ᐅ Floor Plan of a Narrow, Rectangular L-Shaped House on a Triangular Plot with an Oak Tree
Created on: 4 Nov 2018 10:54
O
Oakland
Hello everyone!
We have purchased a triangular plot of land. As if that weren’t complicated enough, there is also a large oak tree that must be considered during the planning. In our initial considerations, it quickly became clear that the floor plan will have an L-shape.
Does anyone here have experience with this type of plot and a correspondingly shaped floor plan? What additional information is needed to get meaningful advice?
Best regards
We have purchased a triangular plot of land. As if that weren’t complicated enough, there is also a large oak tree that must be considered during the planning. In our initial considerations, it quickly became clear that the floor plan will have an L-shape.
Does anyone here have experience with this type of plot and a correspondingly shaped floor plan? What additional information is needed to get meaningful advice?
Best regards
kaho674 schrieb:
Floor area ratio and plot ratio?I need to look into that...sorry.
Oakland schrieb:
Yes, we want the garage underground so that the basement apartment can have windows facing the street. This is achieved by designing the driveway to allow natural light. Additionally, there will be a front door to the apartment directly in front of the garage door. Please sketch this with the dimensions you have in mind, directly onto the site plan.
@Escroda does not claim to know it. The crown eaves... you have to accept them as they are. I still see about 10 meters (approximately 33 feet) width on the east side of the oak tree for a house. However, I wouldn’t want to constrain it further with an underground garage and a granny flat: building a nice residential house already comes with enough challenges. If it happens to work out, fine. But the priority should be the main living unit.
kaho674 schrieb:
In my opinion, the question of placement doesn’t really arise. I haven’t read anything about allowed edge development or similar here. That means a 3-meter (10 feet) distance from all boundaries. With some luck, it might only be 2 meters (6.5 feet) to public walkways or so. But I wouldn’t count on that, and whether that would look good is also questionable.3 meters (10 feet) to the neighbor on the east. 2 meters (6.5 feet) on the other two sides.
kaho674 schrieb:
A 10x10 (meters) house wouldn’t even fit in the building plot. Or am I fundamentally misunderstanding something? You will probably have to build diagonally to reach the square meters. What are the floor area ratio and plot ratio? I think the tree is your smallest problem.Our idea is to place it parallel to the property line on the east side...
kaho674 schrieb:
That’s going to be interesting. 200 m² (2150 sq ft)? Only if you were allowed to build three stories, maybe.The 200 m² (2150 sq ft) includes the finished basement. We are allowed to build two stories.
Oakland schrieb:
Additional cost.Oh dear
Sounds like a cigarette pack standing on end
I have doubts that you will reach your 200 sqm (2,150 sq ft) even without a granny flat
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