ᐅ Location of a city villa or detached single-family house on a 500 m² rectangular plot

Created on: 17 Jan 2020 18:03
T
Tolentino
Dear all,

after sharing the floor plans of my possible hamster cage with you in the other thread , here comes the next thread (thanks again for all the constructive suggestions there).
Just so you know, the semi-detached house is not off the table yet, as this plot of land is highly sought after and it’s not clear whether it will work out. But this one would be my favorite.

Now to this plot. For now, I’m mainly concerned with where and roughly how the house should be positioned on this plot.

Development plan / restrictions
Plot size: 500 m² (5400 sq ft)
Slope: none
Site coverage ratio: 0.2
Floor area ratio: 0.4
Building envelope, building line and boundary: 5 m (16 ft) from the street, 3 m (10 ft) from neighbors
Edge development: allowed for garages and sheds, none existing on the plot
Number of parking spaces: 1-2
Number of floors: 1.5–2.5
Roof shape: no preference
Architectural style: no preference
Orientation: aligned parallel to the street
Maximum heights / limits: ridge height max. 9 m (30 ft)

Below are the site plans I created myself based on the details from the listing.

This is a rough overview of the plot with building boundaries and dimensions.

Site plan: green center outlined by red frame, street names on the left and compass top left.


My question is: where to put the house?
The broker suggests placing it towards the back, since you already have the 5 m (16 ft) setback at the front and would “gain” about 3 m (10 ft) of garden. My partner doesn’t like this because of the visibility from the street. I say: privacy screen! But I also think, a fence too high might create a prison-yard feel.

But even if you follow this suggestion, I wonder if a more square floor plan (-> town villa style) would be better?

Like this, for example:

Floor plan: street on the left, orange buffer zones, green area, central grey building (100 m²).


Then parking space might be tricky, right?

Or upright like this?

Floor plan of a plot with orange buffer zones, green yard and grey building block.


I really want as much of a west-facing view and garden as possible. I tend to be an evening person and that side is less built up, due to the road. So I think more light comes through.
But the narrow floor plan caused lots of problems with the semi-detached house already. Well, here you could build longer instead.

What do you think?

Best regards

Tolentino
K1300S12 Jul 2021 13:01
Well, I know exactly what my installer would say if the electrician had made that decision for him. 😉
Tolentino12 Jul 2021 13:33
K1300S schrieb:

Well, I know exactly what my installer would say if the electrician had made that decision for him. 😉

In fact, the heating technician received the planning documents in advance but was not explicitly told anything about the outdoor sensor placement. I assume that, like me, he quietly assumed that the outdoor sensor would simply be routed near the location where the indoor sensor ends.
11ant schrieb:

You won’t find that here in the orange forum *LOL*
Too bad, I actually need that here more often... (SCNR)


Ground floor plan: rooms, doors, walls, and colored wiring.
A
Alessandro
16 Jul 2021 09:52
Who really needs a weather-compensated heating system? 😉
Tolentino16 Jul 2021 10:09
From what I have read, a return temperature-controlled pump runtime combined with an outdoor temperature-controlled heating curve would be best if you want to minimize manual adjustments.
I’m curious to see what my heating technician will set up for me and what is even possible with my heat pump.
OWLer16 Jul 2021 13:00
I’m curious about that too! Do we already have our support group?
Tolentino16 Jul 2021 13:04
Hehe, not yet. It’s not heating season yet anyway. This winter, we can all get started. 😱