ᐅ Floor plan design shortly before submitting the building permit application
Created on: 2 Oct 2017 23:25
R
R.Hotzenplotz
Hello everyone!
As some users have requested before, I’m now starting a new thread with the current planning of our detached house, which is about to be finalized.
These are the preliminary drawings for the building permit / planning permission application, and I have one last chance to review them and point out any issues.
It still seems to me that there is less than 1.20m (4 feet) of space between the two wardrobes in the dressing room. Or am I seeing this wrong? Apparently, the rooms on the left and right were overlooked and not adjusted accordingly.
Two Velux ceiling spotlights are still planned to illuminate the upper floor hallway.
In the basement, on the right side in the upper room, a window similar to the one on the left basement side is an option.
We still haven’t decided on the T30 fire-rated door to the garage, even though it is shown in the plans. Most likely, for safety reasons and the limited use of the kitchen at the other end of the house, we will eventually forgo it.
User 11ant pointed out that the right window in child’s room 2 is suboptimally positioned. However, this could still be changed after submitting the building permit / planning permission application. Our architect thinks moving the window to the left would negatively affect the house’s exterior appearance. We’ll have to see about that.









As some users have requested before, I’m now starting a new thread with the current planning of our detached house, which is about to be finalized.
These are the preliminary drawings for the building permit / planning permission application, and I have one last chance to review them and point out any issues.
It still seems to me that there is less than 1.20m (4 feet) of space between the two wardrobes in the dressing room. Or am I seeing this wrong? Apparently, the rooms on the left and right were overlooked and not adjusted accordingly.
Two Velux ceiling spotlights are still planned to illuminate the upper floor hallway.
In the basement, on the right side in the upper room, a window similar to the one on the left basement side is an option.
We still haven’t decided on the T30 fire-rated door to the garage, even though it is shown in the plans. Most likely, for safety reasons and the limited use of the kitchen at the other end of the house, we will eventually forgo it.
User 11ant pointed out that the right window in child’s room 2 is suboptimally positioned. However, this could still be changed after submitting the building permit / planning permission application. Our architect thinks moving the window to the left would negatively affect the house’s exterior appearance. We’ll have to see about that.
Exactly @Fummelbrett ... storage planning ... and what you said about the black tops was exactly my thought. After Marie Kondo, I can no longer tell which T-shirt I’m picking up.
And always taking from the top of the stack ... then the bottom T-shirts never get used. After all, you don’t wait to do laundry until everything is worn out.
And always taking from the top of the stack ... then the bottom T-shirts never get used. After all, you don’t wait to do laundry until everything is worn out.
kbt09 schrieb:
Exactly @Fummelbrett
And always take items from the top of the stack... then the T-shirts at the bottom never get used. After all, you don’t wait until everything is worn out to do laundry.You place fresh items underneath, not on top.
But now I’m starting to understand why there need to be concepts illustrated with videos for this.
Well... I still wouldn’t wear T-shirts like that. And I also find layering impractical; it wouldn’t even occur to me.
That’s why it’s important to maybe get advice from others, develop your own concept, and create your own storage planning based on that, rather than focusing too much on whether one person finds a 2m (6.5 ft) or another a 3m (10 ft) wardrobe important.
That’s why it’s important to maybe get advice from others, develop your own concept, and create your own storage planning based on that, rather than focusing too much on whether one person finds a 2m (6.5 ft) or another a 3m (10 ft) wardrobe important.
R.Hotzenplotz schrieb:
Yes, both sides of the cabinet are needed. Then the question was rather pointless. If it’s already clear that full coverage is needed on both sides, what exactly do you want to know?
R
R.Hotzenplotz7 Aug 2018 09:21kaho674 schrieb:
Then the question was rather pointless. If it is clear that full work is needed on both sides, what do you want to find out?Well, if the assessment had been "not possible at all," we could have moved some things to the cloakroom (instead of alternatively making it more open).