In this exercise, you will use two different methods to define surface boundaries for your corridor design.
Use corridor surface boundaries to prevent triangulation outside of the daylight lines of a corridor surface. You may also use boundaries to either prevent an area of a surface from being displayed or to render an area of the corridor surface using a render material.
Corridor surfaces support the following types of boundaries:
A Corridor Extents As Outer Boundary command is available for corridors that have multiple baselines, such as a corridor at an intersection.
This exercise continues from Exercise 1: Creating Corridor Surfaces.
Create outside boundaries automatically
If you have difficulty selecting the corridor in the drawing, go to Toolspace on the Prospector tab. Expand the Corridors collection. Right-click the corridor name and click Select.
Modify Corridor panel
Find.
Four corridor surfaces are displayed in the boundary table.
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This creates a boundary from the daylight lines that are generated from the daylight point codes in the subassembly.
A Corridor Extents As Outer Boundary command is available for corridors that have multiple baselines, such as a corridor at an intersection.
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The daylight line in the corridor model is created at the points where the design surface matches the existing ground on each side. By selecting Outside Boundary, the surface will be clipped outside the boundary formed by the left and right daylight lines.
The new boundaries are added to the Corridor - (1) Top and Corridor- (1) Datum surfaces. The corridor model is regenerated and the surfaces are rebuilt.
These surface boundaries are defined by a pair of feature lines. When there are more than two of a given type of feature lines, then you must use the interactive method to use them to define a boundary.
For example, you were able to automatically create a surface boundary for the daylight region because there is a single pair of Daylight feature lines that define the daylight edges of the corridor assembly.
By contrast, the assembly has two lanes, each of which are defined by its own pair of EPS feature lines. In this case, you must define the boundary interactively.
Create a pave outside boundary interactively
This boundary will define the outside edges of both lanes by using the lanes’ outer EPS feature lines. This will be an outside boundary to define the outside edges of the Corridor - (1) Pave surface.
panel
list
Corridor_Begin.
The drawing is redrawn to a zoomed-in view of the starting area of Corridor (1).
Modify Corridor panel
Find.
Create a hide boundary interactively
This boundary will define the inside edges of both lanes by using the lanes’ inner EPS feature lines. This will be a hide boundary and will act as a mask over the median area of the Corridor - (1) Pave surface.
Create a median outside boundary interactively
This boundary will define the outside edges of the median area using the lanes’ inner EPS feature lines. This will be an outside boundary to define the outside edges of the Corridor - (1) Median surface.
To continue this tutorial, go to Exercise 3: Visualizing a Corridor.