ᐅ Floor plan design for a hillside house with 5 children's bedrooms
Created on: 17 Jun 2017 12:31
A
Arifas
Dear fellow contributors,
I’m sharing our first attempt at the floor plan. Unfortunately, I can’t fill out the list because copying it over on my phone doesn’t work properly, sorry.
Key data:
5 children between 0 and 11 years old
2 adults in their mid-thirties
Plot of about 900 sqm (9700 sq ft), facing north
Building window edge on the street side: 17.35 m (57 ft)
Sloped site; within the building window, the ground rises about 2 m (7 ft) over 10 m (33 ft) from front to back
We want 5 small children’s bedrooms, a slightly larger office for working from home, a master bedroom, three showers, three toilets, a bathtub, and access to the garden through the living room on the upper floor. One wall in the children’s rooms should be removable later.
The attic is walkable.
We are allowed to build 2 full stories, with a ridge height of about 12 m (39 ft) and an eave height of 11.6 m (38 ft).
We would prefer a hip roof.
The current drawing is 9.5 by 11 m (31 by 36 ft), but we would like to have around 195 to 205 sqm (2100 to 2200 sq ft) of living space later; garage or storage will be added.
The back wall of the house is embedded up to about 2 m (7 ft) into the slope.
I will try to attach a rough overview of the plot.
I’m sharing our first attempt at the floor plan. Unfortunately, I can’t fill out the list because copying it over on my phone doesn’t work properly, sorry.
Key data:
5 children between 0 and 11 years old
2 adults in their mid-thirties
Plot of about 900 sqm (9700 sq ft), facing north
Building window edge on the street side: 17.35 m (57 ft)
Sloped site; within the building window, the ground rises about 2 m (7 ft) over 10 m (33 ft) from front to back
We want 5 small children’s bedrooms, a slightly larger office for working from home, a master bedroom, three showers, three toilets, a bathtub, and access to the garden through the living room on the upper floor. One wall in the children’s rooms should be removable later.
The attic is walkable.
We are allowed to build 2 full stories, with a ridge height of about 12 m (39 ft) and an eave height of 11.6 m (38 ft).
We would prefer a hip roof.
The current drawing is 9.5 by 11 m (31 by 36 ft), but we would like to have around 195 to 205 sqm (2100 to 2200 sq ft) of living space later; garage or storage will be added.
The back wall of the house is embedded up to about 2 m (7 ft) into the slope.
I will try to attach a rough overview of the plot.
11ant schrieb:
From my point of view, this is a typical Tektur. Congratulations on the timely idea, I would do it that way.Thank you [emoji3]. What is a Tektur?Arifas schrieb:
What is a Tektur? This refers to a minor modification to an approved building plan. Another common example would be the slight repositioning of a non-load-bearing partition wall.
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11ant schrieb:
This is a minor modification to an approved building plan. Other common examples include slight repositioning of non-load-bearing partition walls.Thank you for the clarification, that sounds good. I will keep my hopes up then.Arifas schrieb:
that sounds good. Then I’ll just hope for that You don’t need to hope too much, since from the approval authority’s perspective the change is mostly cosmetic. It doesn’t affect structural engineering or thermal calculations, and only slightly alters a single emergency escape route.
https://www.instagram.com/11antgmxde/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/bauen-jetzt/
11ant schrieb:
You don’t need to have much hope for that; from the approval authority’s perspective, the change is mostly cosmetic. It doesn’t affect the structural engineering or the thermal calculations, and a single escape route changes only minimally. But the drainage pipes are affected, right? Is that a problem? It should still be feasible on both floors, shouldn’t it?Arifas schrieb:
But the wastewater pipes are affected, right? At least regarding the connection towards the sewer, I see no or no significant impact from the change (at least not for the building permit / planning permission). The sink will be slightly repositioned, and possibly only the water supply will be affected. This way, the further course of the drain can remain untouched, otherwise it will change only minimally. I see no cause for concern: no risk for the permit and just a few minor adjustments for the designer.
https://www.instagram.com/11antgmxde/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/bauen-jetzt/