You can generally fix this by redrawing or re-snapping the wall to Revit orientation snap, align to another Revit object drawn or removing the object and creating a new one. It can also occur when you join to walls that were almost inline and out of line by fractions of a degree. It can occur if you have modelled walls from an underlaying DWG-file which is not as straight as Revit would prefer, or when you have rotated the project against such a line. Walls are slightly off axis and may cause inaccuracies – probably one of the most annoying warnings especially when you are not drawing a square 90 degree orientation project.Sometime these can be quite complicated to resolve. Stair Top exceeds or cannot reach the top elevation of the stair – look at the calculation/design for the stair for both number of risers and top and bottom placement to ensure the rules for the stair and desired number of treads meets the actual design of the staircase.To fix either move the door/window or the wall to remove the conflict. ![]()
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