ARCHITECTURE DRAWING Carlson Ko Oscar Wong Zheng Yang Lee Ren Jet Liew Yu Xian Chong Jin Feng
WHAT IS ARCHITECTURE DRAWING????
I ntroduction
Architecture drawing usually use A0 size paper (841mm X 1189mm) Architecture drawing are drawn to scale for the correctly represented. Scale drawing enabled dimension to be understand by others. Size and scale
Stages Of Architecture Drawings
Sort out what you like and what you want to change Consider some of the technical limits Discuss with designer about environmental conditions Look at your budget Ask about future maintenance issues Decide if you feel comfortable 1.INITIAL SKETCH PLANS
Draw up the development designs Design is particularly a cutting-edge Discuss the materials use – cladding, flooring, roofting , windows, doors Interior fittings and fixtures – power points, cable jacks, exterior taps, light location and attic access Use a Quantity Surveyor to estimate the cost of the project 2.DEVELOPED DESIGNS
In the tendering process, get quotes from contractors, subcontractors and also quantity surveyors Builder and contractors contracted to built house as blueprint for the construction 3.FINAL PLANS AND SPECIFICATION
Standard views
Floor plan is a most fundamental architectural diagram. Showing the arrangement at a particular level of a building. 3 feet / 1 metre above floor level Floor plans includes anything that could be seen below Floor Plan
Symbols
Site plan is an architecture plan, landscape architecture document, and a detailed engineering drawing A site plan usually shows a building footprint, travel ways , parking, drainage facilities, sanitary sewer lines, water lines, trails, lighting, and landscaping and garden elements. Site plan
ELEVATION Elevation drawing that shows the front or side of a building Without elevation drawings, you cannot see the details of your new cabinetry, the size of each drawer or the location of each cabinet Elevation is not required for every renovation or redecorating project, they are very useful when designing items like a fireplace, bathroom vanities, bars, or any location with built-in cabinetry, such as an office or entertainment space
A cross section , also simply called a section, represents a vertical plane cut through the object, in the same way as a floor plan is a horizontal section viewed from the top. Everything cut by the section plane is shown as a bold line, often with a solid fill to show objects that are cut through, and anything seen beyond generally shown in a thinner line. CROSS SECTION
A simple way of representing a three dimensional object. An isometric uses a plan grid at 30 degrees from the horizontal in both directions, which distorts the plan shape An axonometric uses a 45 degree plan grid, which keeps the original orthogonal geometry of the plan. Isometric and axonometric projections