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Free pedicure station CAD block in DWG

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By Saumyajit Maity · Published 23 Jul 2023 · Updated 8 Feb 2025

A pedicure station is the seat-and-basin unit at the heart of a nail bar or spa: a reclining chair with a built-in foot spa at the front and a technician's stool position alongside. This free pedicure station CAD block ships in DWG with a plan footprint, drawn to true millimetre dimensions for AutoCAD 2004 or later, with no signup, no watermark and full commercial clearance. It is the block you array down a wall to set out a row of pedicure positions and confirm the clearances a working nail salon needs.

The pedicure station is a larger footprint than a plain salon chair because it carries the foot basin and needs space for a technician seated at the client's feet. Drawing it to scale lets you check that each station has room for the basin, the recline and the technician's stool, and that a row of stations leaves a usable aisle behind.

What the pedicure station block is

This is a pedicure position drawn in plan: a reclining client chair, a foot-spa basin projecting at the front, and the floor area a technician needs to work at the client's feet. The footprint is the deciding piece of geometry — it governs how many stations fit along a wall and how much aisle is left behind them.

It inserts as a single block reference you can array along a wall and mirror across a room. A single edit to the block definition updates every station, which keeps a multi-position nail bar consistent when the layout changes.

Views and what's included

The download centres on a plan view, because a pedicure station is laid out from above — you array the footprint along a wall and check the basin projection and the technician zone. Where supplied, an elevation shows the reclined chair and raised armrests for an interior elevation of the pedicure wall.

The geometry is layered so the chair, the foot basin and the technician zone separate cleanly, which lets you dimension the station depth and the basin projection without the surrounding furniture interfering.

Typical pedicure station dimensions

Use these as working ranges. A pedicure station footprint is commonly around 700–900 mm wide and 1200–1500 mm deep including the projecting foot basin and the reclined chair. The foot basin itself typically extends 350–450 mm in front of the seat. Seat height sits around 500–600 mm, raised so the technician can reach the feet comfortably.

For a row of stations, allow about 900–1100 mm centre to centre so adjacent clients are not crowded, and keep a clear aisle of roughly 900–1200 mm behind the chairs for circulation. Leave room in front for the technician's wheeled stool, around 600 mm of clear floor.

How to insert and scale it

The block is drawn full size in millimetres. Insert at scale 1 in a millimetre drawing, 0.001 in a metre drawing, or set INSUNITS to millimetres on an imperial template so AutoCAD rescales on insertion. Pick the insertion point at the back of the chair so you can snap each station against the wall line, then array along the wall.

To lay out the nail bar, place one station, ARRAY it at your spacing, and check that the foot basins do not overrun the aisle. Keep the stations on a furniture layer so you can freeze them for the construction plan and thaw them for the furnished FF&E drawing.

Where pedicure stations are used

Pedicure station blocks drive nail-bar and nail-salon layouts, day-spa and beauty-spa pedicure zones, hotel and resort spa suites, and the grooming areas of larger wellness centres. They pair with the salon chair, manicure-table and reception blocks, and with waiting seating from the furniture category.

Because they are free and licence-clear, they suit student spa schemes, salon fit-out concept plans and franchise rollouts where a repeatable, correctly-spaced pedicure position is exactly what the brief calls for.

Layers, plumbing and the spa floor

A pedicure station is more than a seat — it carries a foot spa that needs water and drainage, so the block is most useful when you coordinate it with the services plan rather than treating it as loose furniture. Keep the stations on their own furniture layer, but note the basin position so the plumbing layer can pick up the supply and waste under each chair. When the basins line up on a consistent module, the first-fix runs stay simple and the installer is not chasing offset pipework.

With every station on a dedicated layer, you can freeze the seating to issue a clean services drawing and thaw it for the furnished FF&E view. Tag each station as a block with a position code and the layout doubles as a count of basins, chairs and supply points — exactly the data a spa fit-out schedule wants. Once a position is settled, WBLOCK the chair-plus-basin as a single reusable unit and array it along the wall.

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Questions

Frequently asked

How deep is a pedicure station footprint?+

Commonly 1200–1500 mm deep including the projecting foot basin and the reclined chair, and around 700–900 mm wide. The scaled block lets you confirm the depth against your aisle on the plan.

How far apart should pedicure stations sit?+

Allow about 900–1100 mm centre to centre so clients are not crowded, with a clear aisle of 900–1200 mm behind and room in front for the technician's stool. The block makes these checks visual.

Is the pedicure station CAD block free?+

Yes — free in DWG, no signup, no watermark, no attribution, and cleared for commercial spa and salon projects.

Which view does the file include?+

It centres on a plan view, the layout view for pedicure positions, and may include an elevation for the pedicure-wall drawing. The supplied views are listed on the download page.

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