ᐅ Bungalow 148 m² Site Planning / Floor Plan Design

Created on: 13 Aug 2019 00:11
C
Chrisi1906
Hello everyone,

this is my third post in this forum. First of all, thank you for the valuable tips I have already received. I think I have learned a lot so far.

I have linked the previous posts below. To avoid any misunderstandings, I will list all the necessary information again. Therefore, reading the old posts only makes limited sense. For completeness, I have included them here.

https://www.hausbau-forum.de/threads/grundrissplanung-Bungalow-170qm.31445/

https://www.hausbau-forum.de/threads/grobe-Grundstücksplanung-819m.31558/

For the initial selection, there were three rough floor plan drafts. One was from Yvonne, the second from kbt09, and the third from the planner/ourselves. Many thanks to both of you for the good ideas! After some time for consideration and consultation with the developer, we decided to pursue the third floor plan.
ypg schrieb:

If I say that the plot is not easy, I am understated.
Maybe this is an approach?

kbt09 schrieb:

I continued with the approach from the floor plan adjustments.

Architect’s floor plan of a single-family house with living room, kitchen, bedroom, and bathroom.




Floor plan of a building on a plot as architectural drawing

Now to the main topic.

At the end of April 2019, we reserved a plot (plot no. 10) and started working on the floor plan. The plot is tied to the developer, and unfortunately, the planner has not turned out to be very creative (myself included). Two weeks ago, we had another meeting with the developer and talked about the three options mentioned above. We then chose one variant and want to proceed with it. We have now received a draft, which certainly still needs improvement.

For this reason, I would like to present the floor plan here again for discussion and hope for feedback, ideas, suggestions, and tips. Maybe you will immediately see things that “just don’t work” or are not practical for everyday life. I have also already noticed a few things that I would change, but since we will probably make quite a few modifications anyway, I have not yet suggested my own improvements in the floor plan. Also, the planner and I have not yet discussed doors and windows.

Attached again is the completed questionnaire.

Development plan/restrictions
Plot size: 819m² (8809 sq ft)
Slope: NO
Floor area ratio (FAR): 0.4 (allowable exceedance 25 per 100)
Gross floor area ratio (GFAR): 0.6
Building envelope, building line and boundary: On the northeast side approximately 31m (102 ft) deep, west side approximately 35m (115 ft) deep, plot frontage on the street 18.7m (61 ft) and rear boundary (development limit) approximately 27m (89 ft). The major challenge with the plot is the narrow width at the front. Depending on house orientation, after the 3m (10 ft) building setback on the street side, we have about 19.5m (64 ft) to 20.4m (67 ft) available. This means that if the house is parallel to the street, it is 19.5m (64 ft), and parallel to the neighbor in the northeast direction about 20.1m (66 ft).

Side building setback: 3m (10 ft)
Number of parking spaces required: no specification
Number of floors: maximum 2 full floors
Roof type: gable roof, hip roof
Other requirements: Garage must be at least 5m (16 ft) from the property boundary.

Client requirements
Style, roof shape, building type: bungalow with hip roof
Basement, floors: no basement due to high groundwater level
Number of people, age: 4 people aged 36 years (female), 37 years (male), 2 years (child), 7 months (child)
Room requirements on ground floor and upper floor:
Ground floor: living/dining/kitchen, utility room, guest toilet with shower, hallway with coat area and stairs to the upper floor, children’s rooms, master bedroom, bathroom, and storage room.
Upper floor: office, children’s playroom and additional storage space.

Office: family use or home office? home office
Overnight guests per year: 1–2 times
Open or closed floor plan: a mix of both
Conservative or modern design: a mix of both
Open kitchen, kitchen island: open kitchen with island would be nice but not a must, closed kitchen also has advantages
Number of dining seats: 4, with the option for 6–8 would be nice but not essential
Fireplace: no
Music/sound wall: sound system in the living room
Balcony, roof terrace: no
Garage, carport: Space for 2 cars is required. Currently, I am considering a garage (3x6m / 10x20 ft) and carport (3.6m / 12 ft).
Kitchen garden, greenhouse: no
Other wishes/special requirements/daily routine, including reasons for preferences or restrictions

House design
Who designed the plan:
-Developer’s planner / do-it-yourself
What do you particularly like? Why?
-There should be enough space in the coat area and behind the stairs to store jackets, shoes, etc.
-The children’s rooms have a comfortable size and are practically equal in size.
-Living room/kitchen are close to entrance and garage.
-The storage room has a good (central) location.
-


What do you not like? Why?
-Garage/carport is very far to the back (but I can probably live with this)
-The utility room is comparatively large and long
-The kitchen in my opinion is somewhat too large
-The living room is only the desired minimum size and could use 5m² (54 sq ft) more
-The main bathroom is located between both children’s rooms and the noise from showering and toilet use is likely to be a major issue
-The main bathroom could be slightly larger
-Between the garage and the property boundary there will be a dead space where weeds will probably grow later. Does anyone have ideas on how to prevent this?
-The garage is currently planned with a length of 9m (30 ft), of which 6m (20 ft) is for the garage and 3m (10 ft) for a storage room. The current position directly behind the garage is not optimal in my view


Price estimate according to architect/planner: no new price estimate received yet
Personal price limit for the house including equipment: 400,000
Preferred heating technology: heat pump

Why is the design the way it is now? e.g.
ideas from planner and do-it-yourself ideas from me

What is the most important/basic question about the floor plan summarized in 130 characters?
The main bathroom is located between the children’s rooms. How can we reduce noise disturbance to a minimum?
Imagine I drive a Skoda Superb into the garage. Since the garage is on the property boundary and the driveway narrows between the house and property line, I have to enter at a slight angle. Does this cause problems in everyday life? See pictures.
Assuming we build a double garage directly attached to the bungalow instead of a garage and carport, is there anything special to consider during construction?


Ground floor plan: living room, kitchen, bathroom, bedroom, utility room, storage, two children’s rooms.


Floor plan of a single-family house with interior spaces, outdoor areas, and dimension lines on the plot plan.


Site plan of a residential area with colored zoning areas TG1–TG4 and parcel numbers 76, 57, 93.


Modern single-family house with dark tiled roof, carport, white walls, roof windows, and garden.


A white single-family house with a dark gable roof, surrounding garden, and terrace with furniture.
Y
ypg
15 Aug 2019 10:46
Chrisi1906 schrieb:

As you can see, the house then has to be moved quite a bit forward.

Logically, it would make more sense to move it further back since you are extending diagonally and the southwest corner is approaching the boundary area.
K
kbt09
15 Aug 2019 11:12
He probably meant the back, this time he just had the site plan upside down.

Now, something completely different. The kids’ rooms are on the sunny side, so now definitely quiet. The terrace might be a bit problematic, but the afternoon/evening terrace depends somewhat on the neighbor’s plans anyway due to sunlight.

Laundry will be in the utility/technical room again.

Living with the subwoofer no longer borders any quiet rooms.

Straight staircase, with the space underneath in the hallway extended a bit to store brooms, vacuum cleaner, mop, as well as beverage crates, etc. The side wall of the staircase is only up to railing height at the lower part to create a more open feeling.

While designing together with the attic, I thought of various possible future use scenarios.
  • From the kids’ rooms, add a second level accessible by a space-saving staircase/ladder, and separate a playroom upstairs, creating two larger units for the kids. Or without a staircase in the room, simply a second kids’ room.
  • Set up a living unit upstairs for a caregiver living in the house (accidents, illness, etc. might make this necessary).
  • Separate a living unit for a child: just close the living room door downstairs, add an extra door by the staircase in the hallway, so parents have their own area downstairs and the child can develop an apartment upstairs (which is why there are two red boxes in the attic to provide water there).

Floor plan of a house with hallway/staircase, parents, children, kitchen/dining, living room, bathroom, utility room, entrance.

Floor plan of a house with play/reading room, hallway, storage, home office, and eaves storage.


Floor plan of a house with multiple rooms, interior layout, and separate garage extension; dimension 6.45m (21 feet 2 inches).


White single-family house with dark pitched roof on grass, roof window, several windows and front door.


White single-family house with dark pitched roof, large glass fronts and green lawn.
kaho67415 Aug 2019 11:17
ypg schrieb:

I didn’t place any children’s rooms on the north side, nor does my design include that.
Chrisi1906 schrieb:

I had incorrectly modified ypg’s floor plan.


Oh, sorry, that’s right. The original poster only claimed to have implemented it...
Clear copyright infringement.
Chrisi1906 schrieb:


In your floor plan, I find the living room very small.

Again: the living room is only separated from the rest of the living and dining area. It measures 4x4m (13x13 feet), and if that is too small for the lounge area, just remove the partition wall – then you have a generous approximately 59m² (635 sq ft). But I don’t want to dwell on that – you don’t like the layout anyway. I’m just saying this because for you something like this

2D floor plan of a house with living and dining area, kitchen, bathroom, bedrooms, children’s rooms, and hallway


would also have to be a far too small living room...?
kaho67415 Aug 2019 11:24
kbt09 schrieb:


So, let's look at this differently. The children's rooms should face the nicer side, which will definitely be quieter now. The terrace might be a bit problematic, but the afternoon/evening terrace depends somewhat on the neighbor's plans due to sunlight exposure anyway.

I actually preferred the other design. The terrace issue would be quite a big drawback...
Y
ypg
15 Aug 2019 11:24
Now you have really put up a big building for him.

No, seriously: nice design. The children's rooms are very well incorporated, in my opinion. It’s helpful to focus on the essentials and not get stuck on details.
Personally, despite the subwoofer, I would mirror the living room with the kitchen and add a double door from the entrance hall to the kitchen. This creates more openness in the everyday living areas...

The gable roof is much more charming and modern than the tall hipped roof, which is completely out of proportion with the building.
Y
ypg
15 Aug 2019 11:28
Chrisi1906 wrote:


I find the living room in your floor plan very small.

Then just remove the reduction there and straighten the wall. What’s the problem? This is not a suggestion that can’t be changed. The idea is what counts, the possibilities.

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