A floor plan tells only one part of the story. For a residential project, the site view, road-facing elevation and building section should be reviewed together before execution decisions are finalised.

The Rammurthy G+2 drawing set shows a 40 by 40 site with road references on the south and west sides, a road elevation sheet and a vertical building section. These three views help connect plot conditions, facade planning and internal heights.

The site view explains approach and constraints

The site view shows plot size, neighbouring site references, road sides and building placement. This is important for entry, parking, setbacks and service access.

  • Check road-facing sides clearly.
  • Coordinate entry with parking.
  • Confirm site dimensions before execution.

Elevation shows what the road will see

The road elevation helps the client understand the exterior composition from outside. Windows, projections, wall planes and compound lines can be reviewed before final finishes.

  • Check window alignment.
  • Review compound wall height.
  • Coordinate elevation with internal rooms.

Section reveals height and internal relationship

The section sheet shows floor levels, parking zone, room heights and vertical connections. It helps catch issues that a plan may not reveal.

  • Check floor-to-floor heights.
  • Review parking clearance.
  • Coordinate stair and room levels.

When site, elevation and section are read together, the design becomes easier to execute. It also helps the client understand the house as a complete building, not as separate drawings.