Skylight Constraint Relative to Roof

This feature is applicable to Skylights in Roofs only (not to Skylights in Shells).

If you change the geometry of a Roof that contains Skylight, the Skylight will adjust itself to the new geometry, but you have to decide how to constrain the Skylight position in the modified Roof plane:

either Horizontally (the Skylight will retain its position as seen on the Floor Plan)

or Vertically (the Skylight will retain its vertical elevation regardless of its Floor Plan position.)

Change this Constraint in Roof setting in Skylight Settings or the Info Box.

https://helpcenter.graphisoft.com/wp-content/uploads/archicad-23-reference-guide/040_elementsvb/SkylightInfo.png     https://helpcenter.graphisoft.com/wp-content/uploads/archicad-23-reference-guide/040_elementsvb/SkylightConstrain.png

Use the Horizontal constraint if you want the Skylight to remain in the same place when viewed from above (that is, on the Floor Plan) even after the host Roof plane geometry changes. This option is useful if your Skylight is the kind that lets in light from the top of the building.

Use the Vertical constraint if you want the Skylight to remain at a constant elevation even after the host Roof plane geometry changes. This option is useful if you need a Skylight at a particular vertical position (e.g. as a lookout window in the attic).

  • Was this Helpful ?
  • YesNo
Relevant topics
Angle Bisector Constraint
Using the Angle Bisector relative construction method, you can draw elements bisecting the angle formed by other elements or temporary reference ...
Relative Construction Methods
In addition to Guide Lines and Snap Guides, the relative construction methods also constrain the element construction direction to a constant ...