• Aerial views

    Aerial view drawings provide a comprehensive perspective of large-scale projects, showcasing their spatial relationships, urban integration, and overall design intent. They help architects, planners, and stakeholders visualize site context, circulation, and scale in a way that ground-level views cannot, ensuring clearer communication and better decision-making in the conceptual phase.

    Aerial view of a cityscape featuring a tall skyscraper surrounded by other buildings, roads, and green park areas near a waterfront. The buildings are drawn in a blueprint style with greenery and pathways visible.
  • Eye Level views

    Eye-level view drawings immerse viewers in the architectural experience, showcasing scale, materials, and spatial relationships from a human perspective. They help architects, designers, and stakeholders visualize how a project interacts with its surroundings, understand user experience, and communicate design intent more effectively, leading to clearer presentations and better decision-making.

    Illustration of a modern urban area with people walking on pathways, surrounded by green-roofed buildings and lush trees.
  • design sketches

    Design sketches offer a quick and effective way to visualize architectural ideas, streamlining the design process when time is tight. Developed from client conversations or traced over rough 3D models, these sketches distill key concepts with clarity, allowing architects and designers to explore ideas rapidly, refine solutions efficiently, and communicate vision with precision.

    Conceptual architectural sketches of urban development with high-rise buildings and water features.
  • Urban Design and Planning

    Hand-drawn sketches are a powerful tool for bringing life to large-scale projects in ways digital models cannot. They let designers quickly explore communicate ideas with clarity. Unlike 3D software, which requires extensive detail, sketches can be rapidly created by tracing rough massing models, offering a faster, more flexible alternative for early-stage planning.

    Architectural illustration of an urban development with green-roofed skyscrapers, surrounding roads, waterways, and landscaped areas.
  • Sectional perspectives

    Sectional perspectives are a powerful tool for understanding large-scale projects, revealing multi-level spatial relationships, interior-exterior connections, and urban infrastructure in context. They provide a clear, intuitive way to visualize how spaces are organized, how different levels interact, and how the project integrates with its surroundings.

    Architectural cross-section of an urban development featuring layered buildings, green spaces, and underground levels.
  • graphic styles

    Different graphic styles could serve different project needs, making them a valuable tool throughout various design phases. From loose, expressive sketches for early concepts to refined, detailed illustrations for final presentations, the right style enhances clarity and impact. Clients can select the approach best suited to their project’s purpose.

    Four architectural sketches of urban development projects, featuring buildings and modern design elements.