3D massing in Rhino is useful when it helps you test the big decisions early: scale, volume, access, daylight, hierarchy, context and how the proposal sits on the site.
The mistake is treating a massing model as a finished design image. At studio stage, it should be a thinking tool that helps you compare options and explain why one direction is stronger.
Watch: Architecture Social video
This Architecture Social video adds useful context before the practical guidance below.
What a good massing study should show
- The relationship between site, access and main volumes.
- How public, private, served or servant spaces are organised.
- Why the height, depth or orientation makes sense.
- What changed between options and why.
- How the massing links back to the brief.
Related video: architecture toolkit thinking
This related Architecture Social video adds a broader toolkit angle for students and designers building stronger design workflows.
Use massing as portfolio evidence
A Rhino massing model can help your portfolio when it shows thinking, not just software ability.
Go deeper with Architecture Social
These related Architecture Social episodes add more context once you have the practical framework.
Related video: Architecture Social insight
This related video adds another practical angle to the topic.
Listen: BIM and design innovation
This related Architecture Social episode adds a wider digital-design angle for readers thinking about Rhino, BIM and practical design workflows.
You can also open the related Architecture Social podcast page.
Architecture Social view
Stephen’s view is that software only becomes persuasive when the design judgement is visible. If the massing model explains a decision clearly, it can strengthen both a portfolio and an interview answer.
Make the massing decision clear
Before putting a Rhino massing image into your portfolio, write the decision it proves.
- Label the option and the design question.
- Show why one option was selected.
- Connect the massing back to the brief.



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