The introduction of digital technology has caused a switch to computer aided drafting, or CAD.
The origins of the detailed plans of structures common to modern  times was in the Renaissance, when artists made detailed sketches of  classical buildings and began planning buildings that they imagined.  Builders were expected to follow the illustration and work out the  details.
As building became more complex, the art of drafting the plans  advanced so that everything was spelled out in detail. Creating detailed  plans helps to avoid construction delays, to make cost estimates and to  help the builder decide to commit to a project.
Eventually, the conventions used in modern architecture were adopted  by the architects who prepared the plans. These are combined to create  comprehensive plans for the building, used at stages to solve  engineering problems or construction guides.
 Copies of plans at first needed to be laboriously redrawn by hand,  which was done on special paper such as vellum that could not shrink or  stretch.
                            

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