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MAKE YOUR OWN BLUEPRINT

How to Draw Floor Plans by Hand or Using Home Design Software

This Make Your Own Blueprint tutorial will walk you through the detailed steps of how to draw
floor plans for your new home design. This process can be followed by those drafting their
blueprints by hand or using home design software.
For this tutorial, we are assuming that you have already completed your house design sketches. If
you are just starting out with your home design, check out our freeHome Design Tutorial.

Page Sections at a Glance

Drafting Options

Tools to Make Your Own Blueprints

Using an Architect's Scale

The Blueprint Page Itself

Draw Exterior Walls

Draw Interior Walls

Locate Doors and Windows

Draw Electrical Symbols

Label Floor Surfaces

Dimension Your Plans

Add Furniture

Create Window Schedule

Drafting Options
There are basically two ways to make your own blueprints.

Using home design software.

Drafting them by hand.

There is also the option of doing a bit of both.


Some may ask why would anyone make their own blueprints by hand when we have many
relatively inexpensive home design software products available.
Here are some good reasons:

It takes a long time to truly learn how to use the house design programs to completely
generate the cross sections, framing and other blueprint details that you need to get your
building plans approved.

Most of the inexpensive programs (less than $250) do not generate the kind of details
required for full construction drawings.

Most of the home design programs can produce accurately dimensioned floor plan drawings of the
quality required for your building permit. But for some programs this is as far as you can go with
the construction drawings. What views remain are the cross-sections, elevation views, and any
necessary framing plans. This is where you may have to make your own blueprints by hand or use
a more full-featured (and more expensive home design program).
I am not suggesting to stay away from home design programs entirely. Rather a good approach if
you want to keep costs down is to do some drawing with design software and some hand drafting.
The home design programs are great for allowing you to draw floor plans in 2D then visualize
them in 3D. You can easily move walls as you refine your design. The design programs allow you
to quickly generate views of your ideas and designs. You can then easily modify the drawings as
you drag and drop furniture, appliances and fixtures into the blueprints. Oftentimes, you'll realize
not enough space has been allowed for certain areas once the fixtures are in or perhaps you are
wasting space in some areas.
Whether you are using home design software or drawing your blueprints by hand, the first
drawings to start with are your floor plans. Using your own floor plan sketches or your results
from the Draw Floor Plan module of our house design tutorial, start by drawing the exterior walls

of the main story of your home. (The sequence detailed below for drawing floor plans by hand is a
good one to follow if you are using design software as well.)

Tools for Drawing Floor Plans

Your local art supply store should have all the of drawing tools you will need to make your own
blueprints. You can also order most of these supplies online. A good supplier is Utrecht Drafting
Supplies.

Architect's scale

T-square

Adjustable triangle

Mechanical pencils with leads

Felt tip pens

Erasers

Erasing shields (for accurate erasing of only specific parts of your drawing)

Compass

Symbol template

Long metal ruler or straight edge

Tracing paper

Masking tape

Utility knife

Big flat working surface (table)

White poster board as a base for your working surface


Optional but nice:

Parallel ruler (for drawing parallel lines alternatively you can also use a T-square)

How to Use an Architect's Scale


To make your own blueprint to scale you will use an architect's scale. Architect's scales are very
simple to use, no math required.
For house plans, you should be using a scale of 1/4 inch to a foot for the floor plan drawings. This
is written as 1/4":1'. This means that every quarter inch you draw on your page represents one
foot for the real house as it will be built. So one inch on your drawing would represent four feet of
the built house.

Find the side of the triangular scale which has 1/4":1' marked on it. The numbers on this side of
the scale represent feet for your built house. So if you needed to draw an exterior wall 36 feet
long, you would:
1.

Lay the scale down on the paper

2.

Make a small pencil mark on your paper by the zero mark on the scale

3.

Make another small pencil mark on your paper by the 36 mark on the scale

4.

Use your metal straight edge to draw a straight line connecting the two marks.

This line would measure 9 inches on your drawing and would represent 36 feet for the built
house.
When finished your drawings must have all room dimensions accurately marked. But building
trades people will often use an architect's scale (or ruler) while they are building to check various
dimensions on your drawings. So for this purpose make sure that you use you scale accurately for
every line you draw!

The Blueprint Page Itself


To make your own blueprint floor plans, use a sheet of paper 24" by 36". Lay the sheet down on
your working surface with the longest edge running horizontally.
The lower right hand corner of your drawing you will save for your title block. This is where you
will write the name of the view you are drawing (floor plan, elevation, cross section), the scale of
the drawing, the name of the house (could just be the family name), designer's name and date.
The date is very important especially when you make changes to your plans. Everyone on the
building site needs to know what date version of the plans they should be using.
We ran into this issue when our concrete footings and post pads were being poured. Luckily I was
watching the pour when I noticed the pads for the structural posts were being poured in the
wrong location. I talked with the crew and found they had an old set of drawings. We moved the
wood framing for the pads and then hand shoveled the poured concrete over to the correct
location.

Draw Exterior Walls


Start by drawing the exterior walls of your design. You will want to roughly center your first floor
plan view in the space on the paper available excluding the title block. So before you draw your
first wall, use your scale get a rough idea of how much space on the page your first floor plan will
need.

For this tutorial we will move in a clockwise direction starting at the upper left hand corner of your
drawing. You can choose how you will orient the home on the page. It is fairly standard to have
the front door at the lower side of the horizontal sheet but depending on the design or shape of
your home you may want to alter this.
For the floor plan drawings you will draw the framed walls, interior and exterior. That is you will
not be drawing the finished dimensions of the rooms once drywall or other finished wall surfaces
are installed. Other drawings will detail finished surfaces of exterior and interior walls as required.
The construction drawings for the floor plans need to be properly dimensioned for the framing
crew. The room size difference with the drywall installed is very small and will only make about an
inch of difference for any given room (a half inch of drywall on either side of the room). But there
may be parts of your design where being out by an inch will cause problems (for instance if you
are pre-ordering custom or stock cabinetry).

Start from the upper left hand corner of your floor plan design. At this point do not worry about
doors and windows, we will draw them in later.
1.

Use a pencil, your architect's scale and a straight edge to draw what the total inside
dimension of the first wall will be until it meets another wall (your exterior walls could be
anywhere from several inches to a couple of feet thickfor a straw bale home for instance).

2.

Use your T-square (or a protractor for a wall not at a square angle to the previous wall)
and architect's scale to draw the next wall.

3.

Continue in this fashion, clockwise around your drawing until the inside framing side of all
of you exterior walls are drawn.

4.

Finally, draw the outside of the exterior wall framing. If you are framing with 2 by 6s, your
exterior framed walls will be 5 1/2 inches thick (2 by 4s and 2 by 6s are run through a planer
that takes a half inch off both their width and thickness).

Draw Interior Walls

For your interior walls:


1.

Draw both sides of each interior wall. If you will be using 2 by 4s to frame your interior
walls, the actual thickness of each framed wall will be 3 1/2 inches (as explained above at the
end of the drawing exterior walls section). Initially, just draw each wall, we'll locate doors and
any openings later.

2.

Draw walls around any stairwell areas. This helps visualize the stairwell area as a room. If
there will not be a physical wall around the stairwell simply draw a faint dotted line.

3.

Draw staircases and any mid-stair landings within these walls.

4.

Draw an arrow labeled "up" in the up direction of the stair.

Draw Doors and Windows


The next step as you make your own blueprint is to draw your doors and windows onto the floor
plan. For each door, window or wall opening on your floor plan:

Use your scale to locate its position.

Draw the appropriate door or window symbol from the blueprints symbols glossary to
properly identify it.

Label Rooms
In the center of each room, clearly label the room name. Include closets and open spaces such as
entrances.

Locate Appliances, Plumbing and Fixtures


Using your scale, symbols template and straight edge, draw the correct symbols for:

All appliances

Built in furniture such as kitchen and bathroom cabinets and counters

Plumbing items such as sinks, toilets and tubs

Fireplaces

Equipment such as furnaces, air conditioning units and water tanks.

Draw Electrical Symbols


All electrical symbols should now be added to your plans.
Place the appropriate symbols along walls for the following electrical items:

Plug outlets

Wall switches for lights or switchable plugs

Wall light such as sconces

Doorbells

For ceiling mount items, draw the following fixtures on the floor just below the spot where the
item would be installed.

Ceiling lights such as pot lights or track lighting.

Smoke alarms

Label Floor Surfaces


Detail the plans by indicating for each room how the floors will be finished and any required subflooring. For instance your plans may read:

3/4" hardwood flooring

1/4" tile over 1/2" plywood sub-flooring

Carpet over 5/8" plywood sub-flooring

Dimension Your Plans


The next step on your floor plan drawings is to draw accurate dimension lines. You will need to
draw dimension lines for:

Each room

Closets

Cabinet depths

Distances from wall to back of toilet (know as the rough in dimension)

Sizes of tubs

Distances from walls to edge of any appliances or fixtures.

Note that not all required dimension lines are shown in the plan belowthis is for ease of viewing.
One more dimension line should run along each exterior wall to locate all window and door
openings.

Add Furniture
Furniture should not be included in your construction drawings but for your own design purposes
it is a good idea to use scaled furniture cutouts during the design process to ensure you have
designed adequate space for all rooms and circulation paths. See our tutorial module Draw Floor
Plan for more information and furniture blueprint symbols.

Create Window and Door Schedule


The final step to make your own blueprint is to create a window and door schedule.
On your floor plan:
1.

Label each door and window with a number or letter.

2.

In a blank area to the right of the floor plan, create a three column list.

3.

Put all the labels for your door and windows in the first column.

4.

5.

List window and door types in the second column (casement, awning, fixed, single hung,
etc.)
List the exact window size in the third column.

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