That night, she drew a detail by hand. Just one. And she pinned it above her desk, a reminder that the machine was a tool — not a master.
Something clicked.
Marta closed the corrupted Layout file. She reopened the SketchUp model and, for the first time, organized it properly — tags (formerly layers) for structure, finish, furniture, and site. She assigned every group and component a tag. Then she opened a fresh Layout document. Instead of copy-pasting the whole model into one viewport, she created separate viewports on different sheets: one for the plan with structure tags on, one for finishes, one for dimensions. She locked each viewport’s scale. She used the Scrapbook for the title block — a built-in feature she’d ignored — and connected it to SketchUp’s model info so the project name auto-updated. cursus sketchup layout
He explained it simply: In the old days, he’d draw the base plan in ink, then overlay sheets of tracing paper for dimensions, electrical, plumbing — each layer independent but aligned. Layout, he realized, worked the same way. But Marta was treating it like a single sheet of Mylar. She was trying to draw on top of the model instead of from the model. That night, she drew a detail by hand