The ease with which you can develop multiple orthographic views of an object from a 3d model, (dimensioned, annotated and arranged on sheets) is hugely valuable when you are exploring building technologies, whether old or new.
That study was a non-parametric analysis of how the technology works, and I used Revit because it's my favourite drawing tool. This is the focus of our current work and has entailed some revisiting of the Timber Sash Window, which I studied some years ago We have not spent any time applying Revit materials. Although, there are some limitations in regards to Revit Project Materials that have an Appearance other than Generic, as described here. In the first image I have a side by side of the Revit 3d view vs the Enscape view and the other two images are just showing missing or partially missing elements (floors, windows). Enscape provides its own native Material Editor that can be used in conjunction with the already powerful native Revit Material Editor. Users were super frustrated by it, but its like. A number of addins (including Enscape) created problems with using BIM360, when 2.8 or 2.9 came out (i dont remember which). Even shorter lived was his Board of Trade building, (although parts of this remain). Our Revit model is 185 MB in size & a 200,000 square foot 4 story building. Enscape is like any other Revit addin, in that users should always be testing the new releases in a sandbox environment, before just jumping in feet first. The Law Courts project is fascinating, but was demolished in Victorian times. Easy to import, drag and drop to your scene and render our exceptional models for your landscape project. He built Law Courts, nestled into the ancient buttresses of Westminster Hall, produced numerous schemes for alterations to the old Houses of Parliament, repaired and maintained the Banqueting House (Inigo Jones) and the Old Treasury (William Kent) Globe Plants 3D Plant Models for Revit via Enscape Custom Asset Library. We have been exploring the broader sweep of John Soane's career, and in particular his work in and around Whitehall, an area of Westminster which has become synonymous with the executive arm of government in the UK.