English Posted May 10, 2016 Share Posted May 10, 2016 I am doing a design for a contractor -- it's a story and a half with a bonus room over the garage with 5' knee walls at the ceiling break. The bonus room gable roof planes (12/12) sit on the garage walls and in order to get enough ceiling height in the bonus room the contractor said to add 12" pony walls over those walls to raise the soffit height and thus the ridge height. I'm not sure how to set the heights of the bonus room and garage. Please look at the attached plan and let me know how to get what the contractor wants. Look at the two screen shots to see where the knee walls are supposed to go. Thanks Alan Edit I should have added that it also raises the ceiling height in the dormer to match the rest of the second floor. springfield 11 alt.plan Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Joe_Carrick Posted May 10, 2016 Share Posted May 10, 2016 1. set the ceiling height of the bonus room to 12" 2. uncheck ceiling over this room 3. check use soffit for ceiling Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
English Posted May 11, 2016 Author Share Posted May 11, 2016 1. set the ceiling height of the bonus room to 12" 2. uncheck ceiling over this room 3. check use soffit for ceiling Joe But the soffit is down on the first floor -- the garage walls. Alan Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
English Posted May 11, 2016 Author Share Posted May 11, 2016 If all you need to do is raise the roof, then raise the roof planes 12", the walls will build automatically. I will try that. Maybe I'm making it more complicate than it is. Alan Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
michaelgia Posted May 11, 2016 Share Posted May 11, 2016 Select your roof planes from a 3D overview and click on the "Transform/Replicate" tool. Check the "move" box and enter 12" in the "Z" dimension. I also use this method to get my cantilever trusses so that my bottom chord always sits at top of my top-plate. Pretty sure there's a more elegant way to do this but it works for me... I also use this method to drop my roofs over garages that stick past upper floors. I always hate it when there's an inordinate amount of wall between the top of my garage doors and its roof. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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