Slabs are created extruding the horizontal curves that generate the
surface.
I have just solve this problem subdviding in section the main surface
of the skyscraper using straight mode instead of uniform in the loft
option. Exploding the surface I can subdivide each surface. I will put
some screenshot after

On 27 Apr, 13:56, adriano <[email protected]> wrote:
> I haven't got an answer for you, but a question: the floor slabs did
> you do them parametrically? if so how did you make then equidistant
> from each other?
>
> On Apr 26, 3:03 pm, pul <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > I'm designing a skyscraper for a course at university. I want to use a
> > diagrid for the structure. The base surface is a series of scaled,
> > rotated and lofted bezier curves. It could be the same if I get the
> > input surface directly from a rhino surface. As many tutorials on the
> > web, I divided the surface by the divide interval^2 component, I used
> > the series, but I saw that the vertical divisions are not equal. This
> > means that the joints of the diagrid will not be on the same z value
> > of the floors.
> > Is there a way to make the distance of the divide component equal?
> > I decompose the components of the lofted surface: the skyspcraper is
> > 288 meters tall and the interval shows a higher value so the division
> > is nt correct. The division of the vertical domain is made to match a
> > non decimal values (the height of the floor): divide the skyscraper in
> > 12 parts.
>
> > This link shows the 
> > skyscraper.http://onirichevisionidigitali.blogspot.com/2009/04/thatone-skyscrape...
>
> > This is a closeup of the 
> > problemhttp://groups.google.com/group/grasshopper3d/web/2009-04-26-diagrid_s...
>
> > Thanks for the attention

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