Block landing · double burner hob cad block
Two-burner hob CAD blocks in plan and elevation
By Saumyajit Maity · Published 14 Jan 2022 · Updated 7 Nov 2024
A two-burner hob is the sensible middle ground in kitchen design — more capable than a single ring, far more compact than a four-burner cooktop. It suits apartment kitchens, second kitchens, well-equipped kitchenettes and any layout where worktop is at a premium but a cook still wants to run a pan and a pot at once. This page gathers free double burner hob CAD blocks in DWG and DXF, drawn to true millimetre sizes for AutoCAD 2004 or later, free for personal and commercial use with no signup or watermark.
The two-burner block is the one to reach for when a single ring is too limiting but a full cooktop would swallow the worktop. Drawn to scale, it lets you prove the cooking line and the prep space both fit before the cabinets are ordered.
What the double burner block contains
The plan view shows two burner rings — usually one larger and one smaller, side by side or front-to-back depending on the format — with their pan supports and the control knobs. The arrangement matters for the layout: a side-by-side pair needs a wider, shallower cut-out, while a front-to-back pair fits a narrower run but reaches deeper into the worktop. The block draws the real geometry so you size the cut-out and the cabinet below correctly.
The elevation carries the knob line, the fascia and the grate height above the worktop, which is what you set the hood off in a kitchen elevation. The rings, grates and knobs sit on separate layers so the symbol can be simplified at small scales without losing the outline.
Plan view for layouts, elevation for joinery
For the kitchen layout you work in plan: the two-burner hob set into the worktop, aligned with the base unit below and positioned in the work triangle with the sink and fridge. The plan block fixes the cooking point and the extract centreline.
For joinery drawings and client elevations you switch to the elevation, where the hob is drawn face-on with its knobs and splashback. Because two-burner hobs are common in one-wall and galley kitchens that clients see straight on, the elevation often does real presentation work. Many downloads carry both the plan and the elevation in a single DWG.
Typical two-burner hob dimensions
Treat these as guidance and confirm against the datasheet. A built-in two-burner gas or induction hob commonly runs around 300 mm wide for a front-to-back domino format, or roughly 580 to 600 mm wide for a side-by-side pair on the standard module. Depth is typically 500 to 520 mm. The worktop cut-out sits 20 to 30 mm inside the appliance trim on each edge.
Keep at least 300 mm of worktop landing space on each side of the hob for pan handles, and maintain the usual hood clearance overhead. In a galley or one-wall kitchen, position the two burners so the dominant pan turns toward the prep zone rather than toward a doorway or a walkway.
Inserting and orienting the block
The blocks are full size in millimetres. Insert at scale 1 in a millimetre drawing, 0.001 in a metre template, or set INSUNITS to millimetres to let AutoCAD rescale on insertion. Run INSERT, snap the insertion point to the centre of the worktop cut-out, and rotate so the knobs face the front of the run.
Decide the burner orientation deliberately: a front-to-back domino hob keeps the run narrow, while a side-by-side pair gives two equally accessible rings. Because the hob is a single block reference on its own appliance layer, you can mirror it for a handed kitchen and freeze it for a clean cabinet-only plan, and any later size change edits the definition once.
Where double burner hobs fit best
Two-burner hobs are specified in apartment and one-bedroom kitchens, secondary and outdoor kitchens, granny flats and annexes, premium serviced apartments, and compact family kitchens where worktop is scarce. Interior designers use them to balance cooking capability against prep space; architects use them in space-constrained residential and hospitality schemes.
Pair the double hob with the compact oven, sink and fridge blocks in the kitchen category to assemble a complete small kitchen on the standard module, with base cabinets snapping cleanly either side of the hob.
Choosing between two and four burners on the plan
One of the quiet decisions a kitchen plan settles is how many burners the cooking point really needs, and the scaled block is what lets you test it honestly. Drop a four-burner block onto a tight run and you may find the prep zone vanishes; swap in the two-burner block and the same run suddenly has a usable worktop on both sides. Because both share the standard module logic, you can audition them in the same gap and read the consequences directly off the plan.
The two-burner hob is also the pragmatic choice for kitchens where cooking is occasional rather than central — a buy-to-let, a studio, a guest annexe. Snapping a centreline through the pair lets you set the extract and the gas or power point cleanly, and keeps the door swings and the walkway clear of the cooking zone. Drawn from a scaled block, that trade-off between cooking capacity and worktop is a design decision you can see, not a guess you make and regret on site.
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Questions
Frequently asked
How wide is a two-burner hob CAD block?+
A front-to-back domino two-burner hob is typically around 300 mm wide, while a side-by-side pair runs roughly 580 to 600 mm on the standard module. Depth is usually 500 to 520 mm. Always confirm against the appliance datasheet for the exact cut-out.
Should I draw the burners side by side or front to back?+
It depends on the run. A front-to-back domino format keeps the worktop narrow and suits a shallow run; a side-by-side pair gives two equally accessible rings but needs more width. The blocks cover both arrangements so you can match the format to the layout.
Is a two-burner hob enough for a family kitchen?+
It can be for compact or occasional-use kitchens, but a four-burner is the usual choice where cooking is central. Drawing both blocks into the same gap lets you weigh the cooking capacity against the prep space you lose, directly on the plan.
Are the double burner hob blocks free for commercial use?+
Yes. They download free in DWG and, where available, DXF, with no signup, no watermark and no attribution requirement, and they are cleared for commercial project use.
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