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Curated pack · clinic furniture cad blocks

Free clinic furniture CAD blocks for AutoCAD

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By Sumana Kumar · Published 2 Mar 2023 · Updated 30 Jun 2024

A clinic plan lives or dies on clearances — room around an examination couch, space for a wheelchair to turn, a clear path for a trolley. This free clinic furniture pack gathers the healthcare furniture blocks you reach for most — examination couches, consulting desks and chairs, treatment trolleys, sinks and storage — drawn in plan and elevation, in DWG and ready to insert into AutoCAD 2004 or later. Everything is free for personal and commercial work, with no signup, no watermark and no attribution needed.

Use the pack to lay out consulting rooms, treatment and examination rooms, GP and dental practices, physiotherapy and outpatient spaces. Because the blocks are drawn at believable footprints, an examination couch lands with room to work on both sides, the patient chair sits across the desk at a sensible distance, and you can check the access clearances the moment the furniture hits the plan.

Healthcare layouts carry an accessibility responsibility that ordinary furniture plans don't: there has to be room for a wheelchair to approach and turn, for staff to assist a patient, and for equipment to move. Scaled blocks make those checks visual rather than a constant cross-reference to a dimension. Keeping the furniture on its own layer lets you produce a clean room plan, an equipment plan and an elevation set from the same drawing.

What's in the clinic furniture pack

The pack covers the core kit of a consulting or treatment room. Clinical: examination and treatment couches, an examination stool, a treatment trolley and a clinical wash-hand basin. Consultation: a clinician's desk, the clinician's chair and one or two patient chairs. Storage: drug and instrument cabinets, a base storage run and a screen or curtain track for privacy.

Because clinic furniture is read in both layout plans and elevations, the blocks come as plan footprints for setting out the room and face-on elevation versions for the wall-mounted storage and basin drawings. Each is a single block reference you can copy and mirror, drawn with enough outline to read the furniture type while staying clean at room scale.

How to lay out a consulting room from the blocks

Put the furniture on a dedicated layer so you can produce a clean room plan separate from the services and equipment. Set the room outline and the door first, then place the examination couch where it can be approached from both sides and screened from the door, because that placement drives the rest of the layout.

Position the desk so the clinician faces into the room with the patient chair across the corner rather than directly opposite — a less confrontational arrangement that's standard in consulting rooms. Add the basin near the door for hand hygiene on entry and exit, and the storage along a free wall. With the furniture in, check the wheelchair approach to the couch and the turning space, and confirm a trolley can reach the couch without moving furniture.

Clearances and accessibility to design around

Healthcare rooms are clearance-driven, so keep these checks in mind as you place the scaled blocks. An examination couch needs working room on at least one long side — commonly around 900 mm or more — and ideally both for assisted transfers. Allow space for a wheelchair to approach the couch and a turning circle of around 1500 mm where a wheelchair user needs to rotate.

Keep a clear, obstruction-free route from the door to the couch and to the desk for a patient who may be unsteady or assisted. The clinical basin needs elbow room and a clear front approach. These figures vary by jurisdiction and by the type of clinic, so treat them as planning references and confirm against your local healthcare design guidance — but dropping the scaled furniture in makes the clearances visible while you design.

Plan and elevation clinic furniture

For the layout you work in plan: the furniture footprints seen from above, set out for clearance and access. The plan block does the spatial work — couch position, desk arrangement, turning space. For the joinery and services drawings you switch to elevation, where the storage runs, the basin and the wall-mounted cabinets are drawn face-on at their fixing heights.

In elevation the heights matter: a clinical basin and its splashback sit at a usable working height, wall cabinets clear the worktop, and a couch reads at its set height. Many blocks ship both views, so you can set out the room in plan and build the matching elevation for the storage wall and wet zone from one download, keeping the two drawings consistent.

Who uses the clinic furniture pack

Healthcare architects and interior designers draw clinic furniture constantly, and the pack also suits practitioners planning a fit-out, students working on a healthcare project, and contractors pricing a consulting-room layout. It works for GP and dental surgeries, physiotherapy and outpatient clinics, aesthetic and wellness rooms, veterinary consulting rooms and small private practices.

Pair the clinic furniture with the reception-furniture pack for the waiting area, and the people blocks for scale and accessibility checks, to build a complete practice drawing. Because everything here is free and licence-clear, you can assemble a healthcare-furniture kit once and reuse it across every consulting and treatment room you draw, adjusting the layout to each room's clearances.

Keeping clinic layouts coordinated

Clinic furniture often moves during design as clearances are tested, so keep everything as block references on a clear layer to make those adjustments fast. Nudging a couch to open up a wheelchair approach, or swapping a desk arrangement, is a quick move rather than a redraw when the furniture is blocks rather than exploded lines.

Use the layer to coordinate with services: an equipment-and-furniture plan shows where power, data and medical gas need to land, while the architectural room plan stays clean. Freeze the furniture layer for a pure room-setting-out drawing and thaw it for the equipment and presentation plans. Confirm the clearance figures against current healthcare design guidance for your jurisdiction, since the scaled blocks show the geometry but the standards govern the numbers.

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Questions

Frequently asked

Are these clinic furniture CAD blocks free for commercial use?+

Yes. The whole pack downloads free in DWG with no signup, no watermark and no attribution requirement, cleared for commercial healthcare layouts, fit-out drawings and presentations.

Do the blocks include plan and elevation views?+

Yes. You get plan footprints for setting out the room and clearances, and face-on elevation blocks for the storage walls, basin and wet zone. Where a block carries both views they're in the same DWG.

How much working room should I leave around an examination couch?+

Allow working room on at least one long side — commonly around 900 mm or more — and ideally both for assisted transfers, plus space for a wheelchair approach and turning. Confirm the exact figures against your local healthcare design guidance, as they vary by jurisdiction and clinic type.

Can I use these for a dental or physiotherapy room?+

Yes. The desk, chair, couch, trolley, basin and storage blocks suit dental, physiotherapy, aesthetic and general consulting rooms. Swap the central couch or chair to suit the discipline and adjust the clearances to the equipment that room needs.

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