ᐅ Bungalow Floor Plan – What Should You Consider?

Created on: 28 Jul 2017 18:31
M
Michaela1986
Hello dear members,

Just registered and already have my first question. A brief introduction about us: we are 34 and 30 years old, no children and none planned. We don’t know what the future holds in a few years.

We plan to start building our house, hopefully if the winter weather cooperates, as soon as we finalize the floor plan. Unfortunately, I, Michaela, tend to be a perfectionist (symmetry, etc.). I can’t let it go and want everything to be well thought out and planned, which is starting to annoy me as well.

Since we are building rather small, aiming for about 114 m2 (1227 sq ft) of living space and trying not to compromise on anything at this size, the floor plan design is quite challenging. Among other things, we do not want all rooms to be accessible from the hallway, and we also want to keep a covered terrace. The bungalow will consist of only three rooms. Therefore, we want to keep the option open to convert the attic later if needed. In this context, we are planning space for a future space-saving staircase and the necessary preliminary work; at least that is the goal. The bungalow will have a hip roof, with the roof pitch increased from 30 degrees to 34 degrees, and the hallway correspondingly larger. Ideally, we would like a gable dormer. Since those are too expensive, a skylight window would be a compromise. Of course, a larger bungalow would be the best option but it is too costly. The construction company charges about 700.00 euros per m2. In hindsight, working with an architect might have been more cost-effective, but that is how it is and that is not what this is about.

Maybe you have ideas, suggestions, can give tips, or share what we should pay attention to or consider.

I am of course attaching the floor plan. I hope that something can still be recognized despite the manual changes.

I look forward to reading your replies and wish you a nice weekend.

Best regards,
Michaela
11ant19 Oct 2017 14:26
Michaela1986 schrieb:
But I also believe there are enough builders who choose the options that construction companies already offer as examples.

No. That would mainly assume that the plots are "ideal." But most building plots currently on the market have some kind of "flaw": steep slope / pronounced elevation changes, unfavorably positioned building envelope, street side where the garden should actually be, and so on, or simply slightly too small.
Michaela1986 schrieb:
And on the other hand, that’s their job, isn’t it?

Imagine you are a young mother, a recently graduated architect, and a house provider brings you potential clients who want you to redesign a standard house so they want to build it – with a maximum of three paid visits plus, say, five hundred dollars as a base fee. While this might be more enjoyable professionally for the architect and fits better with taking care of the child than driving a taxi or waitressing, it is not very fulfilling. Now imagine you are the client, and the appointment before you was with a difficult woman who, by the way, dismissed all good suggestions, so none are left for you.
https://www.instagram.com/11antgmxde/
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K
kbt09
19 Oct 2017 17:47
@Michaela1986 .. thanks .. and I’m really doing this just as a hobby, but it actually started in childhood with building Lego houses.

Maybe I should have mentioned, my design is 60 cm (24 inches) wider than your design, but the corner for the terrace is a bit larger.

I’m curious to see how this develops here.
I
Iotafreak
20 Jan 2021 14:13
Michaela1986 schrieb:

I also believe that there are plenty of builders who choose the options that construction companies already offer as examples.

And on the other hand, that is their job, right? I can definitely understand why planners get annoyed at some point.

Hello Michaela, it’s been a while, but we are currently just starting our bungalow construction project. I’m curious about how you designed your entrance area/covering and how you resolved the roof. Did you stick with the 35° pitch? I can’t quite tell from your profile picture. Could you perhaps share an exterior photo of the entrance and the house itself, including the roof, either here or by private message? We’re currently unsure about which roof pitch to choose and how to design the entrance. Thank you very much.
11ant20 Jan 2021 14:27
Iotafreak schrieb:

Unfortunately, I can’t quite make it out from your profile picture... Could you possibly upload an exterior photo of the entrance and the house itself, including the roof, or send it via private message?

Click on the profile picture and select "show image," then you’ll see it clearly framed—showing the entire house, including the roof. Private messages can only be sent and received once allowed here. By the way, the profile of the original poster shows they were last active in May 2018. This information is also visible in the info box.
https://www.instagram.com/11antgmxde/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/bauen-jetzt/
I
Iotafreak
20 Jan 2021 14:57
11ant schrieb:

Click on the profile picture and select "Show image" to see it in full, including the fact that it shows the entire house. You need to be allowed to send and receive private messages here first. By the way, the OP’s profile shows their last login was in May 2018. You can also see that directly in the info box.

Thanks, the roof definitely doesn’t look like a 35° pitch to me… more like 20° or so. I would like to ask them about that…
11ant20 Jan 2021 15:28
Iotafreak schrieb:

Thanks, but the roof doesn’t look like it has a 35° pitch at all to me..
It’s actually not thirty-five, but thirty-four degrees (see post 131: https://www.hausbau-forum.de/threads/grundriss-bungalow-was-gibt-es-zu-beachten.25046/page-22#post-226155). This is a common effect with hip roofs—they tend to appear flatter. A 34° slope on a hip roof looks roughly as steep as a 26° slope on a gable roof.
https://www.instagram.com/11antgmxde/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/bauen-jetzt/

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