Assign 4-Basic Guide to Blueprints
Assign 4-Basic Guide to Blueprints
What Is a Blueprint?
A blueprint is a two-dimensional set of drawings that provides a detailed visual representation of
how an architect wants a building to look. Blueprints typically specify a building's dimensions,
construction materials, and the exact placement of all its components.
The word "blueprint" originated in the mid-nineteenth century when engineering drawings were
printed on blue paper with white lines. In the modern construction industry, physical blueprints
typically aren’t blue. Construction drawings, construction plans, building plans, house plans,
floor plans, and working drawings are all types of blueprints.
1. Plan view drawing: A plan view is a drawing on a horizontal plane depicting a bird's eye
view of a structure from above. Each floor in the building has its own plan view drawing.
2. Elevation view drawing: An elevation view is a drawing on a vertical plane that depicts
how the building looks when viewed from the front, back, left, or right side. There are
both interior elevation drawings and exterior elevation drawings.
3. Section view drawing: A section view is a drawing on a vertical plane that slices through
solid space to depict the inside of a certain section of the structure. A cross-section view
shows elements such as insulation, wall studs, and sheathing.
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10 Types of Blueprint Lines and How to Read Them
Knowing what the different types of lines represent in a construction drawing is one of the most
basic blueprint reading skills.
1. Object line: Also known as visible lines, objects lines indicate the sides of an element
that are visible when looking at the element in person. Visible lines are completely solid
and are the thickest type of line.
2. Hidden line: Also known as invisible lines, hidden lines show object surfaces that are not
visible when looking at the object in person. Hidden lines consist of short dashes that the
architect draws at half the thickness of object lines.
3. Center line: This type of line indicates the central axis of an element. Center lines consist
of alternating short and long dashes that the architect draws with the same thickness as
hidden lines.
4. Dimension line: Dimension lines indicate the distance between two points in a drawing.
When dimensioning, the architect draws two short solid lines with a gap between them
and two arrowheads pointing in opposite directions. The architect then writes the
dimension number in the empty gap between the two lines.
5. Extension line: These short, solid lines at each endpoint of a dimension line indicate the
exact limit of the dimension. Extension lines always pair with dimension lines and should
never touch the object lines.
6. Leader line: A leader line is a finely-drawn solid line that labels a specific point or area
with a note, number, or other written reference. Leader lines usually contain an
arrowhead pointing to the area they are describing.
7. Phantom line: This type of line indicates elements of an object that can move into
alternate positions, or it indicates adjacent features of an object. For example, an architect
might use phantom lines to draw how a closed door looks in the open position. A
phantom line consists of one long dash that alternates with two short dashes.
8. Cutting-plane line: A cutting-plane line is a U-shaped line with arrowheads on each end.
It bisects an object to display its interior features.
9. Section line: Section lines indicate when the surface of an object in the sectional view is
cut along the cutting-plane line. A sectional line consists of multiple short parallel
diagonal lines.
10. Break line: Architects use break lines to shorten the view of long uniform sections of an
object in order to conserve drawing space. Short break lines are thick, solid freehand
wavy lines, while long break lines are thin, solid ruler-drawn lines with interspersed
freehand zig-zags. Architects use break lines in both detail drawings and assembly
drawings.
1. G sheets (general sheets): General sheets contain the cover sheet, plan index, and plot
plans.
2. A sheets (architectural plans): Architectural drawings depict ceiling plans, roof plans,
floor plans, building sections, and wall sections.
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3. S sheets (structural engineering plans): Structural drawings depict framing plans,
foundation plans, and roof structure plans.
4. E sheets (electrical plans): These plans show the location of all electrical fixtures,
circuits, and panel boxes. Electrical schematics show the function of the actual electrical
circuit, while wiring diagrams indicate the physical layout of the wires.
5. M sheets (mechanical plans): Mechanical drawings contain information related to
HVAC systems, refrigerant piping, control wiring, and duct work.
6. P sheets (plumbing plans): Plumbing plans show the location and type of plumbing in a
structure.
7. Door schedule, window schedule, and finish schedule: Schedules describe the size,
material, and style of the doors, windows, and other types of finishes.
8. Specifications sheets: These sheets contain detailed descriptions of all the materials.
1. Begin with the title block. The title block is the first piece of information you'll see in
construction site plans. It contains important details like the project's name, plan number,
drawing date, location information, contact information for the architect, company name,
and the required government approval information. Lastly, it contains the plan index,
which is a reference list of all the drawings contained in the entire set of plans. Any
changes made to the blueprints are listed in a revision block that's typically located in the
title block or in the top right corner of the actual revised drawing.
2. Study the plan legend. The legend is your key to decoding and understanding basic
symbols in the drawings. For example, electrical drawings have symbols that indicate the
placement of an outlet and a roofing plan may have symbols showing the placement of
skylights. There are industry-standard symbols for specific types of projects, but some
architects and construction companies use their own custom symbols. Familiarizing
yourself with the legend right off the bat will make understanding the blueprint symbols
easier.
3. Find the blueprint's scale and orientation. All blueprint drawings are drawn to scale. A
drawing scale indicates the difference between the size of the finished structure and the
size of the drawing. For example, one common drawing scale for a quarter inch in the
drawing to equal one foot in the finished project. If anyone involved in the construction
process uses the incorrect scale, there will be serious problems when materials come in
the wrong sizes. In addition to the architect's scale, you'll want to look for a north arrow
or a compass symbol that establishes the orientation of the drawings. You'll typically find
the blueprint orientation near the plan legend, and the scale should be indicated on each
separate drawing page.
4. Look for notes from the architect. Architects may include general notes to provide
additional context on aspects of the blueprints that would be difficult to interpret
otherwise. Be on the lookout for these notes, which are written directly onto the drawings
or attached in a separate document.