Definition
A scaled drawing of an airport showing runways, taxiways, ramps, buildings, and other features, published on instrument approach plates and as standalone charts. The Airport Sketch is a smaller drawing printed on the lower portion of an instrument approach procedure chart, providing a quick visual reference to runway layout and key airport features. The Airport Diagram is a separate, full-page, more detailed chart published for busier airports, used primarily for ground movement and taxi planning.
Plain English
A map of the airport seen from above. The smaller version (sketch) is part of an approach chart and helps you find the runway after landing. The larger version (diagram) is a separate page with more detail, used to taxi around bigger airports without getting lost.
Context Anchor
You see this on approach charts, in electronic chart apps, and during preflight or taxi planning before moving around an airport.
Derivation
Airport combines “air” with “port,” meaning a place where aircraft arrive and depart. Sketch comes from older European words meaning a quick drawing. Diagram comes from Greek roots meaning something marked out by lines. That fits the aviation use: a drawn layout that helps you see the airport’s shape and parts at a glance.
Why Pilots Care
Allows pilots to plan safe taxi routes, avoid runway incursions, and maintain situational awareness on the ground, especially in low visibility or at night.
Analogy
It is like using a mall map before walking through a large shopping center: you can see the entrances, main paths, and where you need to go before you start moving.
Intuition Check
Do not read “sketch” as a rough, unofficial drawing. In this context, it means a published airport layout meant to support pilot orientation. “Diagram” means the more detailed layout, not just any picture.
Example Sentence 1
During the approach briefing, the pilot reviewed the airport sketch to identify the first available taxiway exit after landing on Runway 27.
Example Sentence 2
During the briefing, the instructor pointed out the runway hold-short lines on the airport sketch.