Welcome back to our comprehensive Revit Structure series. In this session, we'll build upon our previous work where we successfully imported AutoCAD foundation details into our Revit project. Today, we're taking the next critical step: integrating AutoCAD framing details into a dedicated Revit Framing Detail Sheet—a fundamental skill for any structural engineer working in today's BIM-driven environment.

Our first objective is creating a proper drafting view to house our framing details. Navigate to the View tab and locate the Drafting View option. Create a new drafting view and assign it a descriptive name: "Wall to Slab Frame." This naming convention will prove invaluable when managing complex projects with multiple detail types. Set the scale to three-quarter inch—this scale provides optimal clarity for framing connections while maintaining drawing sheet efficiency.

With our drafting view established, we'll proceed with the import process. Access the Insert tab and select the Import CAD tool from the Import panel. Navigate to your BIM 342 project folder containing the downloaded framing details. This systematic folder organization is essential for maintaining project standards and ensuring team collaboration efficiency.

Select the first framing detail and configure the import parameters strategically. Set the color scheme to black and white—this maintains consistency with industry drafting standards and ensures optimal print quality. Choose "Manual—Center" for positioning, which provides precise control over detail placement within your sheet layout. Execute the import command and position the detail appropriately within your drafting view.

Now comes a critical enhancement step that separates professional-quality drawings from basic imports. The imported detail will initially appear flat and monotone, lacking the visual hierarchy necessary for clear technical communication. We'll address this by adjusting line weights to create proper graphic depth and clarity.

Access the Visibility/Graphics dialog by typing "VV"—a keyboard shortcut every Revit professional should memorize. Navigate to the Imported Categories section, where you'll find the individual layers imported from your AutoCAD file. This granular control over imported elements is one of Revit's most powerful features for maintaining drawing quality standards.


Focus on the Lines category and implement a strategic line weight hierarchy. Apply the following professional standards: assign heavy lines a weight of 5 for primary structural elements, medium lines a weight of 3 for secondary components, and light lines a weight of 1 for dimension lines and annotations. This weighted approach creates visual depth and guides the reader's eye to critical information—fundamental principles of technical drawing communication.

The transformation in drawing quality should be immediately apparent. Your detail now possesses the professional depth and clarity required for construction documentation, moving beyond the flat appearance of a basic CAD import to a properly formatted technical drawing.

Next, we'll establish proper organizational structure within our project browser. Rename the drafting view type to "Framing" by accessing Edit Type and using the Rename function. This creates a dedicated category for all framing-related drafting views, streamlining project navigation and maintaining consistent organizational standards across your team.

With our detail properly configured, we'll transition to sheet placement—the final step in creating construction-ready documentation. Navigate to your Framing Detail Sheet. If your sheet lacks a reference grid system, implement this industry-standard feature by copying an existing grid from your foundation detail sheets. Use the "Paste Aligned to Current View" option from the Clipboard dropdown—this maintains consistent grid positioning across all your detail sheets, ensuring professional presentation standards.

Position your framing detail within the sheet grid system, maintaining appropriate spacing and alignment with other sheet elements. However, you may find that the default detail callout doesn't meet your specific project requirements or graphic standards.


This presents an opportunity to implement custom family components—a hallmark of advanced Revit proficiency. Load the custom family "Detail Title Right Justified No Line.RFA" from your BIM 342 project folder. This specialized title block provides enhanced flexibility for detail callout formatting and demonstrates the power of custom family development in creating project-specific standards.

Access the detail bubble's properties through Edit Type and select your newly loaded custom family from the Title dropdown menu. This substitution provides immediate improvement in callout appearance and functionality. Fine-tune the appearance by disabling the "Show Extension Line" option if your graphic standards don't require leader line extensions.

Your Wall to Slab Framing detail is now properly formatted, positioned, and ready for construction documentation. The professional presentation reflects industry standards while maintaining the technical accuracy essential for field construction.

To complete this session's objectives, replicate this process for the remaining two framing details in your project folder. This repetition reinforces the workflow while building your project's complete framing detail library. In our next session, we'll advance to importing native Revit details—a process that offers even greater integration possibilities within your structural modeling environment.

This systematic approach to detail management represents best practices in modern structural engineering workflow, combining traditional drafting standards with contemporary BIM capabilities. We'll see you in the next session as we continue building your comprehensive Revit Structure expertise.