![]() ![]() I’ve attached my version so you can see what I did, and hopefully reconstruct the process. Select inside the section you want to surface, and have at it. Then I started building the roof in sections. To make this work I have to add “Cross Section” curves.īecause your outline is so complex, I put “Cross Section” curves at the sides of the skinny, complex sections of the curve. I now have two connected “Rails” so I can build the surface one section at a time using the Surface - Sweep 2 Rails function. I then used the new line to split the line that was the outline of the surface. I then lifted the line an arbitrary distance, turned on Control Points, and brought the ends into contact with the edge of the surface. Explode the object and then use the RebuildEdges command to restore the edges. Force Rhino to join the surfaces with the JoinEdge command. To see what it does: Draw two planes several units apart. ![]() I then drew a curve on the surface using Curve - Freeform - Interpolate on Surface as the “Spine of the Roof”. This command is useful for restoring original 3-D edges of surfaces after exploding a polysurface into separate surfaces. I cleaned up the curve where you have Cusps, and then created a surface using the Surface - Planar Curve tool. This is just ONE of the Eleven curves you had. Here’s what I did - I picked the curve I wanted to put a roof on.
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