Architectural Design 1 Model
Units:
- Orientation/The World of Architecture
- Architectural Career Opportunities
- Fundamentals of Design
- Indoor Living Areas
- Indoor Living Areas - Cottage Project
- Outdoor Living Areas
- Traffic Areas and Patterns
- Kitchens
- Architectural Kitchen Design Project - Basic Kitchen Designs & The Work Triangle (1 of 4)
- Architectural Kitchen Design Project - Seven Residential Kitchen Styles (2 of 4)
- Architectural Kitchen Design Project - Countertops & Backsplashes, Door & Drawer Front Styles, And Kitchen Appliances (3 of 4)
- Drawing Requirements/Material Scheduels & Deadlines for the "Architectural Kitchen Design Project" (4 of 4)
- General Service Areas
- Sleeping Areas
- Bubble Diagrams
- Technical Sketching
- Graphing
- Architectural Planning
- Floor Plan Design and Delineation
- Electrical Plans
- Creating a Basic Bread Board Electrical Circuit
- Create a Basic Bread Board Series Electrical Circuit
- Create a Basic Bread Board Parallel Electrical Circuit
- Create a Bread Board Series and Parallel Electrical Circuit
- Electrical Plan Using REVIT
- Electrical Symbols
- CAD: the Universal Language
- Drawing the electrical symbols
- Draw the symbols
- A sample electrical plan
- Restate the objectives
- Adding Electrical Symbols to a Floor Plan
- Foundation Plans and Construction Details
- Elevation Designs and Layout
- Section Plan Layouts
- Site Plan Design
- Green Architecture
- Fundamental Drawing Techniques
- Roof Planning
- Structural Design in Architecture
- Architectural Pictorials
- Special Projects-Beginning Level
- Plans for a bird house kit.
- 1/4" Scaled Floor Plan Drawing of Student's Home- lesson 1 of 4
- Students Install Wall Framing of House in Which They Live in - 2 of 4
- Students Build Roof Framing of House in Which They Live in - 3 of 4
- Full Scale Model of Home Students Live In - exterior and roof covering 4 of 4
- Put a car in the garage
- Special Projects-Advanced Level
Tags
Activity Industry Sector
Engineering & Design
Activity Originally Created By:
Kyle Hudson
CAD: the Universal Language
Part of Lesson Plan: Electrical Symbols
Activity Overview / Details
Hold up a mechanical drawing from Japan (or another country). Ask the student if they understand Japanese. They say "No". But can they understand the drawing? "Yes"
The Point:
Drafting is a universal language. By learning the basic symbols used in mechanical drawing, our pictures are really worth a thousand words.
Materials / Resource
No resources are included, yet.




