Kubla Cubed User Manual


Hard Landscape (Building Pads, Drives, Car Parks, etc.)

If you are following the 'Reduce Method' approach of defining the entire site in a 'Feature Surface' and then adjusting to a subgrade/formation level using the 'Reduce' element, then hard landscaping can be modelled with contour lines and break-lines. Points are not a good way of defining hard landscaping areas, as they are not necessarily joined in the way you would expect for hard edges (e.g. the edge of a building pad or car park).

Firstly, closed contour lines can be used to define building pads and other flat areas. Break-lines can be drawn around the perimeter of car parks etc., to add that detail. However, when modelling hard landscaping, the 'Offset Method' by which different areas of construction thickness are defined in different 'Feature Surfaces' tends to create accurate surfaces far more easilty than the 'Reduce Method'. With the 'Reduce Method', a lot of time is often spent on break-lines, contours, and points to get the same effect of a few elevation elements combined. This is because Kubla Cubed generates side slopes for all elements. However, when defining the whole site in one feature, all the side slopes of buildings, car parks, ramps etc. have to be defined with contours, etc.

As with all take-off work, there is no one correct way to define things; however, the following recommendations provide a good starting point when using the 'Offset Method' regarding which elements to use:

When using the 'Offset Method' and splitting areas into different 'Feature Surfaces', some consideration needs to be made regarding the order of the elements. The elements lower in the calculation order will override the ones above. It is a good idea to put the more expansive areas at the top and the more detailed areas lower down. You don't need to carefully snap the boundaries between different areas together if you use the overriding behaviour strategically.