From Satellite to Subfloor: How a Footprint Becomes a Blueprint
Crawlspace footprint mapping begins with county aerial data, is confirmed by the owner on satellite view, and becomes the verified spatial baseline for the permanent record.
The Spatial Baseline Is Everything
A Crawlspace Blueprint™ is a spatial record. Every feature documented in the Blueprint — access doors, mechanical equipment, structural supports, trade-partner findings — is positioned relative to a spatial framework. That framework is the crawlspace footprint: the scaled outline of the crawlspace as seen from above.
Getting the footprint right is the foundation of the entire record. An inaccurate footprint means that every feature placed on the map carries location error. A precise footprint means that every subsequent entry in the record — including findings documented months or years after the initial capture — is positioned accurately within a reliable spatial reference.
The process of establishing that footprint, from the first aerial data pull to the verified spatial baseline, is described here.
Step One: County Aerial Data
The footprint process begins before anyone visits the property. Crawl-Space Connect© pulls building-footprint data from county records — the same data layer that county assessors and GIS departments maintain as part of their property records.
For most residential and commercial properties, this data provides the outer wall dimensions of the structure as recorded in county building files. It is not a measurement taken at the property. It is a digital record of the building's documented footprint, derived from county aerial surveys and updated through the building permit and assessment processes.
This county data becomes the starting point for the Crawlspace Blueprint™. Rather than beginning from a blank grid, the Blueprint starts from a documented outline — the building's footprint as it exists in the public record.
The accuracy of county data varies. Some counties maintain current, detailed building-footprint records. Others have data that lags behind additions, renovations, or irregular geometry. The county data is a starting point, not a finished record.
Step Two: Owner Confirmation on Satellite View
Once the county data is loaded, the property owner reviews the footprint against satellite imagery. The satellite view — available through standard mapping platforms — shows the building from above as it currently appears. The owner can see whether the county footprint aligns with the visible structure, where it diverges, and what adjustments are needed.
This step is a verification and correction step, not a passive review. The owner is the person with the most direct knowledge of the property. They know about the addition put on twelve years ago, the garage that was enclosed, the screened porch that was converted to conditioned space. These changes may not be reflected in the county data. The satellite confirmation is the point in the process where the owner's knowledge is applied to correct and update the footprint.
Where the county footprint and the satellite image agree, the outline is confirmed. Where they diverge — because of an addition, a structural change, or a county data lag — the owner makes the correction before the footprint is used as the spatial baseline.
The result of the satellite confirmation step is a footprint that reflects both the documented county record and the owner's verified understanding of what the structure actually looks like.
Step Three: Wall-Level Verification
Satellite imagery shows the building from above, but it does not distinguish between the portions of the structure that sit over the crawlspace and those that do not. A home with a slab-on-grade garage attached to a crawlspace-foundation main body has two different foundation types under one roof. Only the crawlspace portion needs to be mapped as the Blueprint footprint.
The wall-level verification step addresses this. Working from the satellite-confirmed overall footprint, the owner (or the Connect field team, during an on-site capture) identifies which walls enclose the crawlspace foundation. Portions of the structure on a slab, on a concrete pad, or otherwise not over the crawlspace are marked out of the footprint.
For a standard rectangular home on a single crawlspace foundation, this step is straightforward — the entire footprint maps to the crawlspace. For homes with additions, attached garages, or mixed foundation types, this step is what ensures the Blueprint accurately represents the crawlspace boundary rather than the building boundary.
The output of the wall-level verification is a crawlspace-specific footprint: the spatial boundary of the underground space the record will document.
Step Four: The Footprint Becomes the Spatial Baseline
With the footprint confirmed through county data, satellite review, and wall-level verification, it becomes the spatial baseline for the Crawlspace Blueprint™. This baseline is the coordinate frame that all subsequent documentation references.
A feature placed on the Blueprint — an access door, an air handler, a structural pier — is positioned relative to the baseline footprint. A finding documented by a trade partner is pinned to a zone defined by the baseline. A correction recorded after that finding is entered at the same zone.
The spatial baseline does not change unless the structure itself changes. An addition that extends the crawlspace area would require a footprint update, documented as a revision in the record. The original baseline and the revised baseline both remain in the record, with their respective dates.
This persistence is part of what makes the Crawlspace Blueprint™ a long-term record rather than a snapshot. The spatial framework endures. Documentation accumulates within it. The record's usefulness grows over time rather than becoming outdated.
From Outline to Full Record
The footprint-to-baseline process produces the structural layer of the Crawlspace Blueprint™. The next layer is the feature placement: access doors, vents, mechanical equipment, and structural elements positioned within the footprint. After that comes the documentation layer: trade-partner entries, findings, corrections, and attached files.
For an on-site field capture, the Connect field team moves through the space systematically, recording features and building the full spatial record in one capture event. The resulting Blueprint includes the 2D plan view built from the verified footprint and, for field captures, the 360° Space-Crawler™ navigable visual layer.
For a self-entered draft, the property owner builds the feature layer by placing known elements on the map after the footprint is confirmed. The draft record is a working document that can be upgraded to a field-verified record when an on-site capture is conducted.
To see how both capture formats work together, visit 2D and 360°: The Two Ways a Crawlspace Blueprint™ Is Captured. To start the footprint process for your property, visit Crawlspace Blueprints™.
To create a spatially accurate Crawlspace Blueprint™ for your property, visit The Crawlspace Blueprint Registry™ and start with the Find My House footprint tool.
