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Free sun lounger CAD block in DWG and DXF

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By Sumana Kumar · Published 23 Mar 2025 · Updated 16 Apr 2026

A sun lounger is the long, low reclining sunbed that defines a poolside or a sun deck, and it is the block you reach for when a leisure plan needs rows of believable lounging space. This page offers a free sun lounger CAD block in DWG and DXF, drawn to scale and ready for AutoCAD 2004 or later, free for personal and commercial use with no signup and no watermark.

Loungers are deceptively long — a person lies full-length on them — so a row of sunbeds eats more deck than the casual eye expects. Drawing them to scale is what lets you fit the right number along a pool edge, leave a clear walkway behind them, and keep a gap between each for a side table or for someone to step through. Drop this block in and the poolside capacity becomes a layout you can measure rather than guess.

What the sun lounger block shows

This is a plan-view sun lounger: the long flat bed of the sunbed seen from above, with the adjustable backrest end and the leg frame that holds it off the deck. Some loungers have small wheels at one end and arms; the plan captures the overall envelope, which is what your layout works to.

Drawing the lounger as a block keeps its proportions consistent every time you place one, and lets you array a tidy row along a pool edge in a single operation. The full-length footprint, including the reclined backrest, is the figure that governs spacing — it is the length of the lounger, not the width, that decides how the row reads against the pool and the walkway.

Typical sizing for a sun lounger

Use these ranges to scale and place the block. A sun lounger is commonly in the order of 1900–2000 mm long to take a reclining adult full-length, and roughly 600–800 mm wide; it sits low to the deck for an easy lie-down. The backrest raises at one end, but the plan footprint is governed by the flat length.

For a poolside row, leave a clear walkway of at least 900–1200 mm behind the loungers so people can pass without stepping over feet, and a gap between adjacent loungers — often enough for a small side table or to step through. Treat these as planning ranges and confirm the chosen lounger's real length and width before fixing the row spacing.

How to insert and array loungers

The lounger 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 so AutoCAD rescales on insertion. Use INSERT or drag the DWG from a palette, pick the centre of the bed as the insertion point, and rotate so the foot end faces the pool or the view.

To lay out a sun deck, use the ARRAY command to set a regular row of loungers along the pool edge, then drop a small side-table block between every pair. Because the lounger is one block reference, you can adjust the whole row's spacing at once, and any edit to the definition updates every sunbed in the scheme.

Where sun loungers are used

Sun loungers belong on swimming-pool and pool-deck plans, hotel and resort sun terraces, spa and wellness gardens, rooftop pools, beach clubs and private poolside areas. They pair with the swimming pool, parasol, side table, relaxer chair and decking blocks in the outdoor category to compose a complete poolside scene.

Because the block is free and licence-clear, it suits resort and hospitality concept plans where the lounging capacity around a pool is part of the brief. The same lounger carries from an early pool-deck sketch through to a coordinated landscape FF&E drawing, so the sunbed provision stays consistent across the set.

Layering and counts

Put the loungers on a dedicated furniture or site-furniture layer so you can freeze them for a clean pool-deck plan and thaw them for the furnished version. A distinct colour keeps the sunbeds legible against the deck surface and the pool.

For a resort scheme, tag each lounger with an attribute and you can extract a sunbed count straight from the drawing for a capacity or procurement schedule. When the deck layout is resolved, WBLOCK a lounger-plus-side-table-plus-parasol module and array it down the pool edge so the poolside is laid out evenly in one move rather than placed bed by bed.

Setting out a poolside row

Loungers are usually laid out in rows that face the pool or track the sun, and the plan is where you balance the count against comfort. The temptation on a resort scheme is to pack as many beds in as the deck will hold, but a row jammed wheel-to-wheel reads as a budget lido rather than a relaxing deck, and it leaves nowhere for a side table or a towel rail. A small gap between loungers, enough for a person to stand and a low table to sit, transforms how the row feels for very little lost capacity.

The walkway behind the row is the other figure that earns its space. Guests cross behind the beds constantly — to the bar, the pool steps, the changing rooms — and a route that forces them to step over feet is the mark of a deck laid out without a plan. Keep a clear circulation band behind the loungers and, on a deep deck, consider a double row back-to-back with a shared walkway down the middle. Because each lounger is a single block, you can array the row, drop in the gaps and tables, and read the real usable capacity before the deck is ever built.

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Questions

Frequently asked

Is the sun lounger CAD block free to use?+

Yes. It downloads free in DWG and, where available, DXF, with no signup, no watermark and no attribution requirement, cleared for commercial use.

How much space should a row of loungers take?+

Each lounger is full-adult length, so allow for that plus a walkway of at least 900–1200 mm behind the row and a gap between loungers for a side table or to step through.

What's the difference between a sun lounger and a relaxer chair?+

A sun lounger is a flat, long bed for lying down; a relaxer chair is a reclining seat with arms for sitting back. Both have their own blocks in the outdoor category.

Which software opens the DWG?+

It targets AutoCAD 2004 and later and opens in AutoCAD, AutoCAD LT, BricsCAD, DraftSight and free DWG viewers.

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