Hello dear members,
Just registered and already have my first question. A brief introduction about us: we are 34 and 30 years old, no children and none planned. We don’t know what the future holds in a few years.
We plan to start building our house, hopefully if the winter weather cooperates, as soon as we finalize the floor plan. Unfortunately, I, Michaela, tend to be a perfectionist (symmetry, etc.). I can’t let it go and want everything to be well thought out and planned, which is starting to annoy me as well.
Since we are building rather small, aiming for about 114 m2 (1227 sq ft) of living space and trying not to compromise on anything at this size, the floor plan design is quite challenging. Among other things, we do not want all rooms to be accessible from the hallway, and we also want to keep a covered terrace. The bungalow will consist of only three rooms. Therefore, we want to keep the option open to convert the attic later if needed. In this context, we are planning space for a future space-saving staircase and the necessary preliminary work; at least that is the goal. The bungalow will have a hip roof, with the roof pitch increased from 30 degrees to 34 degrees, and the hallway correspondingly larger. Ideally, we would like a gable dormer. Since those are too expensive, a skylight window would be a compromise. Of course, a larger bungalow would be the best option but it is too costly. The construction company charges about 700.00 euros per m2. In hindsight, working with an architect might have been more cost-effective, but that is how it is and that is not what this is about.
Maybe you have ideas, suggestions, can give tips, or share what we should pay attention to or consider.
I am of course attaching the floor plan. I hope that something can still be recognized despite the manual changes.
I look forward to reading your replies and wish you a nice weekend.
Best regards,
Michaela
Just registered and already have my first question. A brief introduction about us: we are 34 and 30 years old, no children and none planned. We don’t know what the future holds in a few years.
We plan to start building our house, hopefully if the winter weather cooperates, as soon as we finalize the floor plan. Unfortunately, I, Michaela, tend to be a perfectionist (symmetry, etc.). I can’t let it go and want everything to be well thought out and planned, which is starting to annoy me as well.
Since we are building rather small, aiming for about 114 m2 (1227 sq ft) of living space and trying not to compromise on anything at this size, the floor plan design is quite challenging. Among other things, we do not want all rooms to be accessible from the hallway, and we also want to keep a covered terrace. The bungalow will consist of only three rooms. Therefore, we want to keep the option open to convert the attic later if needed. In this context, we are planning space for a future space-saving staircase and the necessary preliminary work; at least that is the goal. The bungalow will have a hip roof, with the roof pitch increased from 30 degrees to 34 degrees, and the hallway correspondingly larger. Ideally, we would like a gable dormer. Since those are too expensive, a skylight window would be a compromise. Of course, a larger bungalow would be the best option but it is too costly. The construction company charges about 700.00 euros per m2. In hindsight, working with an architect might have been more cost-effective, but that is how it is and that is not what this is about.
Maybe you have ideas, suggestions, can give tips, or share what we should pay attention to or consider.
I am of course attaching the floor plan. I hope that something can still be recognized despite the manual changes.
I look forward to reading your replies and wish you a nice weekend.
Best regards,
Michaela
MundS schrieb:
There are cable- and rail-guided systems. You could also pray to weather gods, then faith-guided systems would suffice. But even permitted nonsense remains nonsense. There are many wrong shortcuts where you can try to "save." Guide rails are precisely there to ensure that the system works even when there is wind.
https://www.instagram.com/11antgmxde/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/bauen-jetzt/
11ant schrieb:
You can also pray to weather gods, then faith-based systems are enough. Even permissible nonsense remains nonsense. There are many false shortcuts where you can "save." Guide rails are specifically there so that the system works even without calm wind. Are you expressing some frustration? Or will there be a more substantial and less aggressive follow-up?
As it stands, this blanket statement is unfortunately meaningless.
So, why exactly are cord-guided venetian blinds nonsense in every situation? It’s not like cord-guided venetian blinds are not installed at all...
ruppsn schrieb:
Are you somehow expressing frustration? [...] So this general statement is unfortunately meaningless. Leading "by example" is not suitable for a construction component; it's more about being able to enforce the planned course, and in my opinion, a rail can do that in a more practical way. So why should I be frustrated because of that?
https://www.instagram.com/11antgmxde/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/bauen-jetzt/
MundS schrieb:
...all systems have wind sensors; That's nice, if the shading at least retracts to protect itself, but the glare from the sun is still there ...
Therefore, my position is that an alternative to a roller shutter should be equally stable.
https://www.instagram.com/11antgmxde/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/bauen-jetzt/
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