In this exercise, you will create Top, Datum, Pave, and Median surfaces from the corridor.
The Top surface tracks the finish grade of the roadway from the left daylight point to the right daylight point on both paved and unpaved portions. This surface is used for finish grade modeling.
The Datum surface tracks the finish grade on unpaved portions, and also the subbase on paved portions, going from the left daylight point to the right daylight point. This surface represents the grading elevations before pavement materials are applied. This surface is used for calculating cut and fill quantities.
The Pave surface defines the finished pavement on both travel lanes in the divided highway.
The Median surface defines the area between the travel lanes.
Create a top corridor surface
This setting specifies that the surface will be built using the links along the top of the assembly. This setting is especially critical when an assembly has overlapping subassembly links that, if connected, would result in errors in surface triangulation.
This action adds the corridor links with the Top code to this surface.
Create a datum corridor surface
Repeat the previous procedure to create a Datum surface, using these parameters:
Create a pave corridor surface
Create a Pave surface, using these parameters:
Create a median corridor surface
Create a Median surface, using these parameters:
Generate the surfaces and examine the results
Notice that the corridor surfaces you created have been added to the Surfaces collection. You can work with a corridor surface the same way you do with any surface in the Surfaces collection, including changing its style, adding labels to it, and using it for surface analysis. The following features and behaviors are unique to corridor surfaces:
To continue this tutorial, go to Exercise 2: Creating Corridor Surface Boundaries.