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Original Poster
#1 Old 30th Jun 2026 at 4:20 AM
Default Imported house not at ground level
Started building a house but the lot was too small, so saved it to the library and removed it from that lot. Restarted that world, went to Edit Town and selected a larger lot, imported the house, placed it on that lot, centered it, okayed that and returned to build mode ....where the house is in a pit. Could find no way to raise the structure to ground level so accepted the challenge of finishing it as it sat and landscaping around it. But why did the house appear in a pit? (it was on level ground went built and exported) and is there a way to correct that?
Test Subject
Original Poster
#2 Old 30th Jun 2026 at 11:13 AM
Fwiw ......


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Instructor
#3 Old 30th Jun 2026 at 12:02 PM Last edited by vesko_sims3 : 30th Jun 2026 at 12:24 PM.
You have to use a cheat to align the lot with street level when placing it via Edit Town.

First, bulldoze the house. Before placing it again press Ctrl+Shift+C, type "testingcheatsenabled true", hit Enter. Then, press Ctrl+Shift+C again and type "setimportedterrainoffset <value>". The value must be a number, and it can be positive/negative, or decimal like 1.5 (In your case it needs to be positive). If you don't get it right on the first try, you can keep retyping the cheat with different numbers until you get it right. Next, use "constrainfloorelevation off" to flatten and even out the lot if some parts get raised or sunken.

Once you are done placing this lot and want to place a normal one that isn't raised/sunken, set "setimportedterrainoffset" back to 0 so the height offset doesn't apply to your next lot.

EDIT: You could also use "constrainfloorelevation off" entirely but you have to redo the leveling of the floors and some objects can get raised above ground so you have to delete them and press CTRL+Z to return them, this time in their normal position


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Test Subject
Original Poster
#4 Old 30th Jun 2026 at 10:07 PM
Thank you! I suspected some arcane command buried in the system.

I don't like this house (the top rooms have a wonderful view ....and a trek down four flights of spiral stairs to the bathrooms), though a friend deems it cool; it was designed as a feasibility study for a larger structure where each bedroom will be a small suite.
Instructor
#5 Old Yesterday at 9:45 AM
Quote: Originally posted by jgf
Thank you! I suspected some arcane command buried in the system.

I don't like this house (the top rooms have a wonderful view ....and a trek down four flights of spiral stairs to the bathrooms), though a friend deems it cool; it was designed as a feasibility study for a larger structure where each bedroom will be a small suite.


Actually it's not bad design and Iike it. It has potenial as futuristic/brutalism style home and you can make each bedroom suite little more bigger and change or include more furniture/decoration that fit better in this style from other EPs if possible (High-End loft stuff, Diesel or from Into The Future). Just be careful with the spiral staircase placement, because they are prone to create routing failures if they are not placed properly.


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Original Poster
#6 Old Yesterday at 11:06 PM
"Just be careful with the spiral staircase placement..."

A major issue since there are no double wide spiral stairs; if residents want to go to bed, or to the bathroom, at the same time, tempers will flare. (For some weird reason the stairs do not appear in screenshots.)

Spent an hour playing around with the terrain elevation; no idea what are its limits, doesn't seem linear, and is occasionally unpredictable. But it worked -

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Test Subject
Original Poster
#7 Old Today at 8:48 AM
FWIW, I did use a pair of spiral staircases, on opposite corners of the central column, on an early "pedestal" house to access the pool/yard area; street access is via the lofty staircase on the left -

Screenshots
Instructor
#8 Old Today at 12:50 PM Last edited by vesko_sims3 : Today at 1:01 PM.
Quote: Originally posted by jgf
"Just be careful with the spiral staircase placement..."

A major issue since there are no double wide spiral stairs; if residents want to go to bed, or to the bathroom, at the same time, tempers will flare. (For some weird reason the stairs do not appear in screenshots.)

Spent an hour playing around with the terrain elevation; no idea what are its limits, doesn't seem linear, and is occasionally unpredictable. But it worked -



Unfortunately spiral staircases are really a pain to be correctly configured. Even with the right placement they are awful to play with.

They don't appear from distance maybe because "Hide Objects" is toggled on - that acts like performance booster.

About the terrain... that's the charm of Sims 3 Glad you had the patience to make it


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Instructor
#9 Old Today at 12:58 PM
Quote: Originally posted by jgf
FWIW, I did use a pair of spiral staircases, on opposite corners of the central column, on an early "pedestal" house to access the pool/yard area; street access is via the lofty staircase on the left -



Very interesting design (it breaks the physical laws in real life but it doesn't matter here )

I don't know but from Isla Paradiso fixing guide I read that pool must not be build underneath other routable areas like bridges like yours that enters inside.


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Original Poster
#10 Old Today at 3:48 PM Last edited by jgf : Today at 4:01 PM.
"...it breaks the physical laws in real life but it doesn't matter here "

How true. In RL it would take quite a bit of engineering micromanagement of all systems just to balance the stress, not to mention the slightest breeze would snap it off at ground level. But physics in our sim world are quite forgiving.... if you can imagine it, it will work. (My most ridiculous house was a four story inverted tetrahedron atop a 2x2 glass room containing a spiral staircase; it worked of course, but looked so awkward I added support columns from the center of each side to the ground, unnecessary but aesthetically pleasing.)

I've not noticed if sims will swim under that bridge, I was more concerned with whether they would walk over it (they do); I spent at least an hour, inventorying my vast stock of unacceptable language, deciphering how to make it (first bridge for me). That bridge is the only access to the yard, fences and hedges surround the yard, the only gate opens to the main staircase.


Spiral staircases are very easy for me, just place them where wanted and rotate to properly orient the entrance/exit, and they automatically align when stacked. It's the standard staircases that give me fits - "the ceiling is too low" (?!), "cannot intersect objects" (what objects, there's nothing but a foundation and a wall here), or that wonderful situation where you can place a staircase in the middle of a room but not along a wall.
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