Now we're ready to strategically place Power Outlets—also called Receptacles—in our Power Plans. These terms are interchangeable in professional practice, though I'll primarily use "Receptacles" for consistency. When you hear "Outlets," it refers to the same electrical devices.
A Receptacle is fundamentally a connection point where electrical equipment interfaces with your building's power system. Revit 2026 includes GFCI Outlets and standard Duplex Outlets in the default project templates, providing a solid foundation for most commercial and residential applications. However, modern electrical design often requires specialized components like Floor Outlets for conference rooms, Simplex Outlets for dedicated equipment, or high-capacity Appliance Outlets for industrial applications. Let's return to our project and configure our Power Plans for optimal receptacle placement.
Navigate to the Project Browser and locate the Electrical section > Floor Plans > Power Plan. Double-click to open both the L1 and L2 Power Plans—having multiple levels open simultaneously streamlines the design process. Starting with the L1 Power Plan, I'll zoom in to assess the current display settings, and immediately notice several presentation issues that need addressing.
The plan currently displays both our electrical Lighting Fixtures and the Architect's Lighting Fixtures, creating visual clutter that obscures the power distribution layout. More problematically, the existing Receptacles appear as tiny rectangles at actual scale rather than clear schematic symbols. This presentation makes the plan difficult to read and unprofessional for client presentations or construction documentation.
Let's systematically resolve these display issues to create a clean, professional Power Plan. Access the View Properties panel and locate Identity Data > View Template. The template should read "Electrical Power Plan"—this is correct, but we need to customize several parameters for optimal clarity.
First, I'll invoke the Visibility/Graphics Overrides by typing VG, then navigate to the Model tab and click Edit. This opens the critical display controls for our electrical elements. Scroll down to locate Electrical Fixtures and Electrical Equipment—notice that their Detail Level is currently set to Fine, which explains why our Receptacles appear as microscopic rectangles rather than readable symbols.
This Fine detail setting is a common source of frustration for electrical designers who expect symbolic representation in plan views. The solution lies in understanding Revit's detail level hierarchy and how it affects electrical component display.
Change the Detail Level from Fine to "By View." Since our View is configured to Coarse detail level, this setting will automatically display Receptacles as clear, standardized symbols—exactly what we need for effective electrical documentation and code compliance reviews.
Now we'll address the architectural lighting interference by switching to the Revit Links tab. The unwanted architectural lighting elements are currently visible because Background Architectural is set to "By Host View."
Click that dropdown and change the Basics tab to Custom, giving us granular control over linked model visibility. Navigate to Model Categories and set this to Custom as well. In the comprehensive category list, systematically uncheck Electrical Devices, Electrical Equipment, Electrical Fixtures, Lighting Devices, and Lighting Fixtures. This eliminates the visual noise from the architectural model while preserving essential structural and spatial information.
I'll also disable the Site category, as topographical elements often create unnecessary complexity in electrical power plans and can interfere with clear receptacle placement visualization.
Apply these changes by clicking OK twice. The plan now presents a clean canvas focused specifically on power distribution, without the distraction of architectural lighting elements that aren't relevant to receptacle placement and power circuit design.
Next, we'll optimize the View Range to further refine what electrical elements appear in our plan. In View Properties, scroll to View Range and click Edit. The Top parameter is currently set to 10 feet, which captures ceiling-mounted fixtures that we don't need in a power plan. Reducing this to approximately 7 feet focuses the view on wall-mounted receptacles and power devices while eliminating high-mounted lighting fixtures.
Confirm these settings by clicking OK again. The transformation is immediately apparent—our Power Plan now displays Receptacles as clear, professional symbols against a clean background optimized for power system design and documentation.
For final cleanup, remove any extraneous elements like the redundant Corridor label that's bleeding through from the architectural model. Adjust any misaligned Room Tags to ensure they're properly positioned within their respective spaces—accurate room identification is crucial for electrical load calculations and code compliance.
With Level 1 optimized, let's verify our L2 Power Plan by double-clicking to open it. You'll notice that all our display improvements have automatically propagated to this level—this is the power of Revit's View Template system in action.
This automatic updating occurs because both plans reference the same View Template. When we modify template parameters, every associated view updates simultaneously, ensuring consistency across all electrical documentation and eliminating the tedious task of manually adjusting each plan. This workflow efficiency becomes invaluable on large projects with multiple electrical levels.
With both Power Plans properly configured and displaying clean, professional symbols, we're now ready to begin the strategic placement of Receptacles according to electrical codes, occupancy requirements, and client specifications.