ᐅ Floor Plan Optimization for Single-Family Home, 5 Occupants, 8.5m x 17m, 250 sqm
Created on: 18 May 2020 14:12
C
chrisse
Hello everyone,
I have been following this forum for a few weeks now and have picked up some ideas, and with your help, I believe I have already improved a few things.
So I think it’s time to share the floor plan we have developed so far for discussion. On the one hand, you tend to become somewhat “blind” to your own design over time, and on the other hand, I’ve seen many members here have a lot of experience.
Please excuse the not-so-optimal appearance of the plans. I overlaid the furniture on the floor plans using tracing paper. I didn’t find a suitable software solution that would allow me to import the architect’s plans. I eventually gave up and did it by hand.
I look forward to your suggestions, including criticism and ideas. We are still in a phase where many adjustments and optimizations are possible.
Thanks in advance to everyone.
Chrisse
Development Plan / Restrictions
Plot size: >1,000 sqm (10,764 sq ft)
Slope: no
Floor area ratio (FAR): 0.3
Gross floor area ratio (GFA):
Building envelope / building line and boundary: The building envelope depth from north to south has already been fully utilized in the design.
Edge development
Number of parking spaces: 4
Number of storeys: 2
Roof shape: permitted are tent roof, gable roof, and hipped roof
Architectural style:
Orientation: All plans are precisely aligned to north. The entrance is therefore on the north side.
Maximum heights / limits: maximum wall height: 5.60 m (measured from the bottom edge of the rafters)
Other requirements
Client Requirements
Architectural style, roof type, building type: gable roof
Basement, floors: 2 full storeys plus basement
Number of occupants, ages: 5 persons (38, 37, 4, 2, 0)
Space requirements on ground floor (GF) and upper floor (UF):
On the GF: office for occasional home office use, guest toilet with shower, pantry, utility/laundry room (also serves as a buffer between garage and kitchen), kitchen with dining area, living room
On the UF: 3 fairly equal-sized children’s bedrooms. Separate children’s bathroom. Parents’ area accessed through a walk-in closet, which also serves as a hallway to parents’ bathroom and bedroom to minimize disturbance if someone is already sleeping.
In the basement: utility/technical room, root cellar, guest room with toilet, storage room, hobby room, workshop
Office: used for home office and meetings (volunteering, clubs, etc.)
Guests per year expected to stay overnight: 5
Open or closed architecture: kitchen and dining area are open, with the living room adjacent but somewhat separable
Conservative or modern construction style: modern country house style
Open kitchen, kitchen island: yes, open plan with space for casual breakfast at the kitchen island
Number of dining seats: daily 5, expandable to 10
Fireplace: would be nice as a room divider to the living area
Music / stereo wall: no
Balcony, roof terrace: balcony on west side on upper floor in front of children’s rooms
Garage, carport: double garage, 8.50 m (28 feet) long to accommodate bicycles etc.
Utility garden, greenhouse: no
House Design
Designer:
Friend architect (with a lot of our input)
What do you like most?
Few living rooms facing north/street/neighbor, which provides good screening; south side quite open as there are no neighbors; nice view of the forest to the east.
What do you dislike?
Kitchen and dining area up to the fireplace feel a bit narrow compared to the length. This is partly due to the limited width of the building envelope combined with the desired double garage and the fact that the property consists of two plots. The eastern plot is restricted to a maximum floor area of 110 sqm (1,184 sq ft). Thus, even with a narrower garage, we can’t build much wider. This is not a big problem but requires some consideration about the sensible layout of kitchen/dining/living areas.
The living room is intentionally relatively small since we only want private seating and a TV here for a cozy atmosphere. On the other side of the fireplace, we plan a small seating area for guests.
Price estimate according to architect/planner: 650,000
Personal price limit for the house, including equipment: -
Preferred heating system: traditional (gas boiler with photovoltaic), underfloor heating
If you had to give up certain features or expansions
- What can you live without:
A few square meters (sqm) in the western children’s rooms and in the parents’ bathroom
- What can you not live without:
Generous utility room with “mud shower” (for children’s clothes, shoes, etc.)
Spacious entrance area (nothing worse than guests bumping into each other while taking off coats)
Why is the design as it is? For example:
We created a kind of checklist for the rooms we need and their approximate sizes. Also included were wishes such as a guest WC with shower, utility room between garage and kitchen, walk-in closet in the parents’ area, etc.
Which wishes were implemented by the architect?
In principle, almost all requirements were implemented as requested, or we optimized them extensively with the architect until we reached this result.
We also visited numerous model home parks and looked at many floor plans in books and online for inspiration.
What do you think makes it particularly good or bad?
GOOD: The orientation is optimal in our opinion. Few living rooms facing north, very open to the south (which poses no problem as there are no direct neighbors). Morning sun in the bedroom to the east; west-facing children’s rooms with a nice view over the town/building area.
BAD: Kitchen/dining/living area is somewhat narrow relative to its length. Therefore, furniture arrangement and use are not yet ideal.
Integration of the stove as a room divider between dining area and living room is not quite right for us yet. We want a small seating group between dining area and living room that we can use together with guests.
What is the most important / fundamental question about the floor plan, summarized in 130 characters?
- Do you see weaknesses that we might have missed or that you find suboptimal (e.g., too narrow, too wide, too big or too small)?
- Do you have ideas regarding the sensible layout/use of the kitchen and dining area?
- Otherwise, we welcome all comments, tips, and ideas and are very grateful.
I have been following this forum for a few weeks now and have picked up some ideas, and with your help, I believe I have already improved a few things.
So I think it’s time to share the floor plan we have developed so far for discussion. On the one hand, you tend to become somewhat “blind” to your own design over time, and on the other hand, I’ve seen many members here have a lot of experience.
Please excuse the not-so-optimal appearance of the plans. I overlaid the furniture on the floor plans using tracing paper. I didn’t find a suitable software solution that would allow me to import the architect’s plans. I eventually gave up and did it by hand.
I look forward to your suggestions, including criticism and ideas. We are still in a phase where many adjustments and optimizations are possible.
Thanks in advance to everyone.
Chrisse
Development Plan / Restrictions
Plot size: >1,000 sqm (10,764 sq ft)
Slope: no
Floor area ratio (FAR): 0.3
Gross floor area ratio (GFA):
Building envelope / building line and boundary: The building envelope depth from north to south has already been fully utilized in the design.
Edge development
Number of parking spaces: 4
Number of storeys: 2
Roof shape: permitted are tent roof, gable roof, and hipped roof
Architectural style:
Orientation: All plans are precisely aligned to north. The entrance is therefore on the north side.
Maximum heights / limits: maximum wall height: 5.60 m (measured from the bottom edge of the rafters)
Other requirements
Client Requirements
Architectural style, roof type, building type: gable roof
Basement, floors: 2 full storeys plus basement
Number of occupants, ages: 5 persons (38, 37, 4, 2, 0)
Space requirements on ground floor (GF) and upper floor (UF):
On the GF: office for occasional home office use, guest toilet with shower, pantry, utility/laundry room (also serves as a buffer between garage and kitchen), kitchen with dining area, living room
On the UF: 3 fairly equal-sized children’s bedrooms. Separate children’s bathroom. Parents’ area accessed through a walk-in closet, which also serves as a hallway to parents’ bathroom and bedroom to minimize disturbance if someone is already sleeping.
In the basement: utility/technical room, root cellar, guest room with toilet, storage room, hobby room, workshop
Office: used for home office and meetings (volunteering, clubs, etc.)
Guests per year expected to stay overnight: 5
Open or closed architecture: kitchen and dining area are open, with the living room adjacent but somewhat separable
Conservative or modern construction style: modern country house style
Open kitchen, kitchen island: yes, open plan with space for casual breakfast at the kitchen island
Number of dining seats: daily 5, expandable to 10
Fireplace: would be nice as a room divider to the living area
Music / stereo wall: no
Balcony, roof terrace: balcony on west side on upper floor in front of children’s rooms
Garage, carport: double garage, 8.50 m (28 feet) long to accommodate bicycles etc.
Utility garden, greenhouse: no
House Design
Designer:
Friend architect (with a lot of our input)
What do you like most?
Few living rooms facing north/street/neighbor, which provides good screening; south side quite open as there are no neighbors; nice view of the forest to the east.
What do you dislike?
Kitchen and dining area up to the fireplace feel a bit narrow compared to the length. This is partly due to the limited width of the building envelope combined with the desired double garage and the fact that the property consists of two plots. The eastern plot is restricted to a maximum floor area of 110 sqm (1,184 sq ft). Thus, even with a narrower garage, we can’t build much wider. This is not a big problem but requires some consideration about the sensible layout of kitchen/dining/living areas.
The living room is intentionally relatively small since we only want private seating and a TV here for a cozy atmosphere. On the other side of the fireplace, we plan a small seating area for guests.
Price estimate according to architect/planner: 650,000
Personal price limit for the house, including equipment: -
Preferred heating system: traditional (gas boiler with photovoltaic), underfloor heating
If you had to give up certain features or expansions
- What can you live without:
A few square meters (sqm) in the western children’s rooms and in the parents’ bathroom
- What can you not live without:
Generous utility room with “mud shower” (for children’s clothes, shoes, etc.)
Spacious entrance area (nothing worse than guests bumping into each other while taking off coats)
Why is the design as it is? For example:
We created a kind of checklist for the rooms we need and their approximate sizes. Also included were wishes such as a guest WC with shower, utility room between garage and kitchen, walk-in closet in the parents’ area, etc.
Which wishes were implemented by the architect?
In principle, almost all requirements were implemented as requested, or we optimized them extensively with the architect until we reached this result.
We also visited numerous model home parks and looked at many floor plans in books and online for inspiration.
What do you think makes it particularly good or bad?
GOOD: The orientation is optimal in our opinion. Few living rooms facing north, very open to the south (which poses no problem as there are no direct neighbors). Morning sun in the bedroom to the east; west-facing children’s rooms with a nice view over the town/building area.
BAD: Kitchen/dining/living area is somewhat narrow relative to its length. Therefore, furniture arrangement and use are not yet ideal.
Integration of the stove as a room divider between dining area and living room is not quite right for us yet. We want a small seating group between dining area and living room that we can use together with guests.
What is the most important / fundamental question about the floor plan, summarized in 130 characters?
- Do you see weaknesses that we might have missed or that you find suboptimal (e.g., too narrow, too wide, too big or too small)?
- Do you have ideas regarding the sensible layout/use of the kitchen and dining area?
- Otherwise, we welcome all comments, tips, and ideas and are very grateful.
At first glance, I really don’t like it:
The kitchen is fragmented and not ergonomic, the staircase entrance is not inviting at all, hidden behind a kitchen cabinet, and there are no nice sight lines. The bedroom layout is like a slalom course, and the hallway is difficult to furnish.
Overall impression: just too much of everything.
Comments like that just try to gloss over the flaws.
The kitchen is fragmented and not ergonomic, the staircase entrance is not inviting at all, hidden behind a kitchen cabinet, and there are no nice sight lines. The bedroom layout is like a slalom course, and the hallway is difficult to furnish.
Overall impression: just too much of everything.
chrisse schrieb:
.... That’s why our main cloakroom is next to the utility room.
Comments like that just try to gloss over the flaws.
Curly schrieb:
I can’t really imagine that your kids will always park their bikes in the garage later on, but you have to judge that for yourselves. I’d be worried about my car. We also go for walks every day and I can’t imagine you only getting around by bike or car.
Don’t you ever go out into the garden?
Best regards
Sabine You’re probably right that we’ll often use the front door as well, but we expect to come in through the garage much more frequently. If we place the main wardrobe in the entrance hall, we’d often have to go out of the garage first and then enter the house through the front door.
Unfortunately, we won’t find a perfect solution that works equally well for both.
Alternatively, we could make the entrance hall larger by moving the guest bathroom further east and reducing the size of the utility room. That would be possible in itself. Both options can still be implemented without major changes. We will think about it some more. Thanks for the suggestion.
ypg schrieb:
At first glance, I don’t like it at all:
The kitchen is fragmented and not ergonomic, the stair layout is not inviting at all, tucked away behind a kitchen cabinet, and there are no nice clear alignments. The bedroom layout is complicated and the entrance hall is difficult to furnish. Views: basically just far too much of everything.
Comments like this just gloss over the flaws. I completely agree with you about the kitchen. It’s still in a very rough draft stage and needs a proper design. We can also better consider the stair transition in that process.
Regarding the entrance hall (as described above), we have to weigh up between the two options (family wardrobe in the utility room or in the entrance hall) and adjust the respective area to be larger or smaller accordingly.
Views: I suppose that’s a matter of personal opinion.
- Two plots and floor area ratio separately, but then exactly one house? I’m not sure if that’s allowed. I mean, it should be one plot for a house, so the floor area ratio would be irrelevant.
- A partition wall (K3) between the bathrooms is not ideal. Or at least significantly thicker (calcium silicate) walls for soundproofing.
- Two dining tables, one in the kitchen and one in the dining room, seems excessive. Overall, kitchen + dining room + stairs could start to look like a station hall, especially with the gallery. Definitely have the planner create 3D views with furniture. (Or do it yourself with SweetHome3D or similar.)
- Guest room (i.e. a living space) in the basement might be problematic due to escape routes and safety regulations.
- With three children, more attention should be given to sound insulation. The gallery also seems suboptimal for that.
- Kitchen layout could be challenging as well.
- What are your plans for the attic? Open space? Loft?
- Which floor-to-ceiling windows are you considering, and where is the terrace located?
- Two mirrored children’s bedrooms would not work for me. (And they don’t fit at all with the completely asymmetrical exterior views.)
- Overall, the design is quite large (e.g., a 16 sqm (172 sq ft) master bathroom). If you really don’t know where to spend the budget, okay. But I would build somewhat smaller. Especially since you also need to meaningfully fill the rooms downstairs with life.
- In the early years, children will usually want to play where you are. That means usually in the living room. I don’t really see that working here.
Best regards
- A partition wall (K3) between the bathrooms is not ideal. Or at least significantly thicker (calcium silicate) walls for soundproofing.
- Two dining tables, one in the kitchen and one in the dining room, seems excessive. Overall, kitchen + dining room + stairs could start to look like a station hall, especially with the gallery. Definitely have the planner create 3D views with furniture. (Or do it yourself with SweetHome3D or similar.)
- Guest room (i.e. a living space) in the basement might be problematic due to escape routes and safety regulations.
- With three children, more attention should be given to sound insulation. The gallery also seems suboptimal for that.
- Kitchen layout could be challenging as well.
- What are your plans for the attic? Open space? Loft?
- Which floor-to-ceiling windows are you considering, and where is the terrace located?
- Two mirrored children’s bedrooms would not work for me. (And they don’t fit at all with the completely asymmetrical exterior views.)
- Overall, the design is quite large (e.g., a 16 sqm (172 sq ft) master bathroom). If you really don’t know where to spend the budget, okay. But I would build somewhat smaller. Especially since you also need to meaningfully fill the rooms downstairs with life.
- In the early years, children will usually want to play where you are. That means usually in the living room. I don’t really see that working here.
Best regards
chrisse schrieb:
The guest room in the basement will also have its own shower.Then what is the shower on the ground floor for?Similar topics