A type of copying method often used for architectural drawings Usually used to describe the drawing of a structure that is prepared by an architect or designer for the purpose of design and planning, estimating, securing permits and actual construction
Also called a blue line Is a copy of an architectural or other drawing made by a special machine usually on white paper with the lines and text being a blue color
A type of copying method often used for architectural drawings Usually used to describe the drawing of a structure which is prepared by an architect or designer for the purpose of design and planning, estimating, securing permits and actual construction
A means of recording detailed design plans for a knowledge management system Blueprints provide a roadmap through the content (like a floor plan in a blueprint for a building), screen-by-screen plans for preparing the content (like the elevations), technical specifications for building the software, templates for preparing content that must follow a specific format (such as entries into a lessons learned database), approved terminology lists, and other editorial guidelines (like the specifications in a blueprint for a building
A type of copying method used to describe the drawing of a structure that is prepared by an architect or designer for the purpose of design and planning, estimation, securing permits and actual contruction
plans drawn to scale, used by builders, plumbing, electrical, and other subcontractors in construction Blueprints include floor plans, elevations, a site plan, foundation plan and wall sections, plumbing, electrical and mechanical plans, and construction details
Copies of electrical or other types of technical drawings Although blueprints used to be blue, modern reproduction techniques now permit printing of black on white as well as colors