Now we'll strategically assign departments to our designated spaces, which will enable sophisticated color coding throughout the plan. To streamline this process and maintain organizational clarity, I'll create a comprehensive schedule that represents all rooms within our project scope.
Navigate to the Rooms option in the Schedule list, ensuring we're working within the Tenant One phase. This phase-specific approach is crucial since rooms are inherently tied to their respective phases, and this selection will filter our view to display only the relevant spaces for this particular tenant improvement project.
Upon clicking OK, we can establish our organizational categories. For this workflow, I'll select three essential parameters: Name, Area, and Department. This trio provides the optimal balance of information without overwhelming the schedule with unnecessary data fields that could complicate our color-coding process.
After confirming our selections, expand the schedule view to display all rooms comprehensively. You'll notice the Area column may default to an unnecessarily wide format—feel free to adjust these column widths to optimize your workspace efficiency.
Now comes the critical phase: systematically assigning department classifications to each space type. These designations are user-defined, giving you complete control over your organizational structure. For our Lobby spaces, I'll assign the "Circulation" department, which logically groups all transitional and movement areas.
The Open Office areas will retain their straightforward "Open Office" designation, while Conference Rooms receive the simplified "Conference" label for clarity. All individual offices fall under the "Private Office" category, creating clear delineation between collaborative and focused work environments.
You can efficiently assign these classifications using the dropdown menu for each space. While this task can alternatively be completed in plan view, the schedule format provides superior oversight and reduces the likelihood of inconsistent categorization. The spreadsheet approach allows you to maintain visual consistency across similar space types and catch potential errors before they propagate throughout your documentation.
Continue with the remaining spaces: assign "Service" to the Server Room, and "Conference" to Phone Rooms, recognizing that these small meeting spaces function similarly to larger conference areas. Break Rooms can receive their own distinct classification, while maintaining the established patterns for remaining Open Office and Conference spaces.
With all department assignments complete, return to your TI Plan view to implement the color scheme. Navigate to the Color Scheme settings, select "Rooms," then choose "Department" as your basis. The system will automatically generate an initial color palette, though—as you'll likely notice—the default selections often leave much to be desired in terms of professional presentation.
This brings us to the critical refinement phase: adjusting these colors to create a cohesive, professional appearance. Color selection remains highly subjective, but experienced practitioners typically gravitate toward muted tones that enhance rather than overwhelm the architectural information. Overly saturated colors can quickly dominate a plan, making it difficult to focus on spatial relationships and design details.
I recommend maintaining consistent color values while varying hues to create visual hierarchy without jarring contrasts. Service rooms traditionally receive neutral gray tones, which reinforces their utilitarian function and prevents them from competing visually with primary program spaces.
Remember that achieving the ideal color scheme rarely happens in a single pass. In our practice, we've refined these palettes through multiple iterations, continuously adjusting based on client feedback and presentation requirements. This iterative approach ensures that your color coding serves both functional organization and aesthetic presentation goals.
Make final adjustments to Private Offices, maintaining the gray designation for Server rooms, and refining the Circulation spaces (Lobby areas) for optimal visibility. Break Rooms may need adjustment if they appear too muddy or indistinct, and Conference Rooms should strike a balance between prominence and subtlety.
The refined color scheme provides immediate visual organization, making it easy to identify space types at a glance. However, this is also an opportune moment to conduct a quality control review, ensuring all elements display correctly and families behave as expected.
Occasionally, you may encounter display issues with downloaded families—a common occurrence when sourcing content from online libraries. If elements like booth seating fail to appear correctly in plan view, the issue typically stems from visibility settings within the family definition. These 3D families often have their "Plan and RCP" visibility parameters unchecked, rendering them invisible in your floor plan views.
To resolve this, select the problematic element, choose "Edit Family," and examine the visibility settings for each component. Enable the "Plan and RCP" visibility option, save the changes, and reload the family into your project, overwriting the existing version. This correction should restore proper plan representation while maintaining the 3D modeling capabilities.
With your color-coded plan now functioning properly, you're ready to prepare this view for sheet placement. Take this opportunity to clean up any problematic tags and evaluate the overall graphic hierarchy. Consider whether furniture line weights might be too prominent relative to your space planning information, and adjust accordingly to maintain clear visual priorities throughout your documentation.