Architectural Detailing Basics Vol 1
Build your technical detailing confidence by drawing AND modelling four residential masonry junctions. Foundation to DPC, intermediate timber floor with joist hangers, pitched roof at rafter level (warm vs cold roof explained), and warm flat roof with parapet. Each detail is drawn layer-by-layer in 2D, then modelled in 3D—the ultimate understanding of what you're actually drawing. By the end, you'll sheet them up properly and issue professional documentation.
- 4+ hours of premium content
- 12 step-by-step video lessons
- Future updates included
About this course
This course covers four junctions you'll encounter constantly in residential work: foundation to DPC level, intermediate timber floor, pitched roof at rafter level, and warm flat roof with parapet. Each detail is drawn in 2D (the principles work in any package—AutoCAD, MicroStation, Vectorworks) then modelled in 3D so you truly understand the construction. Along the way you'll learn about line weights, brick coursing, joist spacing for acoustics, warm vs cold roofs, U-value calculations, and how to use element keys to streamline your labelling. The final lessons cover sheeting up details properly for issue.
This fundamental technical design course establishes you as a competent detailing specialist through comprehensive exploration of essential residential construction junctions. You'll develop expertise in creating accurate, buildable details for foundations, floor systems, and roof assemblies that meet building regulations while facilitating efficient construction processes.
The curriculum emphasizes practical coordination with structural engineers, building control officers, and contractors through clear technical drawings and comprehensive specification. You'll learn to anticipate construction challenges and specify appropriate materials and assemblies that ensure project success while avoiding costly construction errors.
Advanced documentation techniques include proper annotation strategies, element key systems, and professional sheet organization that communicate construction intent clearly to building teams. The course covers both 2D technical drawing and 3D modeling approaches that enhance understanding of complex construction assemblies.
These technical skills provide the foundation for successful architectural practice where construction knowledge directly impacts project delivery and professional credibility. The techniques learned apply to all building types where accurate technical documentation and construction coordination are essential for bringing architectural designs to successful completion.
What will you learn?
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This course will turn you into:
A residential detailer
Draw brick dimensions correctly, understand stretcher bond, specify joist hangers and wall ties. Know why openings land on standard brick modules.
A construction thinker
Modelling in 3D reveals what's really happening—how the DPM wraps, where insulation stops, why joist hangers sit in mortar joints. Visual understanding that sticks.
A professional documenter
Create element keys that work project-wide, understand wall types as labelling shortcuts, and sheet up details at 1:5 on A3 with proper title blocks.
Syllabus
Why detailing matters: professional indemnity claims, scope creep from giving structural advice, and the consultants you'll coordinate with (structural engineer, energy assessor, building control). This lesson establishes the mindset for producing details that won't get you in trouble.
Taking viewers on a journey from floor plan to building section to detail. You'll learn how section callouts work - the triangle markers, the "cut" line, and how to number details so anyone can find them. Context before detail.
Drawing a traditional masonry foundation from concrete footing through foundation blockwork, DPM, DPC, cavity insulation, floor slab, and facing brick. We cover brick coursing dimensions, line weight conventions, and how to annotate layers clearly. The longest lesson because it establishes patterns used throughout the course.
Modelling the foundation in SketchUp reveals what the 2D lines represent. See how stretcher bond works, why bricks aren't stacked directly on top of each other, and how the detail navigates around corners. Setting out openings to standard brick dimensions gets demonstrated too.
Drawing a timber joist floor with joist hangers embedding in blockwork mortar joints. The joist depth comes from the engineer, but you need to push them for it. We walk through the floor buildup—joists, acoustic underlay, floorboards—and the ceiling below with resilient bars and plasterboard.
Modelling reveals why joist spacing matters. 400mm centres creates a more rigid floor with better acoustic performance than 600mm - less bounce, less sound transmission. You'll see how resilient bars run perpendicular to joists, how the vapour control layer wraps, and how coving conceals the ceiling-to-wall joint.
Warm roof vs cold roof explained: warm has insulation above the structure (best practice), cold has it between (thinner buildup but potential condensation issues). We draw a hybrid approach with insulation at rafter level, covering ventilation requirements, vapour control layer positioning, and why building regs officers have varying opinions.
Rafters notched around the wall plate, battens and counter-battens creating ventilation voids, fascia and soffit boards concealing the rafter ends, gutter positioning. Seeing this in 3D makes sense of all those parallel lines in the 2D detail. The insulation sits between rafters with a small extra piece sealing the wall head.
A warm flat roof is essentially an intermediate floor with insulation on top. Using Kingspan's documentation to size insulation for a 0.11 U-value—two layers totalling 210mm. You'll draw the plywood deck, vapour control layer (positioned on the warm side here, not below like in floors), tapered insulation for falls, and single-ply membrane.
The parapet detail in 3D: coping stone at the top, cavity tray forcing water back out through weep holes, the internal gutter profile where tapered insulation meets the upstand. Modelling reveals how each element prevents water getting into the cavity while allowing inevitable moisture to escape.
Stop labelling every component individually. An element key lives in one file, gets copied to every detail sheet, and eliminates duplication. Take it further with wall types and floor types that bundle multiple components into single references. This approach acts as an outline specification and speeds up drawing production.
Getting details onto sheets for issue. We demonstrate A3 portrait layouts at 1:5 scale using a professional title block template. The lesson covers viewport setup, scale factors for annotation, and creating a coordinated set where the element key appears consistently across all detail sheets.

Meet your instructor
Adam Morgan
Architectural Director
ThreeForm Architects
Hi, I'm Adam. I am the founder and director of ThreeForm Architects, a team of architects and artists in Liverpool, UK. The office is experienced in a wide range of building types and procurement routes, successfully winning projects with contract values of up to £20 million. We work for a broad spectrum of public and private sector clients across the country. I have always had a passion for teaching aspiring and young architects. I offer support to emerging young architects through the RIBA mentoring programme and am also a visiting architectural critic and tutor for Liverpool John Moores University.
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