The next step involves selecting your curtain wall system and leveraging Revit's powerful isolation tools for precise editing. Access the sunglasses icon in your toolbar and select "Isolate Element" to focus exclusively on your curtain grid and panels hosted on the selected wall. This isolation technique eliminates visual clutter and prevents accidental modifications to adjacent elements—a common pitfall that can cost hours of rework. With your curtain wall isolated, you can now systematically apply different mullion types with confidence and precision.
Begin by establishing a baseline mullion configuration across the entire system—the 2.5" x 5" profile serves as an excellent starting point for most commercial applications. This initial uniform application creates a foundation from which you can introduce strategic variations. The beauty of Revit's curtain wall system lies in its flexibility: you can differentiate vertical mullions from horizontals, or maintain consistency throughout. For projects requiring architectural hierarchy, consider using varied profiles where vertical and perimeter mullions differ from horizontal elements, creating visual depth and professional sophistication.
Revit's grid line selection feature transforms what could be tedious individual selection into an efficient bulk operation. Right-clicking on any grid line reveals the "Select Mullions on Grid Line" option, instantly highlighting all mullions along that axis. This workflow proves invaluable when working with complex curtain wall systems containing dozens of elements. Once selected, you can quickly swap profiles—perhaps changing to a 1.5" x 2.5" rectangular mullion for a more refined appearance. This selective approach maintains design intent while streamlining the modification process significantly.
While elevation views offer an alternative editing approach, exercise caution when selecting elements in this view. Background objects and overlapping elements can inadvertently become part of your selection set, leading to unintended modifications across your model. The plan view isolation method described above provides superior control and reduces the risk of these costly errors that can propagate throughout your project documentation.
For maximum efficiency, utilize Revit's intelligent selection filters to target specific mullion orientations. Select any horizontal mullion, right-click, and choose "Select Mullions on Horizontal Grid" to instantly highlight all horizontal elements across your curtain wall. This bulk selection capability allows you to apply consistent changes across large, complex facades in seconds rather than minutes. The time savings compound significantly on projects with multiple curtain wall systems or when client revisions require systematic updates.
Advanced users can create custom mullion profiles to achieve specific architectural expressions. Access the Type Properties dialog, duplicate an existing profile, and modify dimensions to meet your design requirements. For instance, creating a 2.5" x 8" rectangular mullion with a 3" offset maintains consistent glass-to-mullion relationships while providing the deeper profile often required for structural or aesthetic purposes. This parametric approach ensures that design modifications cascade properly throughout your model, maintaining coordination between plans, elevations, and 3D views.
Apply your custom profiles strategically using the same grid line selection techniques. Use "Select Mullions on Vertical Grid" for all vertical elements, then employ "Select Border Mullions" to address perimeter conditions that often require special treatment for weather sealing and structural connections. This systematic approach ensures comprehensive coverage while maintaining the design hierarchy essential to sophisticated curtain wall systems.
Upon completion of your mullion configuration, immediately reset your Temporary Hide/Isolate settings to restore full model visibility and verify your changes within the broader building context. More importantly, save your work immediately—the complex selection and modification processes described above represent significant time investment that you cannot afford to lose. Consider this mandatory step as insurance against the inevitable software crashes or accidental modifications that can occur in complex BIM environments.