How-To Guide

How to Read a Site Plan

Understanding property boundaries, grading, utilities, and site features on civil drawings

What is a Site Plan?

A site plan (also called a plot plan) is a bird's-eye view drawing showing the arrangement of improvements on a property. It shows the relationship between buildings, driveways, utilities, landscaping, and property boundaries. Familiarity with site and civil symbols is essential for interpreting these drawings accurately.

Key Elements of a Site Plan

Property Information
  • • Property boundaries and dimensions
  • • Setback lines (front, side, rear)
  • • Easements (utility, drainage, access)
  • • Rights-of-way
  • • Adjacent property info
Building Information
  • • Building footprint and location
  • • Finish floor elevation (FFE)
  • • Building entrances
  • • Distances to property lines
  • • Gross building area
Site Improvements
  • • Parking areas and counts
  • • Driveways and access points
  • • Sidewalks and paths
  • • Retaining walls
  • • Fences and gates
Utilities
  • • Water lines and meters
  • • Sewer lines and cleanouts
  • • Storm drainage
  • • Electrical/gas service
  • • Fire hydrant locations

Understanding Contour Lines

Contour lines show elevation changes across the site. For more detail on interpreting slopes and earthwork, see how to read a grading plan. Key principles:

Contour Interval

The vertical distance between contour lines. Common intervals: 1', 2', or 5'. Smaller intervals show more detail.

Close vs. Spread Lines

Lines close together = steep slope. Lines spread apart = gentle slope or flat area.

Existing vs. Proposed

Dashed lines = existing contours. Solid lines = proposed (new) contours after grading.

Reading Direction

Water flows perpendicular to contour lines. "V" shapes pointing uphill indicate valleys/swales.

Spot Elevations and Benchmarks

Specific elevation points are called out on site plans:

AbbreviationMeaningUsage
FFEFinish Floor ElevationBuilding entry levels
TWTop of WallRetaining walls
BWBottom of WallRetaining walls
TCTop of CurbCurb and gutter
FLFlow LineDrainage channels
INVInvertPipe bottom elevation
BMBenchmarkSurvey reference point

Common Site Plan Symbols

North arrow
Tree (existing)
Tree (proposed)
Light pole
Utility pole
Manhole
Fire hydrant
Clean out
Catch basin
Always Check the Legend

Symbols vary between firms and municipalities. Always reference the legend on Sheet C-001 or the symbol key.

Setbacks and Zoning

Setback lines show minimum distances from property lines where building is not permitted. Understanding civil abbreviations will help you decode setback and zoning annotations:

  • Front setback — Distance from street/right-of-way
  • Side setback — Distance from side property lines
  • Rear setback — Distance from rear property line
  • Corner lot — May have two front setbacks

Setbacks are determined by local zoning ordinances and vary by zoning district. Building footprint must stay within the "buildable area" defined by setback lines.

Related Resources

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