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Curated pack · bank branch cad blocks

Free bank branch CAD block pack for AutoCAD

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By Saumyajit Maity · Published 7 Sept 2023 · Updated 25 Mar 2026

A bank branch is organised around a security gradient: a public self-service lobby at the front, a teller line that controls the cash boundary, private advice rooms to the side, and a secured staff and strongroom zone behind. Laying that out in AutoCAD is quicker when the fixtures are already scaled. This free bank branch CAD block pack gathers the pieces you place most — teller and service counters, an ATM and self-service lobby, a managed queue rail, private advice pods and rooms, a waiting seating cluster and the strongroom outline — in DWG, drawn at true dimensions for AutoCAD 2004 or later. Everything is free for personal and commercial work, with no signup and no watermark.

Use the pack to set the teller line first, because it is the cash boundary the whole plan defends, then build the public lobby in front and the secured zone behind. Because the blocks carry their real footprint, you can test the managed queue length and the accessible counter section the moment they land on the page.

A branch also carries duties an ordinary office skips: a controlled cash boundary the public never crosses, private spaces for advice that meet confidentiality, an accessible self-service position, and a secured route to the strongroom. Starting from scaled blocks means those zones are real distances on the plan rather than assumptions tested during fit-out.

What the bank branch pack covers

The pack spans the public and secured sides. Service: a teller counter run with the staff side shown and a lowered accessible position, plus standalone service counters. Self-service: an ATM lobby and self-service kiosks for the 24-hour zone. Queue: a managed queue-rail layout that channels customers to the next free teller. Advice: private advice pods and enclosed rooms for confidential conversations. Secured: a strongroom outline and a staff back-office zone. Comfort: a waiting seating cluster.

Because tellers repeat along a line, the teller position is built as a single unit you can array to the right number of windows, then end the run with an accessible position.

Standard bank branch dimensions to design around

Use these ranges as planning references, not fixed specs. A teller counter is usually around 600–700 mm deep on the customer side with a staff working strip of roughly 1000–1200 mm behind it before the back-counter. Leave a managed queue strip that can hold the expected peak — often a snaking rail occupying several metres of clear floor — without blocking the entrance or the ATM lobby.

Each teller position wants around 1500–1800 mm of width so adjacent customers have privacy, and an accessible position needs a lowered counter and a clear approach. The ATM lobby wants a clear standing zone of roughly 1200 mm in front of each machine. An advice room needs floor for a desk, two or three chairs and a turning space. Drop the scaled blocks in and these clearances read off the plan.

Building the bank branch layout from the blocks

Place the teller line first — it is the cash boundary, so everything references it. Run the managed queue rail in front of it so customers reach the next free window without crossing the lobby, and set the ATM and self-service kiosks near the entrance for out-of-hours access without exposing the secured zone. Put advice rooms along a side wall with doors for confidentiality, and keep the strongroom and back office in the most secured corner.

Keep tellers, self-service, queue, advice, secured zone and seating on separate layers so a security-boundary plan and a furnished public plan come from the same drawing without redrawing anything.

Per-item notes: teller line, queue rail and strongroom

The teller counter is the block everything defends, so draw the staff side as protected clear floor on its own layer and make the lowered accessible position explicit at one end. The managed queue rail is best drawn as a path you can lengthen, because peak demand decides how many turns it needs; keep it as floor geometry rather than baking a fixed length into a block.

The advice rooms are small but regulated for confidentiality — show the desk, the customer chairs and a clear turning space, and note that the door and walls should give acoustic privacy. The strongroom reads as a heavy outline, but place it where only the secured staff route reaches it and never on a public sightline.

Plan view and the security boundary

Bank branch planning is a plan-view discipline: you arrange the teller line, the public lobby and the secured zone seen from above, so every block here is drawn in plan. That is the view that proves the cash boundary holds, the queue channels cleanly and the accessible route reaches a teller, the ATM and an advice room.

Draw the public-to-secured boundary as a clear line on a setting-out layer and confirm the only public crossing is the teller counter. If you need a counter or strongroom-door elevation for the joinery and security detail, draw it separately on its own layer; the plan blocks fix the positions that elevation must follow. Working plan-first keeps the security boundary honest before any joinery is detailed.

Who uses the bank branch pack

Commercial interior designers and branch fit-out specialists use it to turn a unit into a costed, security-zoned layout quickly. Architects use it to populate a retail-banking unit in a larger scheme with believable, scaled fixtures. Students use it for studio briefs and portfolio boards where licence-clear blocks matter.

Because the blocks are free and unrestricted, the same pack carries from a small community branch to a large flagship with many tellers and advice rooms. Pair it with the office and furniture categories to add the staff desks, meeting furniture and reception seating that complete the building, and you can lay out the whole branch from one consistent library.

Free download

Browse the full library — DWG & DXF, no signup.

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Questions

Frequently asked

What is in the bank branch CAD block pack?+

Teller and service counters with an accessible position, an ATM and self-service lobby, a managed queue rail, private advice pods and rooms, a strongroom outline and waiting seating — all drawn in plan at true scale.

How do I plan the queue at the teller line?+

Draw the managed queue rail as a path you can lengthen to hold the expected peak without blocking the entrance or ATM lobby, and allow around 1500–1800 mm width per teller position. The scaled blocks let you test this directly.

Are the bank branch blocks free for commercial use?+

Yes. Every block downloads free in DWG with no signup, no watermark and no attribution requirement, and they are cleared for commercial project use.

What units are the blocks drawn in?+

Millimetres, full size. Insert at scale 1 in a millimetre drawing, or set INSUNITS to millimetres so AutoCAD rescales the block automatically on insertion.

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