Once you've finalized your door schedule, the logical next step is creating a comprehensive Door Types Legend. This powerful visualization tool provides elevation views of each door type as pseudo-model elements that directly correspond to your schedule entries. Rather than cluttering your drawing set with multiple individual door elevations, this streamlined approach allows you to showcase all door variations in a single, organized reference sheet—a practice that has become increasingly standard in modern architectural documentation.

The process begins by navigating to the View tab and selecting Legends from the ribbon. Click on "Legend" to initialize a new legend view. The key to effective door legends lies in using legend components, which create direct representations of the actual model elements in your project, ensuring consistency between your legend and the physical doors throughout your design. As with any view creation, proper naming conventions are crucial—this will be referenced throughout the project lifecycle and potentially by multiple team members.

Name your legend "Door Types Legend" and set the scale to 1/4" = 1'-0", which provides optimal detail visibility while maintaining reasonable drawing sheet real estate. The legend view presents you with an infinite 2D workspace—essentially a limitless drafting canvas. This flexibility is both powerful and potentially overwhelming, so establishing a consistent organizational framework from the start is essential for professional results.

Begin by establishing a ground reference line, which serves as the baseline for all door elevations and ensures visual consistency. Navigate to the Annotate tab and select the Detail Line tool. Set the line style to "Wide Lines" for clear visibility, then draw a horizontal line approximately 35-40 feet in length. This dimension provides adequate spacing for multiple door types while allowing room for annotations. Don't worry about precise length initially—you can adjust this as your legend develops and requirements become clearer.


Now comes the core functionality: adding the actual door representations. From the Annotate tab, access Legend Components. The tool defaults to detail components, but clicking the dropdown arrow reveals the legend component option—this is what creates the parametric link to your project's door families. Start with Door Type A, your Double Storefront or Curtain Wall Storefront Door. The initial placement will likely show a plan view, but you can immediately change this to elevation view for the proper representation.

You may notice the curtain wall door appears unusually small initially—this occurs because curtain panels are defined by their host grids, and the legend view lacks this context. Simply adjust the host length parameter to achieve a realistic representation that matches your project's actual door dimensions. Position this first door slightly above your ground line initially, then use precise alignment tools to place it exactly on the reference line for professional accuracy.

Continue this process methodically for each door type in your project. For Door Type B (Single Flush), locate the specific size variant you're using—in this case, the 36" × 84" option. Maintain consistent spacing between door types, allowing sufficient room for labeling and dimension annotations. The visual breathing room between elements significantly impacts the legend's readability and professional appearance.


Complete the series with Door Type C (Door Double Glass, 72" × 84"). You'll notice the legend components can shift position unexpectedly during placement—this is normal behavior. Use the Align tool to ensure all doors sit precisely on your ground line and maintain consistent relationships to one another. This attention to alignment details separates professional documentation from amateur drafting.

The final step involves adding clear, professional labeling beneath each door type. Access the Text tool and verify you're using appropriate text formatting—3/32" Arial typically provides optimal legibility at typical printing scales. Create text boxes directly below each door, maintaining consistent vertical alignment. Label them systematically: "A - Single Storefront" and "AA - Double Storefront" for the first type, "B - Single Flush" for the second, and "C - Double Glass" for the third. This alpha-numeric system directly correlates with your door schedule, creating seamless cross-referencing throughout your drawing set.

Use the copy function to duplicate text formatting across labels, ensuring consistency in font, size, and positioning. Double-click any text element to edit its content while preserving formatting. Final positioning should left-justify each label with its corresponding door, creating clean vertical alignment that guides the reader's eye naturally across the legend. This systematic approach to door type documentation not only satisfies code compliance requirements but also demonstrates the thoroughness and attention to detail that clients and reviewing authorities expect from professional architectural work.