When you link a Revit Architecture project to a Revit MEP project, consider the following:
- Spaces (created in Revit MEP) can be bounded by elements in linked models, in the host model, or in both.
- Spaces are affected by room separation lines. Rooms are not affected by space separation lines.
- Spaces are measured from the wall finish face.
- In Revit MEP, spaces use the computation height that is defined in the architectural model. See Computation Height.
- A space understands in which room of a linked model it resides, and it can report the identity of that room. This information is based on relative locations, not on a link to a specific room ID.
- Multiple spaces can access the identity of a single room in a linked model.
- Rooms can exist in design options. (See Design Options and Rooms.) Spaces cannot exist in design options.
- If the architectural model changes, spaces are not deleted in the host MEP model. Spaces can become unenclosed, redundant, or ambiguous, as they would if the same changes were made in the host model.
- Modification of one model does not propagate to linked models. If the architectural model and the MEP model link to each other, changes to the architectural model may not be matched by changes in the MEP model until the MEP model is opened, resaved, and reloaded.