ᐅ Single-family home designed by an architect, 150 m² – looking for improvement suggestions and ideas

Created on: 2 Oct 2019 10:32
D
DimaNDS
Development Plan / Restrictions
Lot size: 528m² (5679 sq ft)
Slope: no
Site coverage ratio: 0.3
Floor area ratio: 0.45
Building window, building line and boundary: Roof ridge direction E/W
Edge development: Garage max 15m (49 ft)
Number of floors: 2
Roof type: Gable roof
Orientation: S/W
Maximum height / limits: 9m (30 ft) ridge height
Other: Sound insulation class IV

Client Requirements
Style, roof type, building type: Modern
Basement, floors: no basement, ground floor, upper floor, partial attic
Number of occupants, age: 4
Room requirements ground floor, upper floor: Ground floor living room, kitchen, guest room, office, guest WC, storage room; upper floor 2 children’s rooms, master bedroom, bathroom
Office: family use or home office: both
Overnight guests per year: 10
Open or closed architecture: open
Conservative or modern construction: modern
Open kitchen, kitchen island: yes
Number of dining seats: minimum 6
Fireplace: no
Music/stereo wall: no
Balcony, roof terrace: no
Garage, carport: double steel garage with utility room, 6 x 9m (20 x 30 ft)
Vegetable garden, greenhouse: no (bed in front of kitchen)

House Design
Planning by: Architect
What do you particularly like? Why?: We love the openness of the house.
What do you not like? Why?: We really like the design, but we’re unsure if there might be issues with the technical installations in the attic. Also, access to the attic is via a door in the gable, which might look a bit odd. The architect designed a shelf/ladder construction here. Possibly there is too little storage space for items not used regularly, like Christmas decorations.
Price estimate by architect/planner: €330,000 (including exterior landscaping and kitchen)
Personal price limit for house, including fittings: €350,000
Preferred heating technology: Gas or heat pump, depending on whether sound insulation class leads to a KFW 55 house standard. We still need to get advice on this.

If you had to give up something, which details/extensions
-could you do without: walk-in closet
-could you not do without: the general openness of the house.

Why is the design the way it is now? e.g.
Which wishes were implemented by the architect? Bedroom facing east, living room facing west, evening sun in the kitchen.
What makes it especially good or bad in your eyes? Good: It is not a standard house you’ve seen 100 times in builder catalogs. Bad: Relatively high space wastage due to the openness.

What is the most important/basic question about the floor plan in 130 characters?
What would you do differently or improve? Have we overlooked anything that could cause problems later?

Unfortunately, I cannot upload PDFs. The dimensions are there as well. For orientation: The living room is exactly 4m (13 ft) wide.

Floor plan of a house with kitchen, living room, entrance hall, bathroom, office and guest room including terrace.


Floor plan: two children’s rooms on the left, bedroom on the right, bathroom, hallway, staircase in the middle.


Architectural drawing: north and east elevations and gallery section of a house with a tree.
H
haydee
7 Oct 2019 20:04
This is how the neighbor is attached on the southern boundary

Possibly no garage or carport at all

East side expensive
West and south sides consume a lot of light
kaho6747 Oct 2019 20:34
haydee schrieb:

That's how the neighbor builds right along the southern boundary
Doesn't he build like that there anyway?
H
haydee
7 Oct 2019 21:06
Yes
What else gets damaged when you just attach your carport/garage?
There isn’t much space left
And it doesn’t look nice either
kaho6747 Oct 2019 21:53
haydee schrieb:

What else do you damage when you just slap on your carport/garage?
Well, you're missing 6m (20 feet) of depth on the south side, so the sunlight can reach the terrace.
Y
ypg
8 Oct 2019 01:31
haydee schrieb:

Maybe no garage or carport at all
haydee schrieb:

There isn’t much space anyway
It doesn’t look very nice either

You are overestimating the issue: if there are any problems at all, it’s with the houses themselves, not the garages, which are much lower than the houses and don’t block the sun.
This applies to almost every plot. So there’s no need to unsettle the original poster here.
I would just build a short driveway with a carport or garage. South or west orientation, it doesn’t really matter... it depends on how the floor plan is adjusted. The connection to the house can be done with a pergola.

P.S. to the original poster: sketch it out with a pencil on paper first, so you can focus on the essentials.
Y
ypg
8 Oct 2019 01:38
I am currently going through my messages and notice that the responses to the question are naturally quite contradictory.
So: The kitchen is not meeting expectations. More countertop space is needed, meaning a larger island and closer to the main run of cabinets.
Swap the utility room and the WC/cloakroom.