Block landing · coffee maker cad block dwg
Coffee maker CAD blocks for kitchen worktops
By Saumyajit Maity · Published 3 Oct 2022 · Updated 11 Aug 2025
A coffee maker is a worktop appliance that almost always has a fixed home, usually near a socket and within reach of the mugs and the sink, so it is worth placing to scale when you plan a kitchen. A scaled coffee maker block lets you reserve that beverage-station worktop and dress an elevation so the counter looks used. This page collects free coffee maker CAD blocks in DWG, drawn at true millimetre size for AutoCAD 2004 or later.
You will find filter or drip machines and espresso makers here, in plan and elevation, ready to sit on a worktop near a socket. Every file is free for personal and commercial use, with no signup and no watermark. Use the coffee maker with the toaster, kettle and juicer blocks in the kitchen category to build a beverage station that reflects how the kitchen is actually used.
What a coffee maker block represents
A coffee maker CAD block is a worktop appliance symbol — the base and the carafe or group head seen from above in plan, and the body with the water tank and controls in elevation. It is a loose, plug-in appliance, so its job on a drawing is to reserve worktop near a socket and to anchor a beverage station, not to drive any setting-out dimension.
Because a coffee machine usually lives in one spot — people do not move it daily — placing the scaled block early helps you commit a socket and a clear stretch of counter to it. That is the kind of small decision that keeps a finished kitchen practical: the machine has a home, a mug shelf nearby, and water and waste within easy reach.
Coffee maker types and views included
The downloads cover the common worktop machines: a filter or drip coffee maker with a glass carafe, and an espresso machine with a group head and steam wand. Pod machines fall between the two in size. Each ships a plan footprint — the rectangular base seen from above — and an elevation showing the body height, the carafe or portafilter, and the water tank.
Use the plan to reserve worktop and set the machine near a socket; use the elevation to show it on a kitchen wall face-on. Where both views ship in one file they share a DWG, so you can insert the one you need and freeze the other. The geometry sits on sensible layers so the machine matches the rest of your worktop-appliance set.
Typical coffee maker sizing to design around
Use these as planning ranges. A domestic filter machine is often around a 200–280 mm wide by 200–350 mm deep footprint, standing roughly 300–400 mm tall to allow for the carafe and the brew basket above. A pod machine is usually more compact. An espresso machine with a boiler and steam wand can be wider and deeper, and bean-to-cup machines wider still.
Models vary a lot, so do not letter an exact size from a block. The point is the order of size and the working clearance: a coffee machine needs headroom to lift a lid or slot a carafe, and room in front to set a mug under the spout. Showing it to scale beside a 600 mm module confirms the machine fits and the beverage station has working space.
How to insert and place the coffee maker
The blocks are drawn full size in millimetres. Insert at scale 1 in a millimetre drawing, 0.001 in a metre drawing, or set INSUNITS to millimetres so AutoCAD rescales on insertion. Run INSERT or drag the DWG in, pick a point on the worktop near a socket, and rotate to face the room in elevation or sit square in plan.
Keep the coffee maker on the worktop-appliance layer, separate from the cabinet carcass, so you can freeze the loose appliances for a clean joinery plan and thaw them for a furnished view. As a block reference it can be copied and edited centrally, so the same machine stays consistent if it appears on several drawings or in a repeating layout.
Where coffee maker blocks are used
Coffee maker blocks appear in residential kitchen plans and elevations, apartment and studio fit-outs, office and break-room kitchenettes, hotel rooms and serviced apartments, and in cafe back-counter drawings where an espresso station has to be shown to scale. They are a quick way to mark a beverage corner, especially grouped with a kettle, a toaster and a mug shelf.
For presentation work, a coffee machine adds realism to a counter; for coordination, it reminds you to commit a socket and, for plumbed machines, a water feed. Combine the coffee maker with the other small appliances to dress a worktop, or with the commercial counter blocks where the machine anchors a cafe service point.
Anchoring a beverage station on the drawing
Because a coffee maker usually keeps one spot, it is the natural anchor for a beverage station, and grouping the related items around it makes a kitchen drawing read well. Place the machine near a socket, put the kettle and a mug store within reach, and keep a clear stretch of worktop in front so there is room to fill a cup — all of which a scaled plan can confirm at a glance.
If you draw the same beverage corner across projects, WBLOCK the coffee maker, kettle and a mug shelf as one station block so the whole setup drops into the next kitchen in a single move. That keeps the beverage zone consistent and saves re-placing each small appliance individually every time the worktop reappears.
Free download
Browse the full library — DWG & DXF, no signup.
Questions
Frequently asked
Is the coffee maker CAD block free to download?+
Yes. The coffee maker blocks here download free in DWG, with no signup, no watermark and no attribution required, and are cleared for personal and commercial project use.
Do you have espresso machines as well as filter coffee makers?+
Yes. The downloads cover filter or drip machines and espresso makers, with pod machines falling between the two in size. Where several types or views ship in one file they share a DWG so you insert the one you need.
What scale are the coffee maker blocks drawn at?+
Full size in millimetres. Insert at scale 1 in a millimetre drawing, 0.001 in a metre drawing, or set INSUNITS to millimetres so AutoCAD rescales them on insertion.
Should I use the plan or elevation coffee maker block?+
Use the plan symbol to reserve worktop and set the machine near a socket. Use the elevation symbol when you draw the kitchen wall face-on for a client presentation or joinery drawing.
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