draw Pipe. Route the first connection up and over to reach the upper-level distribution points. Repeat this process for the parallel hot water line, maintaining consistent spacing and routing logic. These systematic connections form the backbone of your domestic water distribution system.
Cross-reference your routing against the section view to verify clearances and proper elevation coordination. Make minor adjustments as needed—this iterative refinement process ensures optimal coordination before the model advances to construction documentation phases.
Your routing strategy must accommodate distribution in multiple directions. The system needs to serve fixtures both above and below the current routing level, requiring carefully planned branch connections. From the section view, select your cold water pipe, right-click for Draw Pipe, and create a vertical drop to serve lower-level fixtures. Position this drop within available chase space to avoid conflicts with architectural elements.
Create additional routing segments by extending horizontally from your vertical drops—this establishes the foundation for future fixture connections. Apply the same routing logic to your hot water distribution system, maintaining parallel routes and consistent spacing that reflects professional installation standards.
For upper-level distribution, utilize Revit's connection features by selecting elbow fittings and clicking the plus sign indicators to create tee connections. This parametric approach automatically generates appropriate fittings while maintaining system connectivity. Right-click these new connections to Draw Pipe upward, then route horizontally toward upper-level fixture groups.
The systematic approach we've employed creates fully coordinated hot and cold water distribution serving both upper and lower fixture levels. This comprehensive routing establishes the infrastructure necessary for complete plumbing system installation while maintaining coordination with other building systems.
Fine-tune your routing to optimize support conditions and avoid potential conflicts. Position pipes to clear ductwork centerlines and consider future seismic bracing requirements—these details matter significantly in professional MEP design. Adjust elbow positions to ensure fittings clear wall assemblies and maintain adequate access for installation and maintenance.
With our hot and cold water distribution systems now properly routed and coordinated, we've established the backbone infrastructure for complete plumbing system connectivity. In our upcoming sessions, we'll focus on creating the specific fixture connections that complete this domestic water distribution system. This systematic approach to MEP coordination exemplifies the professional standards expected in today's complex building projects.