Introduction To Corridor Design
Introduction To Corridor Design
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Build and Edit Surfaces
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Start a New Drawing
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Add Point Groups
Create a Boundary
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Create a Breakline
Editing Surfaces
Point Display
Surface Display
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Add Contour Labels
Point Table
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Object Viewer
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Civil 3D 2008 Introduction to Corridor Design
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Start a New Drawing
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1. Close any open drawings.
2. Select File>New. In the Select Template dialog box, highlight the _0-
C3D 2008 CLASS.dwt template you just created.
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3. Click Open.
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5. Browse to C:\Civil 3D 2008 Intro to Corridor Design Exercise
Files\Mackinaw Estates.
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Import a Coordinate Point File
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The Mackinaw Estates project includes creating a road and lots on a 30
acre site. A survey team collected the existing conditions and you have
been provided with a comma delimited ASCII coordinate file in a Point
number, Northing, Easting, Elevation, Description format.
The first task is to create an existing conditions base map for this site.
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2. Set the Format as PNEZD (comma delimited).
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4. Click Open.
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Civil 3D 2008 Introduction to Corridor Design
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5. Clear the options under the Advanced options area.
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6. Click OK.
7. Zoom Extents.
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The points are imported and the Description Keys provide symbols as
required.
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Note the existing dirt road. You would normally create breaklines along
the road, but in this case, they are not required. There is also a stream
running south to north on the site. The stream requires a breakline for the
surface to generate properly.
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Since the original ground survey there has been a change. A groundwater
well has been drilled and installed. The surveyors returned to the site and
gathered the information needed to locate the well. They set up from an
existing control point and recorded the bearing, distance, and elevation for
the well.
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9. In the Item View, right-click on point number 13 and select Zoom to.
This was the point used to locate the well.
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10. Use Zoom Center and a height of 300 to see the well point. You can
also use the wheel on your mouse to zoom out. Your screen should
look similar to the one displayed below.
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11. Click on the Intersection drop-down menu and select
Direction/Distance.
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The figure below, taken from AutoCAD Civil 3D Help, explains the
command prompts. It uses two points, one for the radial point and one for
the direction point. You will use the same point for both.
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12. Follow the command prompts:
>>Please specify a location for the radial point: pick _node of CTRL
point# 13
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>>Enter radius <0.0000>: 198.30
>>Specify start point: pick _node of CTRL point# 13
>>Specify direction at start point or [Bearing/aZimuth]: B
>>Quadrants - NE = 1, SE = 2, SW = 3, NW = 4
>>Specify quadrant (1-4) or [aZimuth/Angle]: enter a number or pick in a
quadrant – 4 - NW
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>>Specify bearing or [aZimuth/Angle]: 55.1106
>>Specify an offset <0.0000>: 0
>>Enter a point description <.>: WELL
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>>Specify a point elevation <.>: 295.05
>>Please specify a location for the radial point: <Esc>
13. Close the Create Points toolbar. Your screen should look similar to
that shown below.
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Update Point Groups
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You will use Point Groups EG TOPO and VEGETATION as part of the
data for this surface. Therefore, the Point Groups must be updated to
include the points permitted by their filters.
1. In the Prospector tab, select Point Groups to see its collection in the
Item View or expand Point Groups to see its collection directly in the
Tree View.
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The symbol in front of each Point Group indicates that the Point Group is
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out of date. The Point Group _All Points has no symbol, because it
automatically contains all of the points in the drawing regardless of any
filters.
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2. Right-click on Point Groups and select Update. The Point Groups are
now current.
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3. Zoom Extents.
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Create a New Surface
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1. In the Prospector tab, right-click on Surfaces and select Create
Surface...
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3. Click OK.
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5. Use the Polyline command to create a closed polyline around the
points, as shown below.
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You need to define a breakline along the stream to control the
triangulation of the surface in that area. Begin by drawing a polyline
connecting the points that represent the stream. You can draw the polyline
or create a Point Group to isolate the stream points.
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6. Zoom into the north central area of the site, as shown below.
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7. Start the Polyline command. Start at the northern most point with a
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description of STRM (#1037). You do not need to snap to the points.
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8. Work south, picking near each STRM point. To make this process a
little easier, the points are numbered sequentially from 1037 in the
north to 1057 in the south. You now have the three components you
will use to define the surface.
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Add Point Groups
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1. Expand Surfaces, EG, and Definition.
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3. Right-click on Point Groups and select Add.
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4. Select EG TOPO and click OK.
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The surface is displayed.
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5. Add the Point Group Vegetation.
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Create a Boundary
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The surface extends beyond the polyline for the boundary. You will now
define the boundary.
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4. Leave the Non-Destructive Breakline option cleared.
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6. Click OK.
7. Select the polyline. Note how the surface border has changed.
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8. Grip edit the boundary if you did not achieve the intended results.
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Create a Breakline
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You will now add the breakline for the stream. The polylines for
breaklines must be drawn before selecting this command.
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Some of the triangulation crossed the stream. This means a point on the
top of one bank is interpolating to a point on the top of the other bank.
You want the triangulation to follow the stream. A breakline resolves this.
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2. Right-click on Breaklines and select Add.
4. Set the Type to Proximity. The File link options and Mid-ordinate
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distance value are irrelevant. Click OK.
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5. Select the polyline and press <Enter>.
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The triangulation revises to follow the stream. The contours represent the
stream more accurately.
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Breaklines created by Proximity leave the original polylines in the
drawing even though they are defined as a Standard breakline. This
Standard definition can be inserted into the drawing and manipulated. The
original line can be deleted.
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Breakline Type
Standard
Description
Creates a breakline that is defined by selecting 3D lines, grading
feature lines, and 3D polylines.
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Proximity Creates a breakline that is defined by drawing or selecting a
grading feature line or polyline within the extents of the surface
boundary. The location and elevation of each vertex is determined
by the nearest surface point.
Wall A wall breakline is stored as a standard breakline but is defined
differently. You provide an offset side, elevation difference at a
vertex or entire breakline.
Non-destructive Creates a breakline that is defined using grading feature lines and
open or closed AutoCAD objects. A non-destructive breakline
does not affect the original surface.
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