Floor Plan Template
Visualize your designs with our Floor Plan Maker and design a room arrangement for an upcoming occasion, event, or team bonding experience.
About the Floor Plan Template
When you’re in the business of building or designing houses, offices, or other spaces, you’ll fall back on the floor plan when you need to make key decisions. The floor plan provides you with a bird’s eye view of a space, whether that be of the entire floor or just a single room.
Floor plans can be as detailed as you want them to be and might include measurements, appliances, furniture, dimensions, or any other salient information. They’re accessible to everyone interested in designing or re-arranging a space but are used mostly by architects, engineers, builders, and designers. In these professions, floor plans are integral to visualizing the work they intend to do in a space.
What is a floor plan?
For builders, designers, engineers, and architects, most projects begin with a floor plan. The plan is a scaled diagram of a building, floor, or room.
The floor plan will provide the worker with an overview of the space from above. It can be simple, showing just the various rooms and their measurements, or it can be more fleshed out. The more complex plans can go into detail and outline some of the following elements:
Specific appliances in each room
Connections between the rooms
Electrical wiring of the space
Any furniture
Direction of foot traffic flow
Dimensions
The choice to fill out either a simple or detailed floor plan template will depend on what your goals are.
For some, simply visualizing the space and the measurements of each room might provide enough information to move ahead with a project such as installing appliances or creating new spaces. Others may need to see more information, such as foot traffic flow if the building in question is a supermarket and the idea is to rearrange the layout to optimize sales.
If you are interested in how people may move around the space you’re working with, you can use the Spaghetti Diagram Template to visualize the flow of people accurately. This can be used in conjunction with the floor plan to build a clear picture of the space and how people will navigate it.
Create your own floor plan
While it might seem like you need a certain level of expertise to create a floor plan, the reality is anyone can do it with the right floor plan maker. Miro is the perfect canvas to create and share your very own plans.
Get started by selecting the floor plan template, then take the following steps to make one of your own.
Use shapes to create objects in your room. The template already has shapes you can use, copy, or rearrange.
Make your model to scale. If you’re modeling an existing building, take measurements of individual walls, doors, appliances, and furniture. Whether you’re a seasoned interior designer or a homeowner looking to redesign a room, it’s important to have accurate measurements of the space. You can use the squares on the infinite canvas to represent units of measurement to fit everything to scale (e.g., a foot, a meter, a yard).
Add architectural features such as doors, windows, and appliances. Use shapes or even images to visualize them in your floor plan.
If necessary, add in more furniture. Double-check to make sure the furniture is to scale.
Tips to make an effective floor plan
So you have the template and the tools, but what exactly goes into an effective floor plan
Here are some factors you should consider if you want to create a detailed plan for an upcoming project such as a home or room renovation, an office upgrade, or a store layout change:
Get specific
When creating a floor plan, less is often more. The last thing you want to do is waste your time drawing up a plan in which 80% of the rooms aren’t relevant to your project.
Figure out exactly which area you need to draw, whether it be a room or an entire floor, and this will save you time. You can think of this process like zooming in on the area you want to change or optimize.
Use accurate measurements and dimensions
You won’t make any progress if you aren’t able to base your decisions on accurate measurements and dimensions.
As such, it’s important that you take measurements of the existing floor before you start the new floor plan. If it’s a hypothetical plan for a floor that doesn’t yet exist, then you can think about what measurements and dimensions would make the most sense.
Consider individual rooms
There’s a lot more that goes into the design process for an individual room than you might at first assume. While it may appear as if the most important features are the doors, windows, and furniture, these are just the surface-level design elements to consider.
Dig deeper into interior design, and you’ll find that how a room ‘flows’ is just as important as furniture or appliance placement. For example, if you’re sitting at an office desk that looks out the window but has been placed behind the door, this could be jarring whenever someone enters the room.
Get started with this template right now.
Meeting Agenda Template
Works best for:
Business Management, Meetings, Workshops
A detailed, clear agenda — that’s what separates meetings that go completely off the rails from those where goals are met and things get done. So grab this template and set a meeting agenda that lays out expectations for before, during, and after the meeting. It’ll enable participants to get prepared beforehand and empower you to stay on-task and identify when the discussion is complete. (Tip: Plan ahead to send out your meeting agenda at least 24 hours before the meeting.)
Assumption Grid Template
Works best for:
Leadership, Decision Making, Strategic Planning
Someone wise once said that nothing in life is certain. But the waters of the business world? It can seem especially uncertain and unclear. An Assumption Grid can help you navigate those waters and make your decisions confidently. It organizes your business ideas according to the certainty and risk of each — then your team can discuss them and make judgment calls, prioritize, mitigate risk, and overcome uncertainties. That’s why an Assumption Grid is a powerful tool for getting past the decision paralysis that every team occasionally faces.
HEART Framework Template
Works best for:
Desk Research, Project Management, User Experience
Happiness, Engagement, Adoption, Retention, and Task Success. Those are the pillars of user experience — which is why they serve as the key metrics in the HEART framework. Developed by the research team at Google, this framework gives larger companies an accurate way to measure user experience at scale, which you can then reference throughout the product development lifecycle. While the HEART framework uses five metrics, you might not need all five for every project — choose the ones that will be most useful for your company and project.
Brand Positioning Template
Works best for:
Strategy, Branding, Planning
The Brand Positioning Template is a valuable tool that helps businesses establish a strong market presence. It brings clarity and focus to a brand's identity and messaging by guiding users through a structured process. This ensures all aspects of a brand's positioning are aligned and thoughtfully considered. The Brand Positioning Template helps businesses articulate their unique value proposition, ensuring their messaging resonates effectively with their target audience and stands out.
Product Feature Presentation
Works best for:
Product Management, Planning
The Product Feature Presentation template aids product teams in showcasing product features and benefits effectively. By providing a structured framework for presenting key features, use cases, and value propositions, this template enables teams to communicate product functionality clearly and persuasively. With sections for creating feature demos, customer testimonials, and competitive differentiators, it facilitates engaging presentations that resonate with target audiences. This template serves as a powerful tool for driving product adoption and generating customer interest.
Annual Calendar Template
Works best for:
Business Management, Strategic Planning, Project Planning
Plenty of calendars help you focus on the day-to-day deadlines. With this one, it’s all about the big picture. Borrowing from the grid structure of 12-month wall calendars, this template shows you your projects, commitments, and goals one full year at a time. So you and your team can prepare to hunker down during busy periods, move things around as needed, and celebrate your progress. And getting started is so easy—just name your calendar’s color-coded streams and drag stickies onto the start date.