Landscape Site Grading Principles

Page 83

Using and Choosing the Right Scale Where this explanation is leading us is to concepts of drawing conventions (covered in Chapter 4) and scale (to be covered here). The design services of a landscape architect involve (1) developing design ideas, (2) refining these ideas according to input from the client and others, then (3) resolving the refined ideas into their final form of construction-ready plan drawings and details. The drawings are a representation of both what is on the ground (existing conditions) and what is projected to be built on the ground, usually by a third party such as a landscape and building contractor. In order for the contractor to build what the designer intends, the drawings must contain sufficient detail and an accurate representation of existing site conditions. The graphic information must be organized around a graphic system that the contractor and the land surveyor can transpose from hand-drawn or digital information to the ground. The use of scale, in a graphic representation sense, allows the designer to transfer ideas to paper, then allows the contractor to transfer them from paper to the ground. Scale is the relationship between measured distances on the ground and the dimensions of a three-dimensional physical element that is drawn as a plan or as a series of details and sections. The drawings represent the physical reality of the project site and a scaled facsimile of the designed elements to be built. A plan scale represents a fraction or a ratio whereby a unit of measurement shown on a plan, such as an inch or fraction of an inch, is equal to a prescribed number of feet on the ground. For instance, a drawing prepared at 20 scale means that an inch on a ruler represents 20 feet on the ground. So if a playing field is designed to be 100 feet wide and 300 feet long, it would be drawn—on a piece of paper or using a computer—5 inches wide by 15 inches long. Simple enough, but the decision of which scale to use to prepare the needed plans and details has as much to do with the level of detail to be included as with the sheet size of the drawings, in the context of the actual size or area of the project site. A golf course, which could be 150 to 200 acres, might require a drawing scale of 1 inch equals 100 feet (100 scale) in order to fit on a

What Is Scale, Why Is It Important, and How Is It Used?

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Index

8min
pages 316-322

References

0
page 315

Introduction to Estimating Earth-Moving Quantities

3min
pages 277-278

Water Detention Swale

4min
pages 268-270

Cut and Fill Is the Process of Earth Moving

2min
pages 275-276

Water Management

1min
pages 273-274

Aquifer Recharge

2min
pages 264-265

Retention Ponds

2min
pages 266-267

Roadside Drainage Swale

1min
page 263

Contour Grading

3min
pages 254-256

Traditional Handling of Surface Storm Water

1min
page 253

Design Process for Grading a Pedestrian Ramp

3min
pages 231-232

Construction Sequence for a Bus Shelter

4min
pages 245-248

Introduction

5min
pages 249-252

Introduction

1min
page 229

Grading of Paved Surfaces: Walks and Ramps

1min
page 230

Creating a Sculpted Landform

2min
pages 218-220

Catch Basin Design in Paved Area

1min
page 217

Creating a Watershed to Collect Surface Water

1min
page 216

Creating Landscapes Using Contours

3min
pages 182-183

Introduction

1min
page 203

Creating a Level Area on Sloping Ground

1min
page 206

From Schematic Design Plan to Grading Plan

2min
pages 178-181

How a Contractor Uses Spot Elevations Shown on a Grading Plan

1min
page 177

Introducing Calculation of Slope

3min
pages 138-139

Putting It All Together

3min
pages 134-137

Slope in Plan and Section

5min
pages 122-126

Contour Lines: A Language for Two Dimensions

1min
page 111

Reading the Landscape

1min
page 110

Introduction

1min
page 109

Referencing System for a Land Parcel

1min
page 104

The Language of Maps How to Find and Locate Places in the Landscape,

1min
page 95

Licensed Land Surveyor

1min
page 105

U.S. Geological Survey and Scales of Other Countries

2min
pages 93-94

The Information Contained in Topographic Maps

1min
page 92

Architect’s and Engineer’s Scales

1min
page 86

Topographic Maps Are Useful Preplanning Tools

4min
pages 87-89

Map Scales and Contour Intervals

2min
page 90

Using and Choosing the Right Scale

2min
page 83

Reference Plan and Match Lines

2min
pages 84-85

Site Grading Is Integral to the Phases of Design

1min
page 82

The Need for Scaled Drawings

1min
page 81

Scale: A Word of Several Meanings

2min
pages 79-80

Construction Documentation

1min
page 75

Miscommunication

1min
page 74

Another Word about Scale

2min
pages 76-78

Drafting and Representation The Concept of Documentation Conventions in

1min
page 69

Music and Design Following Drawing Conventions Prevents

4min
pages 70-73

Drawing Conventions: Landscape Drawings and Music Scores

1min
pages 67-68

the Design Continuum

1min
pages 65-66

Preliminary Site Grading Plan Design Development and Subsequent Phases in

2min
pages 63-64

Step 4 Land Use and Circulation Diagram

1min
pages 56-57

Step 3 Program Analysis

2min
pages 54-55

Introduction

1min
page 45

Professional Registration to Practice Landscape Architecture

5min
pages 40-44

Site Grading in the Professional Practice of Landscape Architecture

1min
page 39

Could Have Been Avoided

1min
pages 37-38

Avoiding Grading Problems in the Landscape

1min
page 36

What the Student Needs to Know about Site Grading

4min
pages 27-29

The Importance of Grading in Design

3min
pages 22-23

Site Grading Informs Design

2min
pages 19-20

Professional Relationships

1min
page 30

Let’s Begin

0
page 21

A Picture Is Worth a Thousand Words

1min
page 24

What Is Site Grading?

2min
pages 33-35

The Basic Structural Approach to This Book

1min
pages 31-32
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