Curated pack · living room cad block pack
Free living room CAD block pack for AutoCAD
By Saumyajit Maity · Published 28 Jun 2024 · Updated 20 Mar 2026
A living room is the room a client pictures most clearly, so the furniture layout has to read as somewhere people would actually sit and talk. This free living room CAD block pack collects the seating that anchors a lounge — multi-seat sofa sets, sofa-and-rug arrangements, coffee tables and occasional chairs — in DWG and DXF, drawn at true millimetre sizes and ready to insert into AutoCAD 2004 or later. It's free for personal and commercial use, with no signup and no watermark.
Use the pack to lay out living rooms, lounges, hotel lobbies and waiting areas. Because the sofas are drawn to real seat depths and the conversation distances are baked into the arrangements, you can judge whether a grouping works the moment it lands on the plan.
The set is built around the idea of a seating group: a sofa or sofa set facing a focal point, a coffee table within reach, a rug tying the zone together. Drop the group in, rotate it to face the TV or the fireplace, and the room's social heart is set in one move.
What's in the living room pack
The pack is led by sofa sets, because a living room is really a seating arrangement with a focal point. There are multi-seat groupings — a five-piece sofa set drawn with a round rug as one ready-made conversation zone — alongside individual sofas, occasional chairs and the coffee and side tables that complete a group.
Every piece is a clean plan-view block you can copy, mirror and rotate as a unit. The seating, the rug hatch and the tables are arranged so you can drop a whole group at once or build one up piece by piece. Keep them on a furniture layer and the lounge furnishing toggles on and off independently of the room shell.
How to use the set together
Start by deciding the focal point — a television wall, a fireplace, a window with a view — because the seating faces it. Drop the sofa or sofa set so the main seat looks at the focal point, then position the coffee table centred in front of it, roughly 400–450 mm off the front edge of the sofa so it's within easy reach without blocking legs.
Add occasional chairs to close the conversation circle, keeping the distance across the group comfortable for talking — a grouping that's too spread out reads as a hotel lobby, too tight as a dentist's waiting room. The five-piece sofa-and-rug block already resolves these distances, so it's the quickest way to land a believable group; use the rug to define the zone's edge, especially in an open-plan space where the lounge needs visual separation from the dining area.
Sofa and seating notes
Sofas are drawn to real seat modules: a two-seater runs roughly 1500–1800 mm wide, a three-seater 1900–2300 mm, with a seat depth around 850–950 mm including the back. Those depths matter, because a sofa eats more floor than people expect and the walkway behind or beside it is what makes a room feel generous or cramped — aim for at least 600–700 mm to pass behind a sofa, more where it's a main route.
The five-piece set bundles the arrangement so you don't have to space each piece by hand; it's ideal for a quick concept or a repeated apartment layout. For a bespoke room, build the group from individual sofa and chair blocks so you can tune the exact pieces and angles to the architecture.
Tables and rugs
A coffee table is the hub of a seating group, and its position is governed by reach: centred on the sofa, far enough out that knees clear, close enough that a cup is within arm's length. Side tables go at the ends of sofas and beside chairs for lamps and drinks. Keep them as their own blocks so you can swap a round table for a rectangular one without disturbing the seating.
A rug does real work on a plan: it draws the boundary of the seating zone and, in an open-plan room, separates the lounge from the dining or circulation space. The sofa-and-rug block ships the rug already sized to the group, but you can stretch or swap the rug hatch to suit the floor — just keep it under the front legs of the sofas so the group reads as sitting on it, not floating beside it.
Plan view for layouts
Living-room work is almost entirely plan: seating, tables and rugs seen from above and arranged toward the focal point. The plan blocks are what you mirror when a show-flat's lounge is handed, or array when a hotel repeats the same lobby grouping. Keep everything on a furniture layer so you can freeze it for a clean shell plan and thaw it for the furnished presentation.
For interior elevations and presentation views you'll pull sofa elevations from the furniture category, but the layout decisions — what faces what, how far apart, how the rug zones the space — are all made in plan, which is where this pack does its work.
Who uses the living room pack
Interior designers use it to present lounge concepts and furniture layouts fast. Architects use it to furnish residential plans and show that a living space works at the proposed size. Hospitality designers use the sofa sets to lay out lobbies, lounges and breakout areas where seating groups repeat.
Because the blocks are free and licence-clear, the same pack serves a single living-room makeover or a multi-unit residential scheme. Pair it with the dining-room and furniture sets to lay out an open-plan living-dining space from one consistent library.
Free download
Browse the full library — DWG & DXF, no signup.
Questions
Frequently asked
What's in the living room pack?+
Multi-seat sofa sets (including a five-piece set drawn with a round rug), individual sofas, occasional chairs, and the coffee and side tables that complete a seating group — all as scaled plan-view blocks.
What size are the sofa blocks?+
They're drawn to real seat modules — roughly 1500–1800 mm for a two-seater and 1900–2300 mm for a three-seater, with about 850–950 mm depth — full size in millimetres so walkway and reach checks are accurate.
Are the living room blocks free for commercial use?+
Yes. Every block downloads free in DWG and, where available, DXF, with no signup, no watermark and no attribution requirement, cleared for commercial projects.
Can I use the sofa-and-rug block in an open-plan layout?+
Yes — that's where it shines. The rug defines the lounge zone so it reads as separate from the dining and circulation areas in an open-plan room. You can stretch or swap the rug hatch to suit the floor.
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