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
Escroda schrieb:
For those who specialize in floor plans, you should draw the property to scale, marking the exact position of the tree including its canopy, the safety zone (try to negotiate firmly again with the environmental authorities whether it really has to be 1.50m (5 feet)) and the setback from the boundary.I did my best. Okay, the coloring was probably unnecessary
kaho674 schrieb:
Ah, thanks Escroda! So the tree is your main issue then.
What exactly are the distances to the tree? Actually 7m + 1.50m = 8.50m radius = 17m diameter including clearance?Correct. It’s a beautiful, multi-stemmed oak.
kaho674 schrieb:
Sorry, but if that stays, along with the distances, I consider the plot to be undevelopable.Ouch.
Although I do appreciate your honesty.
kaho674 schrieb:
Sorry, but if that remains as is, including the clearances, I consider the plot unbuildable. That's also my thought.
That's only about 4 meters (13 feet) of building width without measuring it.