Arch Site

Description
The Arch Site is a special object that combines properties of a standard FreeCAD group object and Arch objects. It is particularly suited for representing a whole project site, or terrain. In IFC-based architectural work, it is mostly used to organize your model, by containing building objects. The site is also used to manage and display a physical terrain, and can computes volumes of earth to be added or removed.

How to use

 * 1) Optionally, select one or more objects to be included in your new site.
 * 2) Press the  button, or press the  then  keys.

Options

 * After creating a site, you can add more objects to it by drag and dropping them in the Tree View or by using the tool. This only determines which object is part of the given site, and has no effect on the terrain itself.
 * You can remove objects from a site by drag and dropping them out of it the Tree View or by using the tool
 * You can add a terrain object by editing the Site's property. The terrain must be an open shell or surface.
 * You can add volumes to be added or subtracted from the base terrain, by double-clicking the Site, and adding objects to its Subtractions or Additions groups. The objects must be solids.
 * The property can be used to solve some problems that can appear when working with subtractions and additions. In order to perform those additions/subtractions, the terrain surface is extruded into a solid, which is then appropriately unioned/subtracted. Depending on the terrain topology, this extrusion might fail with the default extrusion vector. You might therefore be able to remedy the problem by changing this to a different value.

Data

 * : The base terrain of this site
 * : The street and housenumber of this site
 * : The postal or zip code of this site
 * : The city of this site
 * : The country of this site
 * : The latitude of this site
 * : The longitude of this site
 * : An url that shows this site in a mapping website
 * : The area of the projection of this object onto the XY plane
 * : The perimeter length of this terrain
 * : The volume of earth to be added to this terrain
 * : The volume of earth to be removed from this terrain
 * : An extrusion vector to use when performing boolean operations
 * : Remove splitters from the resulting shape
 * : The angle between the true North and the north direction in this document. This property was previously known as.

View

 * : Shows or hides the solar diagram
 * : The color of the solar diagram
 * : The position of the solar diagram
 * : The scale of the solar diagram

Typical workflow
Start by creating an object that represents your terrain. It must be an open surface, not a solid. For example, it is easy to import mesh data, that can be turned into a Part Shape from menu. Then, create a Site object, and set its property to the Part we just created:



Create some volumes (they must be solids) that represent the areas that you wish to be excavated or filled. Double-click the Site object in the Tree View, and add these volumes to the Additions or Subtractions groups. Click OK.



The site geometry will be recomputed and the areas, perimeter, and volumes properties recalculated.



Solar diagram
If pysolar is installed on your system, Arch Sites can display a solar diagram. For this,, and  (previously ) must be correctly set, and  set to.



Scripting
Arch API and FreeCAD Scripting Basics.

The Site tool can be used in macros and from the Python console by using the following function:


 * Creates a object from, which is a list of objects, or , which is a  or.

Example:

Solar diagram
As long as the module is present, a solar diagram can be added to the site. Set the longitude, latitude and declination angles as appropriate, as well as an adequate scale for the size of your model.

Please note that modern versions of only work with Python 3.

Solar diagram independent of Site
A solar diagram can be created with the following function, independently of any site.


 * Creates a solar diagram as a Pivy node, using and, with an optional.
 * If is, the 12 months are drawn, which shows the full solar analemma.