How to Read Architectural Drawings
The complete guide to understanding floor plans, elevations, sections, and details
Architectural drawings are the foundation of every construction project. If you can't read them accurately, you'll miss critical information that leads to RFIs, change orders, and costly rework. This guide covers everything you need to know to read architectural drawings like a pro.
Types of Architectural Drawings
Horizontal cut through the building, typically 4 feet above the floor. Shows walls, doors, windows, and room layouts.
Flat, straight-on views of the building exterior or interior walls. Shows vertical dimensions and materials.
Vertical cuts through the building showing floor-to-floor heights, foundation depth, and roof construction.
Enlarged views of specific construction conditions. Shows how materials connect and assemble.
Understanding Scale
Scale tells you the relationship between the drawing and real-world dimensions. For a deeper dive, see our construction drawing scale guide. Common architectural scales:
| Scale | Meaning | Typical Use |
|---|---|---|
| 1/8" = 1'-0" | 1/8 inch on paper = 1 foot in reality | Overall floor plans, site plans |
| 1/4" = 1'-0" | 1/4 inch on paper = 1 foot in reality | Floor plans, elevations |
| 1/2" = 1'-0" | 1/2 inch on paper = 1 foot in reality | Wall sections, interior elevations |
| 3/4" = 1'-0" | 3/4 inch on paper = 1 foot in reality | Cabinet elevations, millwork |
| 1" = 1'-0" | 1 inch on paper = 1 foot in reality | Large-scale details |
| 3" = 1'-0" | 3 inches on paper = 1 foot in reality | Connection details, profiles |
Never scale a drawing with a ruler—dimensions may have been adjusted after printing. Always use the written dimensions, and submit an RFI if a dimension is missing.
Reading Floor Plans
Different line weights indicate different wall types:
- • Heavy solid lines — Load-bearing or rated walls
- • Medium lines — Standard interior partitions
- • Dashed lines — Elements above the cut plane (soffits, beams)
- • Hatched walls — Often indicates fire-rated assemblies
The arc shows which way the door swings. The hinge side is where the arc connects to the wall. Double lines indicate a double door; dashed swing indicates a pocket or sliding door.
Room tags typically show: room name, room number, floor finish code, and ceiling height. These link to the finish schedule and door schedule.
Circles with numbers/letters point to other drawings. Section marks show cut direction with an arrow. Elevation marks show viewing direction.
Reading Elevations
Elevations show vertical relationships. Key things to look for:
- Level markers — Horizontal lines with elevation callouts (e.g., T.O.S. +100'-0")
- Material indications — Hatching patterns showing brick, stone, metal panels, etc.
- Window and door heights — Head heights, sill heights relative to floor
- Grade line — Where the building meets the ground (often a heavy dashed line)
- Roof slope — Indicated as rise:run ratio (e.g., 4:12)
Reading Sections
Sections reveal what's hidden inside walls and floors. They're essential for understanding:
- Floor-to-floor heights — Measure from finish floor to finish floor
- Ceiling heights — Clear height from floor to ceiling
- Structure visibility — Shows beams, columns, and their relationship to finishes
- Foundation depth — How deep the footings go below grade
- Roof construction — Slope, insulation, membrane layers
- • T.O.S. — Top of Slab/Steel
- • B.O.S. — Bottom of Structure
- • F.F. — Finish Floor
- • T.O.W. — Top of Wall
- • CLG. — Ceiling height
Reading Details
Details are where the real construction information lives. Understanding architectural detail types helps you know what to look for. They show exactly how components connect:
- Material layers — Each material is called out with leaders
- Dimensions — Specific sizes for gaps, overlaps, and clearances
- Fastener callouts — What type, spacing, and pattern
- Reference standards — Spec section references (e.g., "See Spec 07 92 00")
- Notes — Special instructions, field verify requirements
Common Mistakes When Reading Drawings
Never use a scale ruler on a printed drawing. PDFs and prints may not be at true scale.
The notes on Sheet A-001 often override information shown elsewhere. Read them.
That "3/A-501" callout might have critical information. Always trace the references.
Different drawings may show conflicting information. Cross-check plans, sections, and details.
Related Resources
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