

If you require a response to your feedback, then you will need to provide your email address below (optional)*: Please provide us short feedback: (required) Or send request directly through Enscape. The model rotation is also reset.ĭo you need help with Enscape? Please contact our technical support here – Fit to Location – centers the area selection around the pin and sets its dimensions to 1 Km x 1 Km.

– Go to Location – centers the map on the pin location – Zoom tools ( +, –) – allows you to zoom in and out (or simply use the mouse wheel) In the lower left corner of the map viewport you will find four buttons: Click and hold on the circular arrow symbol, and drag the mouse up/down to rotate the CAD project, releasing the mouse button when you’re happy with the adjustment. When you hover over this circular arrow to rotate the CAD model, the mouse cursor will change accordingly. The location of the CAD model can be translated / rotated by dragging the pin / hovering on the circular arrow symbol (you may have to zoom in on the map to be able to see this symbol) respectively. The orange pin icon in the map indicates where your CAD project model will be placed in the site context model to be imported. Once the site model has been imported, its position can be updated later. – Translate – move the pin to the desired location, and click on Fit to Location – Rotation – hover the mouse cursor near a corner, until it changes, at which point you can click on the corner and rotate the area by moving your mouse – Resize – simply drag one of the sides of the orange bounding box that defines the area intended to be imported. To determine the site area, the following options are available: By default, an area of 1000 x 1000 meters is set. This article will cover the ins and outs of the grass feature in Enscape, including some incredible new developments! The focus of this article will be on Revit and SketchUp.Once the location has been determined, the area and position of the model needs to be determined. Even in the small comparison images below, it is easy to see what a big different this makes. And now, it just got better, as we have been given control over the height and height variation of the blades of grass! This is sure to be a new fan favorite for anyone designing building façades, parks, roadways or bridges!Īny material in Revit, SketchUp, Rhino or ArchiCAD with the word “grass” in its name will render as a thick three-dimensional-looking grass in Enscape by default.

Then, Enscape totally changed the game in early 2017 by automatically adding three-dimensional grass within their real-time photorealistic rendering engine. The best we could do in the past was to apply a bump map and maximize the setting, so the ground did not look completely flat. Representing grass has always been a challenge in architectural graphics, especially for the average designer who does not specialize in developing computer generated graphics (CGI).
