ᐅ Single-family house floor plan 110 m² – Ground floor + Upper floor – First draft room layout
Created on: 25 Aug 2021 08:40
R
ruebe87
Good morning,
we have now received the first draft of the interior layout for our single-family home from our planner, but we are not quite satisfied, as some of our requests were unfortunately not taken into account. Accordingly, we are disappointed because this will be a "life project" for us, and we feel somewhat let down.
It is a terraced house with a total area of 110m² (1,184 sq ft), divided into 2 floors of 55m² (592 sq ft) each. Additionally, there is a basement and an attic, although the attic cannot be used as living space.
In the basement, we want the kitchen and dining area on the south side, the living room further back, which can be closed off with a sliding door to create a potential retreat space. There should also be a small storage room for food and miscellaneous items as well as a guest toilet.
On the upper floor, there is a master bedroom of about 16m² (172 sq ft) with direct access to a large bathroom, two children's bedrooms, and a separate small bathroom.
In my opinion, shifting the staircase might be a good idea, but since we are not experts, we have fully relied on our planner so far.
Another meeting with him will take place in the next few days, and perhaps you have suggestions and input that we could bring up concretely.
Thank you very much in advance!

we have now received the first draft of the interior layout for our single-family home from our planner, but we are not quite satisfied, as some of our requests were unfortunately not taken into account. Accordingly, we are disappointed because this will be a "life project" for us, and we feel somewhat let down.
It is a terraced house with a total area of 110m² (1,184 sq ft), divided into 2 floors of 55m² (592 sq ft) each. Additionally, there is a basement and an attic, although the attic cannot be used as living space.
In the basement, we want the kitchen and dining area on the south side, the living room further back, which can be closed off with a sliding door to create a potential retreat space. There should also be a small storage room for food and miscellaneous items as well as a guest toilet.
On the upper floor, there is a master bedroom of about 16m² (172 sq ft) with direct access to a large bathroom, two children's bedrooms, and a separate small bathroom.
In my opinion, shifting the staircase might be a good idea, but since we are not experts, we have fully relied on our planner so far.
Another meeting with him will take place in the next few days, and perhaps you have suggestions and input that we could bring up concretely.
Thank you very much in advance!
Würfel* schrieb:
I don’t have the knee wall height in mind, but I believe there isn’t one? I assume there is no knee wall.
Würfel* schrieb:
In post #30 the OP mentioned:
Question: what is the roof like? Is there a cross section? Roof slopes down east/west, ridge runs south-north 😱 Thanks! I completely missed that response in post #30! Unfortunately!
In #34 I explicitly asked again when the questions would be answered. They could have pointed me to the red text in the quote 🙄
I’m now wondering if it would have influenced my design, and I think the design works and turned out well.
Regarding the other idea, you have to weigh the pros and cons... at least you should end up close to the central axis (one should orientate oneself by the architect’s staircase 😉)
ruebe87 schrieb:
On the ground floor, we would remove the wall between the living room and the dining room. The wall on the left would be replaced by the wood stove, which serves as a kind of half-height partition. The chimney will need to be relocated but should align well with the bathroom upstairs.
The wardrobe and guest toilet would be swapped, and we would add a shower in the toilet as well.
Looking forward to your feedback 😉In this example, I notice that it is not possible to separate oneself from the rest of the family. For two people, this wouldn’t be an issue (setting aside Tupperware parties and guys’ nights out), but for families, retreating to watch TV is easier if the entrance is positioned to the east. I tried a partial separation, but that would require too many sliding doors for my taste.ypg schrieb:
In this example, I notice that it’s not possible to isolate yourself from the rest of the family. For two people, this wouldn’t be an issue (excluding Tupperware parties and guys’ nights), but for families, retreating to watch TV is easier if the entrance faces east. I tried a partial separation, but that would require too many sliding doors for my liking.[ATTACH alt="Screenshot 2021-08-28 at 14.04.53.png"]65045[/ATTACH][ATTACH alt="Screenshot 2021-08-28 at 14.08.02.png"]65046[/ATTACH]Our next plan will look something like this.
We see it similarly, which is why we chose an open layout. The wood stove will likely be flush with the wall and half-height with a small bench; the chimney would then run through the bathroom on the upper floor.
At the dining table, we now want to install a bench with a window directly along the east-facing wall.
By the way, I can’t find any of the light wells for the basement above ground level...
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https://www.instagram.com/11antgmxde/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/bauen-jetzt/
ruebe87 schrieb:
half-height with a small bench seat,ruebe87 schrieb:
a bench seat with a windowYou certainly won’t be short of seating options 😉Similar topics