Convert Square Foot (US Survey) (ft² (US)) to Plaza (plaza) instantly.
Square Foot (US Survey) to Plaza conversion
1 Square Foot (US Survey) (ft² (US)) = 0.000014516158 Plaza (plaza). To convert Square Foot (US Survey) to Plaza, multiply the value by 0.000014516158.
| Square Foot (US Survey) (ft² (US)) | Plaza (plaza) |
|---|---|
| 1 | 0.000014516158 |
| 2 | 0.000029032316 |
| 5 | 0.00007258079 |
| 10 | 0.00014516158 |
| 25 | 0.00036290395 |
| 50 | 0.0007258079 |
| 100 | 0.0014516158 |
| 1000 | 0.014516158 |
Frequently asked questions
How many Plaza are in one Square Foot (US Survey)?
One Square Foot (US Survey) (ft² (US)) equals 0.000014516158 Plaza (plaza).
How do I convert Square Foot (US Survey) to Plaza?
To convert Square Foot (US Survey) to Plaza, multiply the value by 0.000014516158.
What is 10 Square Foot (US Survey) in Plaza?
10 Square Foot (US Survey) = 0.00014516158 Plaza.
About these units
Square Foot (US Survey) (ft² (US))
The US survey square foot is defined using the US survey foot and differs minutely from the international square foot. While the difference is negligible in everyday contexts, in land surveying even tiny discrepancies matter because property boundaries, right-of-way extents, and engineering alignments may accumulate errors over long distances. Surveyors and civil engineers must interpret historical documents using survey-based values to ensure legal consistency with old plats, deeds, and boundary descriptions.
Plaza (plaza)
A plaza is a traditional Spanish area unit, historically used in various regions of Latin America and Spain. Its value varied widely by locality—commonly ranging between 2,700 and 3,000 square meters—depending on the colonial or municipal standards in effect at the time. The plaza's origin is linked to urban planning under Spanish colonial rule. Town centers in Spanish America were often designed around a central plaza, and surrounding parcels were measured using plaza-based units, embedding the measurement into the cultural fabric of settlement. In agricultural contexts, plazas were sometimes used to define modest landholdings such as gardens, homestead plots, or small fields. While largely replaced by metric units today, the plaza remains significant in historical cartography, land deeds, and anthropological studies of Iberian and colonial town development. It stands as a reminder that measurements often evolve out of cultural-practical needs rather than pure geometric abstraction.