ᐅ Floor Plan Design for Semi-Detached House (150 sqm): Your Opinions?
Created on: 28 Apr 2017 21:11
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RahliMarcel
Hello everyone,
we have made progress in planning our semi-detached house and received a draft from the architect of the developer, which we have discussed together.
What do you think? Do you notice anything else — feel free to comment.
Size
The plot is 465 square meters (sqm) (building site ratio & floor space ratio are 0.3), and the house should have 154.31 sqm (according to DIN standards). The knee wall height is specified at 50 cm (20 inches) on the outside, raised to 80 cm (31 inches) on the inside. The terrace faces east.
What was important to us:
we have made progress in planning our semi-detached house and received a draft from the architect of the developer, which we have discussed together.
What do you think? Do you notice anything else — feel free to comment.
Size
The plot is 465 square meters (sqm) (building site ratio & floor space ratio are 0.3), and the house should have 154.31 sqm (according to DIN standards). The knee wall height is specified at 50 cm (20 inches) on the outside, raised to 80 cm (31 inches) on the inside. The terrace faces east.
What was important to us:
- large living and dining area
- side-by-side refrigerator and tall cabinets integrated into the walls
- dryer and washing machine in the utility room
- small hallways
- upstairs:
- large children’s room with bed nook
- small bedroom
- office
- built-in shower niche
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RahliMarcel28 Apr 2017 22:42Wow... thanks to you all already, I will take another look at it right away. And yes, 3 people are supposed to live there, meaning 1 child.
yvonnebo schrieb:
maybe a wall at 45° 😱R
RahliMarcel29 Apr 2017 07:13Grym schrieb:
65cm (25.6 inches) to the dressing room is quite narrow, as is 74cm (29.1 inches) to the shower. I would base it on a standard door width, so about 90cm (35.4 inches) for each passage.In our case, the idea was that we wouldn’t be going in and out there all the time. And for the shower, it was also meant to have splash protection.
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Marvinius29 Apr 2017 07:51I find the bathroom rather irregular. The recess for the shower might be inconvenient, possibly in the children's room.
Where is north? It seems to me that although the child’s room is large, it is actually facing north?
I would leave out the wall to the walk-in closet, as it would create a storage clutter. It would be better to have corner wardrobes and a flexible partition that can be adjusted. Corner wardrobes should be the priority here, so you can move around more easily in the walk-in closet; this works better in a square area than in a narrow corridor.
Regards, Yvonne
I would leave out the wall to the walk-in closet, as it would create a storage clutter. It would be better to have corner wardrobes and a flexible partition that can be adjusted. Corner wardrobes should be the priority here, so you can move around more easily in the walk-in closet; this works better in a square area than in a narrow corridor.
Regards, Yvonne
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