• Cons:
  • The "Biblioteca Familias Revit" is not a technical footnote; it is the institutional memory of a design firm. When a senior architect retires, their expertise in how a curtain wall mullion connects to a slab edge must live on in the constraints and parameters of a Revit family. A broken library ensures that every project reinvents the wheel, wasting thousands of hours. A pristine library, however, allows a team to focus on design innovation, sustainability, and construction quality.

    To build a biblioteca is to acknowledge that in the age of BIM, information management is design. As the Spanish saying goes, “Cada libro, un tesoro” (Every book, a treasure). In Revit, every family is a treasure—but only if it is found, trusted, and understood.


  • 02_Estructura
  • 03_MEP
  • 04_Detalles
  • 05_Templates_y_Typologies
  • 06_Anotaciones_y_Cadaux
  • 07_Versions_Backup
  • Before organizing, it is essential to distinguish between the three types of Revit families: System Families:

    Built-in elements like walls, floors, and roofs. These are saved within project templates rather than external files. Loadable Families:

    files (e.g., furniture, windows, doors) that you can create, save, and load into any project. In-Place Families: Unique elements created directly within a project context. 2. Sourcing Your Library

    You don’t always have to build from scratch. Reliable sources include:

    Load Families in Revit + Schedules and Groups - Revit Tutorial