Before exporting a Revit model, limit model geometry to improve the performance of the export process.
In Revit, a view of the building model contains many objects and a lot of data. When exporting a model for use in another software application, Revit exports only the objects that are visible in the view (or views). By reducing the amount of model geometry (and its underlying data) that is exported, you can achieve the following:
Use the following techniques to reduce the amount of geometry to be exported.
This strategy reduces the number of objects and the amount of data that are exported from Revit and imported into another application, thus improving performance.
To turn off visibility of graphics in a view, click View tabGraphics panel (Visibility/Graphics).
Turn off visibility for categories of elements in the view, as appropriate. For example, you might want to omit topography from a 3D view to be exported. If you want to render an exterior scene, turn off any elements that appear in the interior of the building.
To define the specific part of the model to export, use a section box in a 3D view or a crop region in a 2D view. Elements that are completely outside the section box or crop region are not included in the export file.
This technique is particularly useful on large models. For example, for an interior rendering of a conference room in an office building, use a section box to export a 3D view of the conference room and omit the rest of the building.
This strategy results in better performance in the importing application.
To specify the detail level for a view, on the View Control Bar at the bottom of the drawing area, click the Detail Level button, and select the desired detail level: Coarse, Medium, or Fine.
Specify Coarse or Medium to reduce the amount of detail in the Revit view. As a result, you reduce the number of objects exported, and the size of the exported file.