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How to Read a Cut and Fill Drawing — A Guide for Equipment Operators

April 2026 · 8 min read · For operators, apprentices, and anyone learning to connect drawings to the ground

Most operators learn to read drawings on the job by watching more experienced guys. Someone hands you the drawings, points at a stake, and says "you're cutting to here." Over time you figure out how the paper connects to the ground.

This article shortens that curve. Here's what you need to understand.

The Three Drawing Views

Highway and civil construction drawings typically show the job three different ways. Each view tells you something different.

1. The Plan View

The plan view is looking straight down at the project from above — like Google Maps but with more information. It shows:

The plan view gives you the big picture. Where is the job? What does the alignment look like? But it doesn't tell you how deep you're cutting or how high you're filling. For that, you need the profile.

2. The Profile (Elevation) View

The profile is looking at the project from the side. Think of it like a long cross-section slice running along the centerline of the road.

You'll see two lines:

Where those two lines cross is the grade point — the transition between cut and fill. Zero cut/fill at that station.

The vertical distance between the two lines at any given station is your cut depth or fill height. That number drives how much material moves — and where it goes.

3. Cross Sections

Cross sections are the view you actually work to on the machine. They're slices cut across the road at a specific station — like cutting a loaf of bread at one spot and looking at the end.

Each cross section shows:

Critical Distinction Subgrade is the bottom of the road structure — the top of prepared native material. Finished grade is the top of the asphalt. You're almost always grading to subgrade first, then the road structure gets built on top. Know which one you're targeting before you start.

Reading the Numbers

Canadian highway drawings use metric measurements. Here's how the numbers work:

TermWhat It Means
Chainage (station)Distance in meters along the alignment from the start point. Written as 0+000, 0+500, 1+000, etc.
ElevationHeight in meters above sea level (or a local datum). Existing ground and design grades are both shown as elevations.
Cut/Fill depthVertical dimension in meters between existing ground and subgrade at that station.
Slope ratio (1.5:1)Horizontal to vertical. A 1.5:1 cut slope means 1.5m horizontal for every 1m vertical. Flatter number = steeper slope. Steeper number = gentler slope.
Crossfall (%)The slope across the road for drainage. Usually 2–3%.

The Typical Section

Somewhere in the drawing set — usually near the front — is a typical section. This is the standard cross-section template that applies along the whole project unless specific cross sections show something different.

The typical section shows:

Read the typical section before you start a new section of road. It tells you what the finished product is supposed to look like. If a cross section at a specific station differs from the typical section, the specific cross section takes priority.

How Grade Stakes Connect to the Drawings

The surveyor translates drawing numbers to physical stakes on the ground. You don't need to do the math yourself — but you need to understand what the stakes mean.

Stake ColorMeaning
OrangeFill — you're building up
BlueCut — you're digging down
Green (or yellow)Grade — you're at or near design grade

The number on the stake (written in centimeters) is how much you need to cut or fill to reach subgrade at that stake location. A blue stake with "75" means cut 75 cm down. An orange stake with "120" means build up 120 cm.

For more detail on reading grade stakes and using them on the machine, see our article on Construction Math for Operators.

Common Operator Mistakes

You don't need to read drawings like an engineer. You need to know: what am I working to, and where is it on the ground? Those two questions cover 90% of what operators need from a drawing set.

Practice Makes It Click

The first time you look at a set of highway drawings it looks overwhelming. The fifth time you've been through a set, you know exactly where to go to find what you need. It's a skill, and like operating, you get better at it by doing it.

If you're studying for your IUOE aptitude test or Red Seal, drawing comprehension and grade calculations show up on both. Work through some practice problems before your test. Start with our free practice questions.

Get Your IUOE Ticket

Reading drawings, grade calculations, machine selection — it all shows up on the aptitude test. Our study guide covers the math and mechanical sections with real construction examples.

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