ᐅ Floor Plan for a 200 sqm Urban Villa – Are Our Requirements Feasible?

Created on: 13 Jul 2020 14:14
E
ECE-2021
Hello everyone,

I’m a bit overwhelmed with our floor plan and keep running into the same problems...
The main issue is probably how to integrate a straight staircase from the ground floor to the upper floor, and how we would have to modify or extend the hallway to fit such a staircase without "breaking up" the other rooms.

Development plan / Restrictions
Plot size: 1005 m² (0.25 acres)
Slope: no
Site coverage ratio: according to neighboring developments
Floor area ratio: according to neighboring developments
Building envelope, building line, and boundary: according to neighboring developments
Edge development: no
Number of parking spaces: double / large garage planned
Number of stories: 2
Roof type: hipped roof
Style: urban villa
Orientation: street facing northeast, plot extends sideways toward west-northwest, garden planned all around southwest / west-northwest

Client requirements
Style, roof type, building type: urban villa with hipped roof
Basement, floors: basement + ground floor + upper floor
Number of occupants, ages: 2 adults + young child (3)
Office: home office?
Closed architecture
Closed kitchen, kitchen island
Fireplace
Balcony
Garage

House design
Who designed the plan:
- Option 1: planner from a construction company (not yet an architect)
- Option 2: do-it-yourself

What do you particularly like? Why?
Overall, the floor plan is good and was implemented largely according to our ideas.
What do you dislike? Why?
We would prefer a straight staircase. According to a staircase calculator tool, it would require a length of 3.70 m (12 ft).
From research, this might be rather uncomfortable and therefore unrealistic.
We would be willing to extend the hallway for the straight staircase if necessary.
Symmetry, especially in the front view of the house, is very important to us, so we want to keep the type of front door as is.
The awkward corner in the upper hallway is not very appealing (bedroom / office).
Furthermore, the hallway window was initially placed in the child’s bedroom, but that will be changed so there is natural light in the upper floor hallway.
I’m also wondering if the chimney flue on the upper floor can still be routed freely, possibly offset within the ceiling/floor. Or does it have to go straight up from the ground floor fireplace? Because then it would end up right in the middle of the upper floor hallway.

If you have to give up something, which details or fittings could you do without?
- Could you compromise on: I’m open to suggestions for now
- Cannot compromise on: ideally the straight staircase

What do you think makes it particularly good or bad?
See differences between our design and the construction company’s plan
- straight staircase instead of quarter-turn
- kitchen recessed
- window in the hallway instead of in the child’s room
- ideally no hallway obstruction on the upper floor

Floor plan of a single-family house: living/dining room, kitchen, ground floor hallway, guest bathroom, green outdoor area.


Floor plan of a house with rooms 1–5, utility room and hallways.


Floor plan of an apartment with bedroom, office, walk-in closet, bathroom, hallway and children's room.


Floor plan of a house with kitchen, dining area, living room, fireplace, entrance hall, bathroom.


Floor plan of a basement with several rooms, stairs and building services.


Floor plan of a house: hallway, staircase, bathroom, child’s room, bedroom, walk-in closet, home office, balcony.


Architectural drawing: detailed section of a building with stairs, walls, roof structure and dimension lines.


Technical staircase sketch with dimensions, ceiling opening and standard values.
E
ECE-2021
14 Jul 2020 13:06
What do you think about these hallway areas?
This is a floor plan from a construction company.
It also seems quite small.

Ground floor plan: Kitchen/dining, living room, hallway, cloakroom, WC, utility room, stairs, garage location.
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pagoni2020
14 Jul 2020 13:15
ECE-2021 schrieb:

What do you think about these hallway areas?
This is a floor plan from a construction company.
It looks quite small.

If I were the designer, I would have extended the hallway a bit so that you step directly onto the terrace as soon as you come through the door. Apparently, it was already built this way, but I definitely wouldn't have wanted that.
Looking at the hallway on its own, it’s passable. But based on your headline (a generous 200sqm (2,153 sq ft)), I would see it more as a bottleneck.
Climbee14 Jul 2020 13:30
I don’t understand these recessed bay windows in this example either. However, the hallway works better than yours. When you enter the door, there is enough space to let others in. I would reverse the swing of the front door – when I come in, I’d prefer to enter the wardrobe area rather than the utility room.

Having the hallway straight ahead could work without a door, but I will never understand why the living area is artificially narrowed by this recessed bay window.
S
Scout
14 Jul 2020 13:58
How to design a straight staircase in almost your exact exterior dimensions (here 10.6 x 10.6 meters (35 x 35 feet)) is demonstrated by Viebrockhaus. This definitely makes it worth experimenting with...

Floor plan of an apartment with several bedrooms, bathroom, and children’s shower bath, furniture


Floor plan of a house: open living/dining area, kitchen, entrance hall, cloakroom, WC, terrace.
Climbee14 Jul 2020 14:13
And there it is showcased.

I’m not sure if this would be my floor plan, but here the straight staircase at least has the impressive wow factor it deserves.
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ECE-2021
14 Jul 2020 14:17
Scout schrieb:

How to design a straight staircase in almost your entire exterior dimensions (here 10.6 x 10.6 meters (35 x 35 feet)) is demonstrated by Viebrockhaus. It’s definitely worth experimenting with...
Yes, it looks good, but isn’t that impossible with a basement staircase, or did I miss something?