AutoCAD Building Plan

Categories: Architecture
Wishlist Share
Share Course
Page Link
Share On Social Media

About Course

AutoCAD is an ideal digital tool for Industrial Designers, Engineers and Architects. It allows you to Fashion 2D and 3D schematics for an infinite variety of solid surface creations and comes in many variations depending on your needs. From Electrical components to entire Buildings you can Design anything your imagination comes up with.

Why to Learn?

It provides, Engineers, Drafters, and Surveyors with the comprehensive package for Designing and Drafting for a wide range of Engineering and Designing.

Opportunities

  • Civil Engineer
  • Mechanical Engineer
  • Interior Designer
  • Electrical Engineer

My Teaching Approach

As you can understand, I take the class as module by module. I give more importance to the practical class. You can find assignments and PDF documents for each module in these classes of mine.

Show More

What Will You Learn?

  • You can first draw a basic rough drawing of placement of different rooms in your floor plan and then draft it using different methods.
  • You can use basic line command or use rectangles and different tools to draft the floor plan. Also, you are not looking for a CAD software but a room planning software; for example, sweet home 3D.

Course Content

Floor Plan
In architecture and building engineering, a floor plan is a technical drawing to scale, showing a view from above, of the relationships between rooms, spaces, traffic patterns, and other physical features at one level of a structure.

What Should Floor Plans Include
Whether you’re creating home building plans or conceptualizing the ideal workspace, floor plan drawings should include more than just the room size. Floor plans typically feature: All of your living and working spaces: Your home building plans should indicate the location and setup of bedrooms, hallways, bathrooms, the kitchen, and the garage and/or basement. All of your room layouts. Floor plans should show all room layouts and areas per floor, such as where the breakfast nook will go in your kitchen, or how the hallways and staircases will connect individual rooms. Room layout can help you get a better idea of the “flow” of the house. Doors and windows. Your floor plan should indicate the location of doorways and other entryways, where major furniture like couches will sit, the height and width of your windows and the directions they’ll face, and the height of width of your doors plus where the doors will sit upon opening. Room features: In addition to the layout of the rooms and spaces, a floor plan can also help you plot out the space you’ll need for built-in appliances like ovens and refrigerators, and where the washer and dryer will go in the laundry room. If you’re planning on including interior features like a fireplace or mudroom, you’ll need to indicate it on the floor plan layout. A floor plan should depict the use of each room and any fixtures that go along with it

Door Window Sizes
Mark - Items - Size D0 Door 100x210 D1 Door 90x210 D2 Door 80x210 FW 1 French Window 50x180 FW2 French Window 100X180 W1 Window 50x150 W2 Window 100X150 W3 Window 150x150 KW1 Kitchen Window 50x100 KW2 Kitchen Window 100x100 V Ventilation 60x60

Course Content in PDF

Assignment

Student Ratings & Reviews

No Review Yet
No Review Yet