ISSN: 2168-9717

Journal of Architectural Engineering Technology
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  • Mini Review   
  • jaet, Vol 11(12)
  • DOI: 10.4172/2168-9717.1000313

How to Draw Your Own Floor Plan Architecture Design: A short note

WK Chow*
Department of Building Services Engineering, Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong
*Corresponding Author: WK Chow, Department of Building Services Engineering, Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong, Email: WK.Chow@gmail.com

Received: 01-Dec-2022 / Manuscript No. jaet-22-81603 / Editor assigned: 03-Dec-2022 / PreQC No. jaet-22-81603 / Reviewed: 17-Dec-2022 / QC No. jaet-22-81603 / Revised: 21-Dec-2022 / Manuscript No. jaet-22-81603 / Accepted Date: 30-Dec-2022 / DOI: 10.4172/2168-9717.1000313 QI No. / jaet-22-81603

Abstract

A bottom plan is a planning tool that interior contrivers, pro builders, and real estate agents use when they're looking to design or vend a new home or property. Bottom plans help you fantasize a space and how it'll look when construction or emendations are complete. When developing your own home plan or office area( or constricting someone to do it for you), it’s essential to know what you ’re looking for in a working or living space.

Introduction

A bottom plan is a planning tool that interior contrivers, pro builders, and real estate agents use when they're looking to design or vend a new home or property. Bottom plans help you fantasize a space and how it'll look when construction or emendations are complete. When developing your own home plan or office area (or constricting someone to do it for you), it’s essential to know what you’re looking for in a working or living space [1].

There are numerous good reasons to draw bottom plans before starting a construction design

• They turn generalities into palpable form. Bottom plans are architectural delineations that give you a raspberry’s eye view of the dimension lines, measures, and spatial connections between objects and institutions. They give the builder or developer commodity physical to look at and serve as the original design for your design [2].

• They make planning easier to acclimate. bottom plan designs let you see what’s possible in the space you have. However, a bottom plan can help you discover the issue beforehand in the design process, allowing you to make the necessary adaptations, If the master suite’s design in your dream home is n’t going to work.

• They can save coffers. Creating a bottom plan communicates your design ideas easily, and can help you save time and plutocrat when copping accoutrements or hiring workers. The further details you include in your plans, the more effective the structure process will be [3].

• They can help establish the bigpicture.However, a bottom plan can help you fantasize a implicit space for what it's and what it can come, If you ’re a real estate agent or someone looking to buy a home. Whether you ’re creating home structure plans or conceptualizing the ideal workspace, bottom plan delineations should include further than just the room size. bottom plans generally feature

• All of your living and working spaces. Your home structure plans should indicate the position and setup of bedrooms, hallways, bathrooms, the kitchen, and the garage and/ or basement [4].

• All of your room layouts. bottom plans should show all room layouts and areas per bottom, similar as where the breakfast niche will go in your kitchen, or how the hallways and staircases will connect individual apartments. Room layout can help you get a better idea of the “ inflow ” of the house.

• Doors and windows. Your bottom plan should indicate the position of doorways and other entries, where major cabinetwork like lounges will sit, the height and range of your windows and the directions they ’ll face, and the height of range of your doors plus where the doors will sit upon opening.

• Room features. In addition to the layout of the apartments and spaces, a bottom plan can also help you compass out the space you ’ll need for erected- in appliances like ranges and refrigerators, and where the washer and teetotaller will go in the laundry room. However, you ’ll need to indicate it on the bottom plan layout, If you ’re planning on including interior features like a fireplace or mudroom. A bottom plan should depict the use of each room and any institutions that go on with it [5].

A bottom plan is a delineation or a visual representation of a home’s innards from over. It shows the placement of walls and includes crucial rudiments of the house like doors, windows, stairs, and main cabinetwork. It also communicates the room names and sizes, as well as the confines between walls.

A small design can be displayed at a larger scale on the paper, and thus it's frequently possible to keep all of the information on one plan [6].

still, the content of these could be

If a complex design requires separating into a selection of delineations.• Primary rudiments( walls, frames etc)

• Secondary rudiments( doors, internal walls, window information etc, suspended ceilings)

• Finishes

• Services

• Institutions and Fittings

• Other

A bottom plan is considered a vertical section of the space at about 1 –1.2 m height. Anything above the 1 –1.2 m height, should be shown as a projected line of the element above this height, using a dashed line.

An illustration of this may be a kitchen. A standard bottom plan will show the kitchen worktop, Gomorrah, waggery, but the rudiments above the 1m line, i.e., wall cupboards; cooker hood etc will be shown as a dashed line, to indicate their position. It's fair to assume a advanced slice aeroplane in cases where there's a altitudinous or high window to insure it's included on the plan [7,8].

A bottom plan is a type of drawing that shows you the layout of a home or property from over. bottom plans generally illustrate the position of walls, windows, doors, and stairs, as well as fixed installations similar as restroom institutions, kitchen cabinetry, and appliances. bottom plans are generally drawn to gauge and will indicate room types, room sizes, and wall lengths. They may also show cabinetwork layouts and include out-of-door areas [9].

You can draw 2D bottom plans by hand or use 3D design software to collude out all the architectural features. Whether you’re drawing your bottom plan by hand or mapping it out in computer software, the following tips can help produce the right bottom plan for you

1.Choose your area. To start, you’ll need to know the type of bottom plan you want to produce. Is it for a single room or an entire bottom layout? If you’re doing an entire structure, each bottom should get its own new plan design.

2. Know your dimensions. However, take accurate measures of the space, If you ’re creating a bottom plan for an being building. However, you’ll need to know the square bases of the entire space you ’re working with before you draw walls or add features to make sure you have enough room for your ideas, If you ’re making a bottom plan for a structure that doesn't yet live [10].

3. Start in pencil. However, keep your markings light and erasable, If you ’re drawing a bottom plan by hand. You can use graph paper to help guide your designs more precisely

4. Draw to gauge. Draw bottom plans to gauge to help draft an accurate representation of how the finished design will look. Make sure you duly convert your dimension rates before drafting your plan.

5. Mark features with the correct long hands. Use the correct markings, bowdlerization’s, or symbols for your bottom plan. While you can write whatever is most comfortable for you, there are a many common longhands or images that make it easier for engineers and contrivers to follow along with your plan. For case, mark your surface walls with darker, thicker lines than your interior walls. Windows are represented by a set of double lines, while bends indicate the direction of swinging doors. “WC ” stands for “ water closet, ” which shows the position and layout of the restroom, and “ HW ” stands for “ hot water, ” which will indicate the position of the water heater.

6. Include the features. lot space for cabinetwork layouts like lounges and bookshelves and institutions like phone jacks, HVAC units, wiring, and outlets. Note their position in the room, and how important room they will take up. Including the information can help you figure out if any of your endless institutions will block or inhibit other features

7. Know which direction the windows face. Natural light is an important consideration for any space. You ’ll need to know whether your windows are north-, east-, south-, or west- facing because it can make a big difference in how the room looks, and how the colors and designs you choose will look during the day. You can use a compass directional symbol to orient your layout.

8. Add an elevation. Although it’s generally the coming step after a bottom plan, elevations and bottom plans frequently go hand in hand. While a bottom plan offers a raspberry’s eye view of the entire bottom, an elevation can get you outside at eye- position, so you can see the front or side view of a room, offering a different perspective of where you can place appliances or erected- sways.

Conclusion

Construction delineations need to give more detailed information to the anthology and will be used to gain structure regulation blessing, and latterly to construct the structure. Due to the quantum of information displayed, it's occasionally necessary to divide the general arrangement bottom plan into rudiments so that the information remains clear to the anthology. For illustration, services, similar as mechanical and electrical services may be displayed on a separate bottom plan for clarity.

Acknowledgement

None

Conflict of Interest

There is no Conflict of Interest.

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Citation: Chow WK (2022) How to Draw Your Own Floor Plan Architecture Design: A short note. J Archit Eng Tech 11: 313. DOI: 10.4172/2168-9717.1000313

Copyright: © 2022 Chow WK. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

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