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Drawing Ground Plans
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Drawing Ground Plans. What is a Ground Plan? A birds eye view of the set, drawn using symbols for both staging and set. Ooooh look! A stage!

Apr 01, 2015

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Gianni Solt
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Page 1: Drawing Ground Plans. What is a Ground Plan? A birds eye view of the set, drawn using symbols for both staging and set. Ooooh look! A stage!

Drawing Ground Plans

Page 2: Drawing Ground Plans. What is a Ground Plan? A birds eye view of the set, drawn using symbols for both staging and set. Ooooh look! A stage!

What is a Ground Plan?

A birds eye view of the set, drawn using symbols for both staging and set.

Ooooh look! A stage!

Page 3: Drawing Ground Plans. What is a Ground Plan? A birds eye view of the set, drawn using symbols for both staging and set. Ooooh look! A stage!

A Ground Plan must have

K A Key

A Audience and Arrows

V Viability – it has to work.

E Entrances and Exits

S Symbols, Scale and Staging

Page 4: Drawing Ground Plans. What is a Ground Plan? A birds eye view of the set, drawn using symbols for both staging and set. Ooooh look! A stage!

Start by drawing the basic outline of your stage and add in where the audience is positioned in relation to the stage.

Add arrows to show the direction in which the audience is looking.

The six types of stage look like this…….

Page 5: Drawing Ground Plans. What is a Ground Plan? A birds eye view of the set, drawn using symbols for both staging and set. Ooooh look! A stage!

End On

AUDIENCE

Page 6: Drawing Ground Plans. What is a Ground Plan? A birds eye view of the set, drawn using symbols for both staging and set. Ooooh look! A stage!

Avenue

AUDIENCE

AUDIENCE

Page 7: Drawing Ground Plans. What is a Ground Plan? A birds eye view of the set, drawn using symbols for both staging and set. Ooooh look! A stage!

Thrust

AUDIENCE

A

UD

IEN

CE

A

UD

IEN

CE

Page 8: Drawing Ground Plans. What is a Ground Plan? A birds eye view of the set, drawn using symbols for both staging and set. Ooooh look! A stage!

Theatre in the Round

AU

DIE

NC

E

AUDIENCE

AUDIENCE

AU

DIE

NC

E

Page 9: Drawing Ground Plans. What is a Ground Plan? A birds eye view of the set, drawn using symbols for both staging and set. Ooooh look! A stage!

Proscenium Arch

AUDIENCE

Page 10: Drawing Ground Plans. What is a Ground Plan? A birds eye view of the set, drawn using symbols for both staging and set. Ooooh look! A stage!

Promenade

Page 11: Drawing Ground Plans. What is a Ground Plan? A birds eye view of the set, drawn using symbols for both staging and set. Ooooh look! A stage!

Next indicate using symbols where the exits and entrances are and how pieces of set are positioned on stage.

Make sure that the set is Viable.

Doors, entrances and exits should not be blocked by pieces of set.

Flats are not placed downstage in a way that masks the audiences view of the stage.

Chairs are not placed facing upstage away from the audience.

The set has to work.

Page 12: Drawing Ground Plans. What is a Ground Plan? A birds eye view of the set, drawn using symbols for both staging and set. Ooooh look! A stage!

Not viable….

AUDIENCE

AUDIENCE

There are a number of problems with this set in terms of viability……..

Page 13: Drawing Ground Plans. What is a Ground Plan? A birds eye view of the set, drawn using symbols for both staging and set. Ooooh look! A stage!

Symbols

FLAT

WHAT FOLLOWS ARE STANDARD SYMBOLS WHICH SHOULD BE USED WHEN DRAWING GROUNDPLANS

Page 14: Drawing Ground Plans. What is a Ground Plan? A birds eye view of the set, drawn using symbols for both staging and set. Ooooh look! A stage!

DOOR FLAT

Page 15: Drawing Ground Plans. What is a Ground Plan? A birds eye view of the set, drawn using symbols for both staging and set. Ooooh look! A stage!

WINDOW FLAT

Page 16: Drawing Ground Plans. What is a Ground Plan? A birds eye view of the set, drawn using symbols for both staging and set. Ooooh look! A stage!

ROSTRA

Page 17: Drawing Ground Plans. What is a Ground Plan? A birds eye view of the set, drawn using symbols for both staging and set. Ooooh look! A stage!

STAIRS

(TREADS)

Page 18: Drawing Ground Plans. What is a Ground Plan? A birds eye view of the set, drawn using symbols for both staging and set. Ooooh look! A stage!

TABLE

Page 19: Drawing Ground Plans. What is a Ground Plan? A birds eye view of the set, drawn using symbols for both staging and set. Ooooh look! A stage!

CHAIR

Page 20: Drawing Ground Plans. What is a Ground Plan? A birds eye view of the set, drawn using symbols for both staging and set. Ooooh look! A stage!

SOFA

Page 21: Drawing Ground Plans. What is a Ground Plan? A birds eye view of the set, drawn using symbols for both staging and set. Ooooh look! A stage!

BACK CLOTH

Page 22: Drawing Ground Plans. What is a Ground Plan? A birds eye view of the set, drawn using symbols for both staging and set. Ooooh look! A stage!

CURTAIN

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Page 23: Drawing Ground Plans. What is a Ground Plan? A birds eye view of the set, drawn using symbols for both staging and set. Ooooh look! A stage!

GAUZE

Page 24: Drawing Ground Plans. What is a Ground Plan? A birds eye view of the set, drawn using symbols for both staging and set. Ooooh look! A stage!

ENTRANCE

EXIT

Page 25: Drawing Ground Plans. What is a Ground Plan? A birds eye view of the set, drawn using symbols for both staging and set. Ooooh look! A stage!

The Key

Explains all the symbols on the Ground Plan

and is drawn alongside or below the Ground

Plan.

AUDIENCE

Key

Entrance/exit

Flat

Rostra

Chair(x2)

Treads

Page 26: Drawing Ground Plans. What is a Ground Plan? A birds eye view of the set, drawn using symbols for both staging and set. Ooooh look! A stage!

If you have a piece of set which requires you to create a new symbol, keep it simple, and mark it in your key.

Example – a car

Example – a fireplace

Page 27: Drawing Ground Plans. What is a Ground Plan? A birds eye view of the set, drawn using symbols for both staging and set. Ooooh look! A stage!

Scale

Symbols should be drawn with some

consideration of scale.A kitchen table is about four or six times the size of a chair.

A chair is usually a third of the size of a sofa.

Flats are not smaller than chairs.

Tables are not bigger than flats.

Doors are not more than twice the size of a chair…….

Page 28: Drawing Ground Plans. What is a Ground Plan? A birds eye view of the set, drawn using symbols for both staging and set. Ooooh look! A stage!

Not to scale

+Key

Door flat

Chairs (X2)

Desk

Filing cabinet

Page 29: Drawing Ground Plans. What is a Ground Plan? A birds eye view of the set, drawn using symbols for both staging and set. Ooooh look! A stage!

Also……

It’s a good idea to use a pencil and ruler and

have an eraser handy when drawing your

Ground Plan.

Remember KAVES, keep it neat and simple.

Do not put PROPS on a ground plan.

Page 30: Drawing Ground Plans. What is a Ground Plan? A birds eye view of the set, drawn using symbols for both staging and set. Ooooh look! A stage!

And finally some Ground Plans for you to try….

• An office with desk, two chairs, filing cabinet, A door flat, a window flat and a flat. END ON stage.

• A bedroom with a door flat, desk, chair, bed, bedside table. THRUST stage.

• A police interview room with table, three chairs, door flat and flat with two way mirror attached. AVENUE stage.

• A bar with two tables & 4 stools and jukebox, a mens’ washroom with one stall and a urinal, & a smokers area outside with chairs and heater. PROMENADE stage.