Sun Study

To use this feature, use Document > Creative Imaging > Create Sun Study.

Sun Studies allow you to view an entire project or a selected part of it in a real-life situation by choosing a geographic location and defining the time period over which you wish to examine lighting and shadow casting.

What you actually see is a series of simple or photorendered 3D images defined by the current 3D Projection Settings, the current 3D Style or PhotoRendering Settings, and the Sun Position settings.

The geographic location of your project, including Project North, is defined at Options > Project Preferences > Location Settings.

See Location Settings.

Note: Based on these data, Archicad uses the Solar Position Algorithm from the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (USA) to calculate the solar zenith and azimuth angles.

For information on this algorithm, see: Solar Position Algorithm.

You can either have the resulting animation shown immediately on the screen, or save these images in the desired file format and show them in the future using a movie viewer on any platform.

Create Sun Study

CreateSunStudy.png 

All the projections in a Sun Study will be generated in accordance with the current parallel projection or perspective view, including Sun Position, defined in the 3D Projection Settings dialog box.

See 3D Projection Settings.

Source

Click 3D Window to use the 3D Window as the image source and preview window.

Note: Choose a 3D Style and set the current 3D window options before creating a Sun Study.

Click PhotoRendering Window to use the PhotoRendering Window as the image source and preview window.

Note: Choose a PhotoRendering Scene to generate the photorealistic images, before creating the Sun Study.

Date

Choose the month and day to begin the Sun Study.

Choose the length of your sun study: either From Sunrise to Sunset, or enter a specific time span, in hours and minutes.

Interval: Set the interval, in minutes, for taking the Sun Study images during the time range set above.

Click All Frames to image all animation frames in the current Path.

Click Frames to specify a range of animation frames (first and last) for imaging from the current Path.

Note: The numbers shown by default are the first and last frames in the entire animation.

Rebuild Model for Each Frame: If you check this option, Archicad rebuilds the project after each frame and creates a new view from the rebuilt model.

Note: This option lets you create additional animation effects, provided that your project contains any Library Parts whose appearance changes with every frame. This can be achieved if the Library Part parameter is set to change along with the frame number.

Result

Specify the format of the Sun Study.

Select a file format, such as a single movie file or set of images.

Specify the color resolution.

Note: Higher color depths result in increased file size.

Remove Redundant Lines

Check this box to remove overlapping lines from the saved image(s).

This option is available if:

the 3D Engine is the Vectorial Engine (not Hardware acceleration)

you are exporting particular Frames (not All Frames)

the chosen file format is either PMK or Archicad 2D Lines.

Frame rate: Enter a frame rate per second value here.

Total Length: Length of the animation is displayed in seconds, which divides the total number of frames with the frame rate, as an indication of how long the saved animation will be.

Timestamp

Check to add this information to the Sun Study (available if saving to a movie format)

Click Edit to specify the content, appearance and location of the Timestamp.

Show

Click Show to process the Sun Study and preview the images without saving them. You can save the resulting animation afterwards by reopening the dialog and clicking Save.

Hint: To preview only a short sequence of frames, adjust the Frames range.

The pictures below show the same part of a building at different times of day, including sunrise, one hour later, two hours later and in the afternoon.

Sun_study_1.PNG     Sun_study_2.PNG

Sun_study_3.PNG     Sun_study_4.PNG