AI Assistant
Notifications
Clear all

Floor Plans

9 Posts
6 Users
0 Reactions
713 Views
not-my-real-name
(@not-my-real-name)
Posts: 1216
Member
Topic starter
Translate
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

If you were making "Floor Plans" for a condominium conversion would you use architectural units or decimal feet?

In our jurisdiction a condominium conversion requires a "Site Plan" and "Floor Plans" to be recorded at the Registry.

The most convenient units for measuring and plotting the interior is decimal feet for the CAD system.


Historic boundaries and conservation efforts.

 
Posted : August 15, 2024 9:27 am
holy-cow
(@holy-cow)
Posts: 25672
Member
Translate
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

Changing the drafting units to inches and fractions is easy peasy. Try it.


 
Posted : August 15, 2024 9:33 am
not-my-real-name
(@not-my-real-name)
Posts: 1216
Member
Topic starter
Translate
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

You're right. I can change the dimension style to architectural and apply a scale factor of 12 otherwise it will show a line that is 10.5 feet as 10.5 inches. Thank you.


Historic boundaries and conservation efforts.

 
Posted : August 15, 2024 10:00 am
peter-lothian
(@peter-lothian)
Posts: 1226
Member
Translate
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

It's been so long since I prepared a set of floor plans, I can't remember for sure. I probably just did decimal feet at the time but as noted it would be easy use feet and inches. I suggest keeping it simple as far as dimensioning goes. No need to show every twist and turn through the hallways and closets. Just a length and width for each space is enough in most cases.


 
Posted : August 15, 2024 11:47 pm
BStrand
(@bstrand)
Posts: 2740
Member
Translate
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

I'm not familiar with condo conversions, but if you show measurements of the existing building don't you get some pretty weird fractions when you convert the decimal feet? I've heard architects and carpenters only comprende 8ths. 😏


 
Posted : August 16, 2024 12:35 am

Norman_Oklahoma
(@norman-oklahoma)
Posts: 8310
Member
Translate
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

My first exposure to Condo plans was in British Columbia, in metric. Even though the building plans were still in feet and inches. So that says something, doesn’t it?

I’ve since done several in both Washington and Oregon. Always in decimal feet. They are survey plans, after all, and statute law calls for length dimensions in decimal feet on survey plans in both places.

The fact that the OP is working a conversion has no bearing on the matter.


 
Posted : August 16, 2024 1:14 am
peter-lothian
(@peter-lothian)
Posts: 1226
Member
Translate
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

I would set the dimensioning to show only to the whole inch, possibly to the half inch. These floor plans aren't mapping out Swiss watches. They are to show the unit purchasers "what they are buying" and distinguish between the individual ownership and the common ownership. Eighth inch distances would be useless to the unit owners and may even be a bit of false precision, when you think about slightly curved wall studs, etc. The floor area is usually very important, as many times the common ownership percentages are based on the areas of the units.


 
Posted : August 16, 2024 2:45 am
thebionicman
(@thebionicman)
Posts: 4524
Member
Translate
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

For a condo your dimensions serve three primary purposes. From the surveyor view they are to get you to the right monument (wall). For the assessor it's about computing taxes. The insurance company wants to charge correct premiums and cut the proper check in the event of a disaster.

None of these require high precision. Nearest half- tenth is fine and that's my preference. I also note the dimensions cannot be measured or expressed more precise than the materials and type of construction allow.


 
Posted : August 16, 2024 8:01 am
not-my-real-name
(@not-my-real-name)
Posts: 1216
Member
Topic starter
Translate
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

Thank you to everyone. I must say, it is not fun to measure the walls inside of a building, especially when the rooms are not rectangles. It was fun using the hand-held laser distance meter though. Just push the button!


Historic boundaries and conservation efforts.

 
Posted : August 16, 2024 8:41 am