Development Plan / Restrictions
Plot size: 931 sqm (10,016 sq ft)
Slope: yes
Development according to § 34 Building Code
Number of parking spaces: 4 (two separate and two in front of the garage)
Number of floors: Basement and ground floor
Roof type: hipped roof, 22 degrees
Style: classic
Orientation: south/west
Client Requirements
Basement: yes, due to sloped plot
Floors: 2
Number of occupants: 3 adults plus two children: 3 months and almost 3 years
Space requirements on ground floor and upper floor
Office: family use in guest room and an additional room for home office
Overnight guests per year: 5
Open floor plan
Conservative and/or modern construction style
Open kitchen with half island
Number of dining seats: 6-8
Fireplace: yes
Balcony: yes, later terrace on the south side on the roof of the planned prefabricated garage
Garage: double garage as prefabricated unit directly adjacent
House Design
Planner: Architect
What we like most: the large living/dining/kitchen area
What we like less: possibly the hallways
Price estimate according to architect/planner: approx. 350,000
Preferred heating technology: heat pump
Hello dear forum,
We would like to present our planned house now and would appreciate some honest feedback. We are generally very happy with it and have already submitted the building permit / planning permission application. But maybe there is still something we don’t see.
The ground floor (or basement level) will be completely open at the front, so we want to enter the house at ground level or drive in through the garage. The other sides will partly be embedded in the slope.
The two smaller children’s bedrooms on the upper floor are planned for the first years of the children. When they get older, they will move to the ground floor where the two larger rooms are.
Please don’t take the furniture layout too seriously. This does not matter at this stage.
Best regards and many thanks!!!

Plot size: 931 sqm (10,016 sq ft)
Slope: yes
Development according to § 34 Building Code
Number of parking spaces: 4 (two separate and two in front of the garage)
Number of floors: Basement and ground floor
Roof type: hipped roof, 22 degrees
Style: classic
Orientation: south/west
Client Requirements
Basement: yes, due to sloped plot
Floors: 2
Number of occupants: 3 adults plus two children: 3 months and almost 3 years
Space requirements on ground floor and upper floor
Office: family use in guest room and an additional room for home office
Overnight guests per year: 5
Open floor plan
Conservative and/or modern construction style
Open kitchen with half island
Number of dining seats: 6-8
Fireplace: yes
Balcony: yes, later terrace on the south side on the roof of the planned prefabricated garage
Garage: double garage as prefabricated unit directly adjacent
House Design
Planner: Architect
What we like most: the large living/dining/kitchen area
What we like less: possibly the hallways
Price estimate according to architect/planner: approx. 350,000
Preferred heating technology: heat pump
Hello dear forum,
We would like to present our planned house now and would appreciate some honest feedback. We are generally very happy with it and have already submitted the building permit / planning permission application. But maybe there is still something we don’t see.
The ground floor (or basement level) will be completely open at the front, so we want to enter the house at ground level or drive in through the garage. The other sides will partly be embedded in the slope.
The two smaller children’s bedrooms on the upper floor are planned for the first years of the children. When they get older, they will move to the ground floor where the two larger rooms are.
Please don’t take the furniture layout too seriously. This does not matter at this stage.
Best regards and many thanks!!!
There are many doors in the entrance area, but somehow there is no space for a coat rack.
In the upper floor bathroom, you have to squeeze between the shower partition and the washbasin every time, which looks very tight.
And for 36 people plus 2 children, I would find it too cramped 😉
In the upper floor bathroom, you have to squeeze between the shower partition and the washbasin every time, which looks very tight.
And for 36 people plus 2 children, I would find it too cramped 😉
kaba80 schrieb:
Number of people: 36 plus two children: 3 months and almost 3
Hmm, I’m also very cautious when I read that the plan is supposed to be final.
Basically, I would have arranged the living/dining area with the kitchen on the basement level and placed the bedrooms upstairs.
Or planned a split-level design.
For me, there is nothing better than having direct access to the garden on the ground floor. Everything else always feels like an apartment to me.
Regards
Basically, I would have arranged the living/dining area with the kitchen on the basement level and placed the bedrooms upstairs.
Or planned a split-level design.
For me, there is nothing better than having direct access to the garden on the ground floor. Everything else always feels like an apartment to me.
Regards
T
toxicmolotof10 Nov 2016 08:28So... for 214 sqm (2303 sq ft) plus attic space, you only have 10% more actual living area compared to our 125 sqm (1345 sq ft).
I see a huge amount of room for improvement and optimization. Writing everything down now would be too much and wouldn’t make much sense anyway, so the short version is: Tear it all down and start over.
I can’t believe this is supposed to come from a motivated architect.
I see a huge amount of room for improvement and optimization. Writing everything down now would be too much and wouldn’t make much sense anyway, so the short version is: Tear it all down and start over.
I can’t believe this is supposed to come from a motivated architect.
J
j.bautsch10 Nov 2016 08:532 rooms of 16m² (172 sq ft) for work and guests, but the children get a more complicated 12m² (129 sq ft)? Somehow disproportionate 😉
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