It can be represented by a two-dimensional drawing as in Figure 15.1.
Two further factors result in a five-dimensional model which cannot be represented by a two-dimensional drawing.
Traditional building design was largely reliant upon two-dimensional drawings (plans, elevations, sections, etc.).
Many people, including developers and would-be house buyers, cannot visualise a design in three dimensions (3-D) from two-dimensional (2-D) drawings.
The center also contains painting and drying rooms, and even a computer-guided laser that can create three-dimensional works from two-dimensional drawings.
These two-dimensional drawings are traditionally drawn on cloth or bark paper (Ulantaga paper) with natural dyes.
Furthermore, a three-dimensional counterpart of a two-dimensional drawing is usually not a "copy" of the drawing.
Conventional (so-called orthogonal) buildings are typically rendered by plans and elevations, two kinds of two-dimensional drawing.
It caused me to think in a way that looking at two-dimensional drawings and models wouldn't have.
It has features needed for making two-dimensional technical drawings.