ᐅ New Construction Exterior Single-Family Home Solid Construction
Created on: 1 Mar 2021 17:08
B
bau2022
The plan is as follows:
9,000 m² (2.2 acres) plot of land (already purchased)
Approx. 165–190 m² (1,775–2,045 sq ft) living space
Approx. 80 m² (860 sq ft) single garage
Heat pump with underfloor, ceiling, and wall heating (optional)
Ventilation system
All windows with blinds, plus an additional mesh for darkening
Planned budget is open
Photovoltaic system with approx. 15 kWp
Contractors will be involved, but with some owner participation (construction time therefore about 3 years)
Both staircases lead to the upper floor, but this will not be finished.
The staircase inside the house leads only to a small hallway. No other rooms.
The garage staircase leads to the technical room.
All paths/passages inside the house have a minimum width of 1.20 m (4 ft)
I created the drawing myself, so the measurements are not 100% accurate.
A professional planner will finalize the plans later.
I didn’t want to spend too much time learning the software.
9,000 m² (2.2 acres) plot of land (already purchased)
Approx. 165–190 m² (1,775–2,045 sq ft) living space
Approx. 80 m² (860 sq ft) single garage
Heat pump with underfloor, ceiling, and wall heating (optional)
Ventilation system
All windows with blinds, plus an additional mesh for darkening
Planned budget is open
Photovoltaic system with approx. 15 kWp
Contractors will be involved, but with some owner participation (construction time therefore about 3 years)
Both staircases lead to the upper floor, but this will not be finished.
The staircase inside the house leads only to a small hallway. No other rooms.
The garage staircase leads to the technical room.
All paths/passages inside the house have a minimum width of 1.20 m (4 ft)
I created the drawing myself, so the measurements are not 100% accurate.
A professional planner will finalize the plans later.
I didn’t want to spend too much time learning the software.
W
WilderSueden3 Mar 2021 18:54bau2022 schrieb:
I don’t see the problem. Are you building a garage out of OSB boards?We are going to build a carport. It costs less than €5000 and the car stays dry. My parents still have a traditional brick garage. In winter, the snow melts there quite well and makes everything wet. There is also
bau2022 schrieb:
If I exclude the garage from the thermal envelope, what do I achieve?I already listed that for you. The garage door and ventilation. If the garage door is part of the thermal envelope, it must be very well insulated. The drafty standard door costing just a few hundred euros without insulation won’t meet the energy efficiency regulations, according to the engineer. You can ventilate through windows, but that’s pointless. Then you might as well exclude the garage from the thermal envelope and build it cheaply.bau2022 schrieb:
I never said anything against that.You always say it won’t be expensive. If that’s cheap for you, fine. But then it would make sense to mention the budget from the start. bau2022 schrieb:
The roof is around 8.5 meters (28 feet). We think it fits the look of the house well.
Also, a 40-degree (40°) roof pitch is quite good for the photovoltaic system.Sounds to me like a climbing gym in the attic. The space upstairs will be huge. I don’t understand why everything would be placed on the ground floor if there is that much space above.WilderSueden schrieb:
We will build with a carport. It costs less than 5000€ and the car stays dry. My parents still have a traditional masonry garage. There, the snow also melts quite well in winter and makes everything wet.
There is also You can do that, but I don’t have to.
WilderSueden schrieb:
I listed it for you: garage door and ventilation. If the garage door is part of the thermal envelope, it must be well insulated. The drafty standard door costing a few hundred euros without insulation won’t meet energy efficiency regulations according to an engineer’s calculation. Ventilation through windows is possible but makes no sense. Then you might as well take the garage out of the thermal envelope and build it cheaply. I’m not going to write that again.
WilderSueden schrieb:
You always say it won’t be expensive. If that’s cheap for you, go ahead. But it would be helpful to name the budget from the start. I never said it would be cheap. Budget is open, that’s what I mean. 800,000 euros if you want a price.
WilderSueden schrieb:
Sounds to me like a bouldering gym in the attic. The room on the upper floor is huge. I don’t understand why everything is moved to the ground floor when there is so much space upstairs. Quite simple—because we want everything on the ground floor and the glass fronts look nice.
We paid a high price for the undeveloped land and I want to make the most of that. A plot in a secluded rural area doesn’t cost less than 300,000 euros.
The upper floor will remain empty then.
K1300S schrieb:
Well then: fire away! No one says that high-end building is prohibited, but throwing money away on poorly thought-out solutions goes against my principles, even if I don’t have any better use for it.I could have written anything, and you would have found something to object to. *Shaking my head*Tassimat schrieb:
No sarcasm. I’ll find an example picture later.I couldn’t find the picture from the forum again.
But I like something along these lines. The section shown is maybe 15m (50 feet), and you’re planning double that.
Warning, sarcasm from here on: The Google search term is “castle terrace” 😉
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