Hydrant, sprinkler, consulting documentation, Revit modelling, and 2D/3D production.
Fire protection documentation built for coordination, issue, and installation.
Central Fire Design delivers hydrant and sprinkler consulting, shop drawings, full BIM design, Revit modelling, and 2D/3D drawing output. The site is intentionally technical and direct because the service is technical and direct: clear documentation, strong coordination, and professional issue-ready output.
Eighteen technical palettes, including eight full dark themes that still suit a fire protection, BIM, and documentation business.
Design intent, coordinated BIM views, and issue-ready drawing packages.
Documentation that can move between sheet clarity and model-led coordination.
Auckland based with documentation support for teams working across New Zealand.
Interactive service detail without turning the site into a sales brochure.
This section is deliberately more interactive than the first version. It still stays professional, but it now demonstrates stronger HTML, CSS, and JavaScript capability by letting visitors move through the service stack instead of just reading one static grid.
Hydrant System Design
Hydrant documentation should be easy to coordinate and easy to issue. The focus here is on structured layouts, practical system routing, and documentation packages that can support downstream review and construction discussion.
Projects needing disciplined layout documentation and clean communication into wider consultant or contractor workflows.
System clarity, buildability awareness, and documentation that does not create unnecessary noise for the wider team.
Structured sheets, legible plan information, and supporting views that help teams understand the system quickly.
Sprinkler Shop Drawings
Shop drawing output is handled as a delivery tool, not just a set of lines on a page. The emphasis is on coordination-aware detail that supports pricing, review, fabrication planning, and the practical needs of project teams.
Contractors and project teams needing more than generic drawings and wanting dependable technical presentation.
Cleaner handoff between coordination, shop use, and issued communication through more deliberate drawing structure.
Detail-rich sheet sets, layout clarity, and supporting views aligned to practical team use.
Consulting Documentation
Central Fire Design can sit inside a consultant-facing documentation process while still keeping the output readable, intentional, and build-aware. The website copy is written to show that this is technical work carried out with discipline.
Consultants, builders, and project teams who need structured documentation support that integrates cleanly with other disciplines.
Clearer issue packages, easier coordination dialogue, and documentation that supports project confidence.
Professional documentation packages with strong hierarchy, usable sheet organisation, and practical technical communication.
Revit Modelling and BIM Workflows
Model-based delivery is positioned as a practical coordination tool. Revit workflows are used to support consistent output, better spatial understanding, and cleaner communication with the wider digital project environment.
Projects where spatial coordination and model integration matter, but the final output still needs to stay readable on sheet.
Clearer routes, stronger coordination awareness, and a model-to-document workflow that stays commercially practical.
Revit-driven model views, consistent drawing generation, and coordination-ready technical output.
2D and 3D Drawing Production
Some teams need direct sheet clarity, others need model-assisted views to explain complex conditions. The site now reflects that the output can move between both modes while keeping the visual language of the business measured and professional.
Projects needing drawing communication that supports consultants, contractors, and project managers with different viewing needs.
More understandable documentation and a clearer bridge between spatial information and practical issue packages.
2D clarity, 3D support where useful, and deliberately structured graphic hierarchy.
Proof without invented project claims.
Until the client provides approved project examples, the strongest honest proof is the way the work is structured. This section shows the capability profile through outputs, workflow indicators, delivery structure, and abstract technical presentation.
The site now makes each service area clearer instead of compressing them into one generic block.
Design, coordination, and documentation are treated as distinct but connected stages.
Documentation is framed as communication across both conventional and model-led drawing contexts.
The site stays conversion-oriented with visible phone and email actions rather than a buried form.
Used to explain scope, route logic, system understanding, and the shape of the documentation package before issue.
Represents spatial awareness, discipline interfaces, and the practical adjustments needed when documentation meets project conditions.
Shows the final objective: output that reads cleanly, looks intentional, and communicates the system without unnecessary clutter.
The positioning is written for contractors, consultants, builders, and project teams needing clearer fire protection documentation support.
Not project counts or named clients. It proves seriousness of presentation, technical confidence, clarity of offer, and a stronger contact path.
When approved, this layout can absorb real case studies, redacted drawing samples, testimonials, and a more formal capability statement.
A view-state module that shows design, coordination, and documentation as separate working modes.
This is the main SVG-backed interaction on the page. It keeps the tone technical and restrained while still making the page feel materially more advanced than a typical brochure site.
Route logic, model structure, and early documentation intent before the package is refined for wider issue.
Design View
This state focuses on system logic and model structure. It represents the phase where routes, layout behaviour, and documentation intent are being defined with enough clarity to move into wider project coordination.
Coordination View
This state is about spatial response. It reflects how a model-led workflow supports more informed service layouts and clearer communication with other project disciplines when routes need review, alignment, or adjustment.
Documentation View
The final state shows how model information is turned into cleaner sheet output. This is where drawing clarity, hierarchy, and usable issue packages matter more than digital theatre.
How this section helps the client
It shows that the website can communicate technical depth visually, not just through text blocks. That matters because future clients will often judge capability before they ever make contact.
A stepped project flow with a stronger visual reading pattern.
Instead of four static cards, the process now reads as an active sequence. As visitors move down the section, the interface keeps surfacing the current step and the purpose behind it.
Clear workflows reduce friction before issue and during delivery.
The left side acts as the project status rail for this section. On larger screens it becomes the pinned reference point while the step cards move through the active state on scroll.
Project Brief Review
Review the scope, required documentation, and the information needed to move into a dependable working model or drawing set.
Project Brief Review
Review project information, scope boundaries, drawing inputs, and what level of documentation is actually required.
System Layout and Modelling
Develop hydrant or sprinkler layouts in the appropriate drawing or Revit environment so the package starts with technical clarity.
Coordination and Issue Structure
Use the working model and drawing package to support clearer coordination conversations and more structured issue preparation.
Issued Documentation Support
Issue finalised drawing output and stay responsive through change, refinement, and practical documentation updates as required.
Direct contact, better interaction, and clearer guidance on what to send.
The final section keeps the primary conversion path simple, but it now feels more deliberate. Contact details are easier to use, copy-to-clipboard is built in, and the page gives prospects a clearer sense of what to include in their first enquiry.
Project enquiries and technical discussions
If the project needs hydrant documentation, sprinkler shop drawings, BIM support, Revit modelling, or coordinated 2D/3D fire protection output, use the contact details below. The page intentionally keeps the path direct.
East Tamaki, Auckland 2013 Auckland based, with support for project teams working across New Zealand.
What helps the first conversation
This is not a fake enquiry flow. It is simple guidance so prospects know what to send if they want a more useful first exchange.
What this implementation now proves
Stronger interaction design, better motion discipline, clearer service communication, and a more premium technical presentation without drifting away from the client’s business reality.