There’s a lot of documentation involved in getting your coffee shop built out. Here’s what you need to know to get your coffeehouse plans right.
Our recent post about coffeehouse design showed you all the things you’ll need to consider when planning the use of your space. But that may be the easy part. Ultimately you have to assure the dimensions of everything you bring into the space are spot-on, as well as making your electrical and plumbing plans crystal-clear and correct, so you can avoid myriad headaches: rejection of your plans by your local authority (city or county), equipment that doesn’t fit in the space allotted for it, or other design mistakes that can be expensive to address after the fact.
Dimensions
Your floor plan must outline dimensions for new partitions, doors, cabinets and fixtures. This will assure that all equipment, furniture and fixtures end up where they should, and fit into the space.
You also need to account for existing features, some of which may not be up to code and will need to be fixed. If your space was formerly used for food service the code violations may be grandfathered it—but don’t count on it. Check with city or county. Some features that commonly need upgrades are sprinkler systems, stairways (making them less steep and/or adding a ramp), bathrooms (requiring ADA standards).
Electrical Plan
Your electrical plan will show the location and configuration of all outlets (horizontal or vertical), and details on voltage, amperage, phase, hertz and whether any power sources require a dedicated circuit.
A small, basic coffee shop might get away with a 200-amp service, but typically 400 amps will be required if you’ll be using an electric water heater, high-temperature dishwasher or cooking equipment.
You may also need to adjust existing electrical for:
Plumbing Plan
Your plumbing plan should show locations for all water sources, drains, water heater, water filtration system (with specifics on whether it’s a full system, reverse osmosis, or single filter), grease interceptor (if needed), bathroom fixtures, etc.
Some of your equipment will also need to be hooked up to a sink drain:
Keep in mind:
Cabinets and Counters
For your cabinet maker to give you the most user-friendly storage spaces, be sure to let them know:
The equipment itself
Make sure your equipment is up to standards set by your city or county. It will typically need to be NSF & UL approved, or have an equivalent foreign certification. The inspectors reviewing your plans may want to see manufacturer specifications that prove your equipment complies with their standards.