ᐅ Floor plan of a traditional single-family house on a 700 sqm plot with east-facing access

Created on: 5 Oct 2021 00:20
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Mitch404
Hey everyone,

many of you probably know this situation: suddenly there are three of you, and you realize that your current apartment will soon be too small. My wife and I have therefore decided to treat ourselves to a single-family home. We are currently working with the architect we chose to develop the floor plan.

Development Plan / Restrictions
Plot size: 700 sqm (7,535 sq ft)
No slope
Site occupancy ratio (building coverage ratio): 0.3
Floor area ratio: 0.6
Number of parking spaces: 2
Number of floors: 2 full stories; with two full stories, a knee wall is not allowed
Roof style: Gable roof

Client Requirements
Style, roof type, building type: The roof style is fixed as a gable roof. The house should also blend in with neighboring buildings, so a more rectangular than square (town villa) footprint is preferred.
Basement, floors: No basement and no sloping ceilings desired; therefore, two full stories
Number of residents, ages: 3 people aged 35, 30, and 0.3 years; space for an additional child desired
Room requirements on ground floor and upper floor: Typical needs of a family with two children and no special hobbies. A sufficiently sized utility room to be able to hang laundry indoors in winter. Kitchen large enough to comfortably bake a cake occasionally (currently only a 6 sqm (65 sq ft) kitchen, which is rather tight). We had also considered a home office on the ground floor to avoid guests needing to enter the upper floor, but overall that made the ground floor feel too large.
Office: The office is for home office use, designed for two workstations (usually not used at the same time) and with the possibility to accommodate occasional overnight guests.
Overnight guests per year: None regularly. If our parents or friends want to stay over, we want to have the option to use the office space for this.
Open or closed architecture: We think open layouts look nice, but in everyday life we want practicality, which includes being able to retreat occasionally. Therefore, a large living/dining area with a kitchen that can be at least partially integrated via a large sliding door, while the rest remains rather closed off.
Conservative or modern construction: Modern construction as far as we like it (for example, an open staircase in the living area is currently trendy but we do not like it, and for the “T” layout solution, we find our bathroom too small and cramped).
Open kitchen, kitchen island: The kitchen should not be fully open but with a large sliding door. A kitchen island and dining area directly in the kitchen would be nice.
Number of dining seats: 8+
Fireplace: No fireplace
Music/surround sound wall: Not desired. Besides the TV, a 2.1 sound system will be installed as now, and that’s enough.
Balcony, roof terrace: Not desired
Garage, carport: Carport
Utility garden, greenhouse: We plan a small utility garden — a few raised beds, maybe 1-2 regular beds — but the focus will be a low-maintenance recreational and leisure garden.
Additional wishes / special features / daily routine, also reasons why some things are desired or not: Each children’s bedroom has an attic ladder leading upward, so the rooms can be expanded upstairs when the kids are teenagers and want more space. We have seen this realized in 2-3 houses and think it’s pretty cool.

House Design
Who designed the plan: Independent architect
What do you especially like? Why? The southwest garden protected from the street. The living room, which is open yet still brings some calm due to the niche and the door that only leads into the dining area. The kitchen has a terrace door that can be unlocked from outside, so groceries can be carried straight into the kitchen. The walk-in closet, which adds visual calmness to the bedroom. Storage space under the stairs. The separation of the technical room and the utility room, allowing the utility room to be kept tidier.
What do you not like? Why? I worry that the bathroom on the ground floor and the office might be somewhat too small. The children’s rooms seem fairly generous with 17 sqm (183 sq ft); 16 sqm (172 sq ft) might have sufficed.
Price estimate according to architect/planner: The architect is handling only phases 1-4 for us. We have not yet decided whether to hire a general contractor or use individual contracts and arrange construction supervision ourselves.
Personal budget limit for the house, including fixtures and fittings: 500k
Preferred heating system: Ground-source heat pump with horizontal trench collector

If you had to give up something, which details/upgrades
- can you do without: We have already dropped the basement and fireplace; we will probably also give up on the “T” layout in the bathroom to avoid making it too dark and cramped.
- cannot do without:

Why is the design the way it is now? For example:
Standard design from the planner? The plan was created individually based on a questionnaire we completed for the architect.
Which requests were implemented by the architect?
- Carport and shed cover the neighbor’s unsightly prefabricated garage.
- House and carport form a kind of L shape lying down that creates a protected southwest garden.
- Two children’s rooms with at least 15 sqm (161 sq ft) + office
- Kitchen separated from the living/dining area by sliding door
- Long-term option to convert the upper floor into a separate living unit (for flexibility and eligibility for KfW funding for two dwelling units)

What do you think makes the plan particularly good or bad?
Overall, we quite like the plan. We now want to look at details (for example, the walk-in closet slightly larger by about 1 sqm (11 sq ft) so that a low cabinet could fit against the second wall). The windows are not planned yet and were initially placed arbitrarily by the architect.

We are especially looking forward to your open feedback to optimize the plan further before it gets serious and hopefully avoid some mistakes. 😉

Best regards

Mitch404

Site plan of the plots with buildings; red dots over area, yellow circle marks 1122/9


Ground floor plan: living/dining/kitchen area, hallway, WC, technical room, utility room; carport for 2 vehicles.


Ground floor plan: living, dining, kitchen, hallway, WC, washing facilities, technical room, utility room; outdoor area with dining table


Upper floor plan of a house: hallway connects bedroom, office, children’s rooms 1/2 and bathroom.
Schimi17915 Oct 2021 10:49
driver55 schrieb:

Including an 8m (26 feet) long corridor in a new build is a no-go, terrible, or however you want to call it.
Just imagine—with a mirror at the end of the corridor, it would even seem like 16m (52 feet) 🙂
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ypg
5 Oct 2021 11:05
RomeoZwo schrieb:

Unannounced visits, like from fundraisers, sales representatives, or even tradespeople, shouldn’t mean they see any mess in the living room or garden (which is unavoidable with a child).

You’re not serious about wanting to make sure that no one—whether representatives or similar people—sees your disorder, no matter who caused it, right?
When our door opens, no stranger looks past me to see what’s going on inside. They have a brief conversation, and that’s it. Our mail carrier sometimes comes in through the back if we don’t hear the doorbell. And that’s fine—the trust has to be there. But I built the house for myself and my husband, not for fundraisers 🙂
11ant5 Oct 2021 12:21
Tom1978 schrieb:

If it bothers someone to see a wall at the end of the hallway, they can hang a large mirror on that wall. If it bothers them to see their own reflection, then there’s not much that can be done about that.
I have a problem walking toward mirrors; I always want to avoid the big guy *ROTFL*
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Myrna_Loy
5 Oct 2021 12:24
The hallway is nonsense. The kitchen is only about 2.75 m (9 feet) wide, presumably as a rough construction measurement. In a new building of this size—14 x 8 m (46 x 26 feet)—this is simply a planning mistake. These dimensions are typical for terraced houses, along with all the associated issues.
11ant5 Oct 2021 12:38
I have seen many development plans with initial flaws, but this one is the first to come with rubella today ;-)

The plans lack window dimensions, the planner was quite generous with the load-bearing walls, in several places we still need to practice the octameter grid, and the wall limiting the closet in the bedroom is simply positioned incorrectly.

Elevations could be helpful. Which project phase are you currently in?
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ypg
5 Oct 2021 12:50
Myrna_Loy schrieb:

The hallway is nonsense. The kitchen is only about 2.75 m (9 feet) wide, probably measured as the shell dimension? For a new build of this size – 14 x 8 m (46 x 26 feet) – this is simply a design mistake. These are dimensions typical for terraced houses, with all the usual associated drawbacks.

I looked at the measurements again: even the sofa corner is only 2.84 m (9 feet 4 inches) wide in the shell dimension. You would have to look for a narrow family sofa. The lamp, coffee table, or magazine basket all have to be squeezed in front of it.
Personally, I like these narrow houses, but they usually have a more open floor plan to compensate.

I would simply design the house about one meter (3 feet) wider – there is no reason to stick to this shape.
How is the "separation of dwelling unit 1" supposed to work? That doesn’t work as a separation, not even later. The bathroom would then be shared by everyone.