To create a comprehensive furniture tagging system, we'll develop an enlarged plan that allows us to systematically identify and label each furniture piece within the office space. Since all offices share identical furniture arrangements in this project, we can establish one office as our master prototype—a strategy that maximizes efficiency and ensures consistency across the entire building documentation.

Navigate to the View tab and select Callout. Here's a critical step that many professionals overlook: verify that your callout is configured as a floor plan view. This setting frequently defaults to detail or section views, which will misplace your callout in the project browser hierarchy and disrupt your documentation workflow. With the correct floor plan setting confirmed, define your callout boundary by clicking to establish the starting point, then dragging to encompass the office area. Focus on creating a boundary that captures all furniture elements while maintaining clean, professional margins. Once you've positioned the callout boundary appropriately, double-click to enter the enlarged view.

The system automatically generates a generic name—typically "Level One Callout"—in your project browser. Since this view will serve as a universal template applicable to multiple floors, rename it to reflect its broader purpose. Right-click the view name, select Rename, and assign a title like "Typical Office Layout." This nomenclature approach proves invaluable when managing complex projects with repetitive elements, as it clearly communicates the view's function to other team members and future project stakeholders.


Before proceeding with furniture tagging, clean up the view by removing unnecessary elements that might clutter the final presentation. Grid lines, while essential for construction documentation, often detract from furniture layout clarity. Select any grid line and employ one of two efficient hiding methods: right-click and choose "Hide in View > Element" for the traditional approach, or use the keyboard shortcut "EH" (Element Hide) for faster workflow execution. Professional tip: if you accidentally hide critical elements, use the Reveal Hidden Elements tool (lightbulb icon) in the view control bar to temporarily display all hidden items and selectively restore what you need.

Now we'll implement the systematic tagging process using the familiar Tag by Category tool from the Annotate tab. Since we've already defined these furniture elements as proper family categories, the tagging process will be streamlined and consistent. For larger furniture pieces like desks, consider whether leader lines enhance or complicate the drawing's readability. Often, placing tags directly on substantial elements without leaders creates cleaner, more professional documentation. Position the desk tag centrally and assign the identifier "D-1" to establish our numbering convention.


Continue the tagging sequence methodically, ensuring each furniture type follows a logical naming convention that will be immediately understood by facility managers, space planners, and procurement teams. Tag the office chairs (which inherit the properties we defined earlier), assign "S-1" to the shelving unit, and designate "FC-1" for the file cabinet. When the system prompts you to adjust type parameters, confirm these changes—you're building a comprehensive database that will serve multiple project phases and future renovations. Complete the tagging by assigning "C-1" to the remaining chair, establishing a complete furniture inventory for your typical office layout.

With all furniture elements properly tagged, refine the view boundaries to optimize sheet placement and visual impact. The crop region should encompass all tagged elements while eliminating excess white space that would waste valuable sheet real estate. If tags extend slightly beyond the initial boundary—a common occurrence with furniture positioned near walls—adjust the crop region accordingly rather than compromising tag readability. Finally, hide the crop region boundary itself since it serves no purpose on the final documentation and can be visually distracting. This completed view will integrate seamlessly into your sheet composition, providing clear, professional furniture documentation that supports both current project needs and long-term facility management requirements.