ᐅ New Single-Family Home Construction – Join Us on Our Journey!
Created on: 4 Aug 2022 16:13
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gregman22
Dear community,
We are finally getting a step closer to realizing our dream of building a single-family home.
The plot has been purchased, building plans have been reviewed, construction method decided, and so on. We have now commissioned the architect of the general contractor (GC) of our choice with the planning task and are currently fine-tuning the house design. I would love to take you along on this journey and incorporate your valuable feedback.
At this stage, the focus is on the house design.
Basic data:
Plot: 1062m2 (11,433 sq ft); approx. 25.5m x 41.64m (84 ft x 137 ft)
Orientation: Northwest -> The arrow in the screenshot of the 3D view points south
Desired room layout:
Ground floor:
First floor:
Attic:
Note: I am still discussing this with the architect. Due to the hipped roof shape, the actual living area has shrunk too much. Therefore, further discussion is needed to accommodate the other rooms. I had underestimated the ratio of gross floor area to usable living space.
Basement:
Additional plans:
Now to my first questions for you:
My biggest construction challenge at the moment is the layout of the attic. There are two alternatives:
- Change the roof type, which would increase costs but provide more usable living space in the attic
- Give up the playroom on the first floor, convert it into a guest room, and build only the two offices in the attic (no guest room or bathroom)
Thank you in advance for your comments.




We are finally getting a step closer to realizing our dream of building a single-family home.
The plot has been purchased, building plans have been reviewed, construction method decided, and so on. We have now commissioned the architect of the general contractor (GC) of our choice with the planning task and are currently fine-tuning the house design. I would love to take you along on this journey and incorporate your valuable feedback.
At this stage, the focus is on the house design.
Basic data:
Plot: 1062m2 (11,433 sq ft); approx. 25.5m x 41.64m (84 ft x 137 ft)
Orientation: Northwest -> The arrow in the screenshot of the 3D view points south
Desired room layout:
Ground floor:
- Large living/dining area with adjacent (but separable) kitchen at the bottom left, plus a gallery overlooking the first floor
- Utility room
- Guest toilet
- Garage
- Separate apartment at the top right with its own entrance for parents-in-law
First floor:
- Gallery overlooking the ground floor
- 2 children’s bedrooms with a shared bathroom
- 1 playroom (initially a home cinema room, later to be repurposed) above the garage
- Master wing with main bedroom, dressing room, and bathroom
Attic:
Note: I am still discussing this with the architect. Due to the hipped roof shape, the actual living area has shrunk too much. Therefore, further discussion is needed to accommodate the other rooms. I had underestimated the ratio of gross floor area to usable living space.
- 2 separate offices
- 1 guest bedroom
- 1 small guest bathroom
Basement:
- 1 technical room
- 1 laundry room
- 1 storage room
- Large fitness room
- Wellness room with sauna
Additional plans:
- Air-to-air heat pump or air-to-water heat pump
- Photovoltaic system with/without battery storage
- Possible pool (3.5/4m x 8m or 3.5/4m x 12m) with heat pump (and countercurrent system)
- Sauna in the basement room
- Air conditioning for various rooms
- Smart home system – most likely via KNX
- Garden: Currently planning 2 terraces – one to the left, slightly more to the south, and one facing the main part of the plot further north
Now to my first questions for you:
- How do the floor plans strike you? Do they make sense in terms of the dynamics of family life?
- The location of the separate apartment was chosen based on our wish. We wanted a strict, clearly defined spatial separation with a separate entrance. Do you have any comments on this?
- Do you consider the utility rooms in the basement to be adequately sized (considering KNX, heat pump, etc.)?
My biggest construction challenge at the moment is the layout of the attic. There are two alternatives:
- Change the roof type, which would increase costs but provide more usable living space in the attic
- Give up the playroom on the first floor, convert it into a guest room, and build only the two offices in the attic (no guest room or bathroom)
Thank you in advance for your comments.
gregman22 schrieb:
For the foreseeable future, our two parents will stay here at varying frequencies. The separate apartment will probably be occupied about 50-60% of the year. Plus spontaneous (longer) guest visits.Oh yes…But I don’t see that working here. The separate apartment doesn’t function: no washing machine, no way to do laundry, no “space to move around”… completely neglected.
Either do it properly or leave it out!
driver55 schrieb:
Sorry, when I see the picture of the “black bunker” with what feels like “38 roof windows” and access through the kitchen, to me, that’s a design failure. Even a failure in planning must first be an (attempted) plan – however, I don’t see a systematically developed result here that implements the clients’ requirements (apart from their probably successfully eased fear of not being able to realize a flashy building within the given floor area limit). I can’t help but get the impression from some architects that a whole generation doesn’t study “architecture” anymore, but rather “media design, specializing in CAD” :-(
driver55 schrieb:
I also find the Zuffi and the Sindelfinger “embarrassing”… In which post was there a Zuffi? – in post #176 I’m unsure whether the white farmhouse cabinet represents a GLE or maybe rather an Outlander after all. However, I don’t find this “embarrassing,” but rather a helpful hint about where the architect is aiming socially and how tightly you need to buckle up before the bill arrives.
https://www.instagram.com/11antgmxde/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/bauen-jetzt/
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Myrna_Loy24 Sep 2022 13:18Our house & yard architect sketches the box representing the vehicle the client arrives in. They would always get excited and immediately identify with the design.
“Look, the car is already there!”
“Look, the car is already there!”
Myrna_Loy schrieb:
Our architect for the house and property draws the box that the client drives up with. They are always so happy and immediately identify with the design.
“Look, the car is already there!” No joke, the kitchen planner (for the office kitchen) drew in exactly! our coffee machine and almost the identical fridge (a red "old-school" Bosch). I was quite stunned since I couldn’t remember giving her these details 🤨
She must have been a very attentive listener, which also saved her from price negotiations (which I usually handle).
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