Architectural Design
A comprehensive guide to the door and window schedule process in architecture. Discover how to effectively manage and organize detailed project information using BIM.

Jessica Wyman
Originally Published: Dec 28, 2023
What is a door or window schedule?
Door and window schedules are itemized lists of all the doors and windows within a project. Door and Window schedules are a central location for detailed information including head and jamb details or hardware sets.
A common challenge is long lead times for door and window components. Ordering the wrong hardware can cause delays to occupancy if it’s not caught before installation.
This guide will help you get it right!

What do door and window schedules look like?
At their most basic, door and window schedules are a list of the doors and windows in the project. The list will include detailed information about each door or window and often reference standard types for each. Reference tags in your plans and elevations connect the information in the schedules to a location in your project.
In older drawing sets, door and window schedules were hosted in Excel and copied into drafting software. Today, they’re most often an auto-populated schedule hosted directly in the BIM model. Tools like Layer, give designers an intuitive interface to manage and quickly pull information from these schedules.
Who creates door and window schedules?
Door and window schedules are typically completed by the architectural team. On large or specialized projects a dedicated door hardware consultant may join the team. Hardware consultants review drawings and produce hardware specifications that align with egress, security, and durability requirements.
When is a door or window schedule created?
When working with BIM software like Revit, it is easy to begin populating the door and window schedule during design development. Determining the door’s size, rating, panel type and frame type during design development gives the team an opportunity to review with the client and end users before issuing the drawings for bid. Similarly, the window’s dimensions and frame type should be identified during DD.
It is best to wait for Construction Documents to put in detailed information such as the hardware sets and detail markers for doors and windows.
DD’s - basic information
Size
Material
Frame type
Rating
CD’s - add in
Hardware set
Jamb, Head, and Sill details
Specialty information
How do Door Schedules differ from Window Schedules?
Door and window schedules share many similarities, but several key differences.
1. Doors each have a unique tag and windows do not.
Doors are typically tagged with the same number as the room they lead into, making them easy to locate on the plan. Within a project, no two doors have the same number.
In contrast, the same window tag can be applied to multiple windows within the project. The tag is not specific to a single window, but rather a type of window.
2. Where they're tagged
Doors are tagged in plan. Windows are tagged in plan and elevation.
3. Components of the schedules
Door schedules have three main components: an itemized schedule, a legend of door types, and a legend of frame types. The schedule includes each door, its dimensions, panel type, frame type, rating, and hardware set. The door panel legend includes the material, dimensions, and locates view windows within the panel. Frame types include the material of the frame, dimensions, and jamb and head detail markers.
Window schedules have two main components: a glazing schedule and a legend of window types. The glazing schedule lists each type of glass included in the project. Typical types include: 1” insulated low-e glass for exterior windows and ¼” tempered glass for interior windows. The window type legend includes dimensions, sill height, glazing type, and detail markers for head, sill, and jamb conditions.
What information should be included in a door schedule?
Dimensions: rough openings
Material selection: Glazing types
Fire rating requirements
Hardware sets
Jamb and head details
What information should be included in a window schedule?
Window type: Fixed, Single Hung, Double Hung, Storefront System, etc.
Dimensions: rough openings, sill height
Glazing types
Fire rating requirements, where applicable
Jamb, head, and sill details

What are common pitfalls when creating door and window schedules?
Door and window schedules require special attention since mistakes can be costly and long lead times are common items. Further, mistakes can have significant implications for building life safety and egress. The most common pitfalls happen with changes made late in the design process. Documenting changes and reviewing schedules before issuing drawings avoids errors and omissions.
Door and window schedules require careful coordination because errors are expensive to fix. These items are tied to life safety, security, and envelope performance. Long lead times also add risk.
Top Pitfalls
Failing to coordinate door and window ratings with life safety plans.
Assigning incorrect hardware sets or missing hardware requirements.
Mixing new and existing elements during renovations without clear definitions.

Taking a few moments to review your door and window schedules with a fresh set of eyes is always time well spent!
How BIM streamlines the door and window schedule process
BIM software has liberated architects from managing an excel spreadsheet of door and window schedules! Schedules are no longer hosted in Excel, but integrated into the model. Don’t take my word for it, ask a veteran colleague about their first experience managing door and window schedules.
As you model, schedules are automatically updated. You can quickly modify the information in your schedules with field options. Most firms have a standard template for their door and window schedules, but these are often customized to fit the needs of each project.
Tools for Creating Door and Window Schedules
Process 1: Excel
Pros of this process
BIM software is also extremely easy to export. Door and window schedules can be exported into excel. Making collaboration and communication with consultants and clients seamless.
Cons of this process
Exported files are not linked to the live BIM model. If changes are made to the BIM model after exporting the schedules, it requires constant management from the design team to ensure clients and subconsultants have the most up to date information.
Referencing information such as the hardware schedules and details requires flipping between program and pdf sheets.
Process 2: Flexible Database Tool (like Layer)
The advantages of using a flexible database tool for door and window schedules
Link product cut sheets for hardware, glazing, panels, or frames with Layer! So long to flipping through different pdf’s and folders searching for the relevant information.
Easily pull quantity takeoffs for door panels, windows, and hardware sets. This can be a great way to confirm your model is accurate and a powerful tool for cost estimating.
Door and window schedules allow you to succinctly organize detailed information for your project. Even though BIM software has improved workflows for managing door and window schedules, they still require careful attention. Flexible databases ease the burden of managing this crucial information throughout design and construction.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a door schedule?
A door schedule is an itemized list of all doors in a construction project. It includes door dimensions, panel and frame types, fire ratings, hardware sets, and references to head, jamb, and sill details. Door schedules are typically maintained in BIM software like Revit and referenced from floor plans through tag numbers.
What is a window schedule?
A window schedule is an itemized list of window types in a project. It includes dimensions, sill height, glazing type, frame material, fire ratings (where applicable), and references to head, sill, and jamb details. Unlike doors, multiple windows of the same type can share a single window tag.
What is the difference between a door schedule and a window schedule?
Door schedules use unique tags per door (typically matching the room number) and contain three main components: an itemized schedule, a door type legend, and a frame type legend. Window schedules use shared tags for matching window types and contain two main components: a glazing schedule and a window type legend. Doors are tagged in plan only; windows are tagged in plan and elevation.
When are door and window schedules created?
Basic information (size, material, frame type, rating) is typically established during Design Development. Detailed information (hardware sets, head and jamb details, specialty requirements) is added during Construction Documents. Auto-populated schedules in BIM tools update as the model develops.
What information should be in a door schedule?
At minimum: door dimensions and rough openings, panel and frame material, fire rating requirements, hardware sets, and references to head and jamb details. Specialty doors may require additional information about glazing, security hardware, or accessibility compliance.
Who creates door and window schedules?
Door and window schedules are typically prepared by the architectural team. On large or specialized projects, a dedicated door hardware consultant joins the team to produce hardware specifications that meet egress, security, and durability requirements.
What are common mistakes in door and window schedules?
Three frequent issues: failing to coordinate door and window ratings with life safety plans, assigning incorrect or missing hardware sets, and mixing new and existing elements during renovations without clear definitions. Most errors trace back to changes made late in the design process.
Further Resources
The Ultimate Guide to How to Specify Door Hardware. The dedicated companion guide covering hardware sets and specification.
An Introduction to Furniture Schedules. A related schedule type used in interior projects.
Architectural Specifications Explained. How door and window specifications fit within the broader specifications package.
The Architectural Design Process Explained. Where door and window scheduling fits within Design Development and Construction Documents.
Design Development Phase and Coordinating Around the Revit Model. The phase where most schedule work begins.
The Building Survey Process Explained. Documenting existing doors and windows during renovations.
Door Survey Workflow Template in Layer. A pre-configured workflow for documenting and managing door schedules linked to Revit.
FF&E Workflow Template in Layer. A related schedule workflow for furniture, fixtures, and equipment.



