
I use Revit for Building Information Modeling, and I like its parametric modeling where every element—walls, doors, beams, or ducts—has embedded parameters defining their behavior and relationships. One of Revit's biggest advantages is that it treats the entire model as a single, data-rich database. Every component carries its own parameters such as dimensions, materials, costs, and performance data, which can be extracted into schedules or exported to external tools without losing accuracy. Revit's centralized data management ensures that all drawings, schedules, and quantities stay automatically synchronized, greatly improving accuracy and coordination across disciplines. The initial setup of Revit was straightforward, especially with Autodesk Account licensing. Review collected by and hosted on G2.com.
It performs well overall, but large models can become slow and resource-intensive. File sizes grow quickly, and collaboration across disciplines can suffer from sync delays. Improved performance optimization, faster rendering, and better interoperability with non-Autodesk tools would make it even more efficient. Beyond performance and interoperability, Revit could benefit from more flexible modeling tools for complex geometry and facades systems, which currently require workarounds or Dynamo scripts. Review collected by and hosted on G2.com.
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This reviewer was offered a nominal gift card as thank you for completing this review.
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