Discover the intricate details of riser designation area drawings for commercial buildings with this comprehensive overview. Learn how a building can be divided into sectors to facilitate the creation and reading of detailed riser diagrams.
Key Insights
- The article outlines the process of dividing a large commercial building into ten sections, labeled A-J, on a riser designation area drawing to help in the creation and interpretation of riser diagrams.
- This division into smaller sections is necessary due to the sheer volume of information that needs to be presented and interpreted on the riser diagrams of each specific area within the commercial building.
- The riser designation area drawing acts as a reference plan for subsequent drawings, with each section represented in detail on separate pages of riser diagrams, simplifying the process of understanding the building's overall structure.
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In our last drawing, which was the enlarged view of the laundry, we saw plan views as well as riser diagrams. This sheet, which is our riser designation area drawing for part B of the building, is a reference drawing to subsequent drawings that include numerous riser diagrams. And so what they have done is they have taken the building and divided it into ten sections.
They're labeling it Area B, Section A, Area B, Section B, C, D, and so on. They have divided this section into two separate riser pages because of the amount of information that needs to be presented for those specific areas. So again, this is a reference plan.
There will be ten pages following this sheet containing only riser diagrams. And we're going to work on one of those sections in just a minute. So take a few moments to review this drawing, and now let's get into learning more about riser diagrams.