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
kbt09 schrieb:
@kaho674 .. Katja, but he already has concrete ideas about the kitchen location, and this is starting to get really frustrating, considering the thread is already 10 days old.Why is that frustrating!?
In the first sketches, the northern part of the house would have, at worst, a width of 4 meters (13 feet). Our kitchen is 3.20 meters (10.5 feet) wide on one side, so we pragmatically planned the kitchen there.
kbt09 schrieb:
Well, where exactly is it located if not on the property? So from where does the 7m (23 feet) radius apply?
Honestly, instead of replying to every post with quotes, it would really make sense to tidy up these sketches.
@ypg .. there won’t be 550 cm (18 feet) left if the tree is roughly on the boundary.It is located directly on our property boundary.
Dr Hix schrieb:
I will never understand why people spend as much money on a house as on a car. Especially in this case, where it is already clear that significantly more money than average will be needed for architectural and construction services, and the budget is obviously so limited that this purchase was the only option...In this neighborhood, plots that would otherwise be suitable for us cost 500-600 euros per square meter (around $530-$635 per square yard). Yes, that is too expensive for us. Especially since we don’t need a 1,000 sqm (about 10,760 sq ft) plot.
Still, calling the budget "so limited" is quite disrespectful.
Oakland schrieb:
Again: I have no intention of taking anything here without contributing first! Oh no, I’m really starting to get cynical... this is unbelievable.
Oakland schrieb:
Calling it "so limited" is still quite disrespectful.This has absolutely nothing to do with a lack of respect. I think everyone faces the issue of a limited budget (myself included). I assumed that no one would buy such a difficult plot without good reason, especially since you yourself said that there are easier-to-build plots available just next door in the new development area. Conclusion: either you didn’t really think it through (no judgment intended!), or simply don’t have the necessary funds.
However, if you seriously consider investing significant amounts in an underground parking garage for your car under these conditions (and I don’t think we’re talking about the high-end luxury segment here), in my opinion, you are setting completely wrong priorities. That was my point... which, by the way, you thanked me for again on page 29 in post #171. Do you share an account?
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