ᐅ Bungalow Floor Plan with 140 sqm – Is the Storage Space Sufficient?
Created on: 23 Feb 2023 13:38
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EinmalimLeben
Hello! I would like to share our plans with you and would appreciate any suggestions or improvements, more specifically further down. First of all:
Development Plan / Restrictions
- Plot size: 707 sqm (7,609 sq ft)
- Slope: no
- Site coverage ratio: -
- Floor area ratio: no development plan, same as neighboring buildings
- Building window, building line and boundary
Edge buildings: 3 m (10 ft), building encumbrance considered
- Number of parking spaces: 2
- Number of storeys: 1
- Roof style: hipped roof
- Architectural style: bungalow
- Orientation: driveway on the south side, terrace on the north side
- Maximum height / limits: -
- Other requirements: -
Owners’ Requirements
- Style, roof type, building type
Small but cozy floor(s) 😉 No stairs (for husband), bungalow / country house style, no basement, attic not usable
- Number of people, age: 2 adults, 2 children (2 and 5 years old)
- Space requirement: 140 sqm (1,507 sq ft)
- Office: family use or home office: both teachers, so necessary, but one desk is enough
- Overnight guests per year: grandmother often (about every other weekend), otherwise irregular visits from friends or family members
- Open or closed architecture: both
- Traditional or modern construction: both
- Open kitchen, kitchen island: yes, already purchased
- Number of dining seats: 6
- Fireplace: no
- Music/sound system wall: no
- Balcony, roof terrace: no
- Garage, carport: carport planned later
- Utility garden, greenhouse: children’s play equipment, some garden for vegetables, more of a natural garden
- Additional wishes / special features / daily routine, including reasons for choices: our plot is quite narrow; a bungalow was our dream and fits well on the lot, although it is quite far from the driveway and parking spaces. We prefer a country house style; the house will have red facing bricks with an anthracite-colored roof. We all spend a lot of time on hobbies and gardening in the afternoons, but the children also want their fun... The large building to the east on the neighboring plot will soon be demolished and replaced by three large buildings with senior apartments. The distance to us will then increase somewhat, but these are three storeys and part of our street will be used. So there are quite a few changes happening around here. The village has many supermarkets, a drugstore, an outdoor pool, and schools, but no train station or grammar school. Those are located in the nearest larger town (15 minutes by bus/car).
House Design
- Who designed the plan: planner from a construction company with us
- What do you particularly like? Why?
The layout, bathrooms, separation of living and sleeping areas, open kitchen
- What don’t you like? Why? Possibly too little space in the utility/technical room and for storage cabinets?
- Price estimate according to architect/planner: Plot 80,000, house price 321,000 without flooring and painting but tiled in kitchen, baths and utility room, we signed in April 2022 and financed at the same time, rural Lower Saxony plot but located between three large cities, additional costs for the plot paid so far 16,500 (property taxes, tree removal, surveying...), planned further 30,000 for construction road, extra cost for deeper excavation, drainage. Kitchen (Bristol style) from Häcker in L-shape with island already purchased and stored, 14,000 Euro as it is a display kitchen and only slightly modified.
- Personal price limit for the house including fixtures and fittings: flooring 5,000, painter, electrician, tiles... 10,000, kitchen 14,000, furniture included, new sofa 1,000 and a few new cabinets: approx. 360,000 Euro without exterior works and additional costs.
- Favored heating technology: we are installing geothermal heat
- If you had to give up some details or fittings, which ones? I think we have already given up on a lot of unnecessary things. Carport for now
- Things you can’t do without: open kitchen, children’s bathroom with shower, shutters on the south side
- Why is the design as it is now? Developed together with planner
- Which wishes were implemented by the architect? Bungalow, children’s room 14 sqm (150 sq ft), children’s bathroom with shower
- What do you think makes it particularly good or bad? Everything on one level, wishes were implemented, possibly too little space for stuff?
What is the most important/basic question about the floor plan in 130 characters?
We like the floor plan as it is and have already obtained building permit/planning permission for it. I would like to know if the space in the utility room is sufficient and if there is enough space for cabinets. We currently live on 73 sqm (785 sq ft) and have rather little; even the basement only stores a bit of Christmas decoration, children’s clothes for the younger one to grow into, and my husband’s workshop items, which will eventually go into a shed/workshop. The children currently share one room (11 sqm (118 sq ft)). If it is then split into two rooms in the house, that should be plenty. Still, there is sometimes some concern since many here plan much larger and allocate more storage space...
Would you change anything else or are we overlooking something? We have no load-bearing walls and could still make some adjustments before construction starts (even if it costs more).

Development Plan / Restrictions
- Plot size: 707 sqm (7,609 sq ft)
- Slope: no
- Site coverage ratio: -
- Floor area ratio: no development plan, same as neighboring buildings
- Building window, building line and boundary
Edge buildings: 3 m (10 ft), building encumbrance considered
- Number of parking spaces: 2
- Number of storeys: 1
- Roof style: hipped roof
- Architectural style: bungalow
- Orientation: driveway on the south side, terrace on the north side
- Maximum height / limits: -
- Other requirements: -
Owners’ Requirements
- Style, roof type, building type
Small but cozy floor(s) 😉 No stairs (for husband), bungalow / country house style, no basement, attic not usable
- Number of people, age: 2 adults, 2 children (2 and 5 years old)
- Space requirement: 140 sqm (1,507 sq ft)
- Office: family use or home office: both teachers, so necessary, but one desk is enough
- Overnight guests per year: grandmother often (about every other weekend), otherwise irregular visits from friends or family members
- Open or closed architecture: both
- Traditional or modern construction: both
- Open kitchen, kitchen island: yes, already purchased
- Number of dining seats: 6
- Fireplace: no
- Music/sound system wall: no
- Balcony, roof terrace: no
- Garage, carport: carport planned later
- Utility garden, greenhouse: children’s play equipment, some garden for vegetables, more of a natural garden
- Additional wishes / special features / daily routine, including reasons for choices: our plot is quite narrow; a bungalow was our dream and fits well on the lot, although it is quite far from the driveway and parking spaces. We prefer a country house style; the house will have red facing bricks with an anthracite-colored roof. We all spend a lot of time on hobbies and gardening in the afternoons, but the children also want their fun... The large building to the east on the neighboring plot will soon be demolished and replaced by three large buildings with senior apartments. The distance to us will then increase somewhat, but these are three storeys and part of our street will be used. So there are quite a few changes happening around here. The village has many supermarkets, a drugstore, an outdoor pool, and schools, but no train station or grammar school. Those are located in the nearest larger town (15 minutes by bus/car).
House Design
- Who designed the plan: planner from a construction company with us
- What do you particularly like? Why?
The layout, bathrooms, separation of living and sleeping areas, open kitchen
- What don’t you like? Why? Possibly too little space in the utility/technical room and for storage cabinets?
- Price estimate according to architect/planner: Plot 80,000, house price 321,000 without flooring and painting but tiled in kitchen, baths and utility room, we signed in April 2022 and financed at the same time, rural Lower Saxony plot but located between three large cities, additional costs for the plot paid so far 16,500 (property taxes, tree removal, surveying...), planned further 30,000 for construction road, extra cost for deeper excavation, drainage. Kitchen (Bristol style) from Häcker in L-shape with island already purchased and stored, 14,000 Euro as it is a display kitchen and only slightly modified.
- Personal price limit for the house including fixtures and fittings: flooring 5,000, painter, electrician, tiles... 10,000, kitchen 14,000, furniture included, new sofa 1,000 and a few new cabinets: approx. 360,000 Euro without exterior works and additional costs.
- Favored heating technology: we are installing geothermal heat
- If you had to give up some details or fittings, which ones? I think we have already given up on a lot of unnecessary things. Carport for now
- Things you can’t do without: open kitchen, children’s bathroom with shower, shutters on the south side
- Why is the design as it is now? Developed together with planner
- Which wishes were implemented by the architect? Bungalow, children’s room 14 sqm (150 sq ft), children’s bathroom with shower
- What do you think makes it particularly good or bad? Everything on one level, wishes were implemented, possibly too little space for stuff?
What is the most important/basic question about the floor plan in 130 characters?
We like the floor plan as it is and have already obtained building permit/planning permission for it. I would like to know if the space in the utility room is sufficient and if there is enough space for cabinets. We currently live on 73 sqm (785 sq ft) and have rather little; even the basement only stores a bit of Christmas decoration, children’s clothes for the younger one to grow into, and my husband’s workshop items, which will eventually go into a shed/workshop. The children currently share one room (11 sqm (118 sq ft)). If it is then split into two rooms in the house, that should be plenty. Still, there is sometimes some concern since many here plan much larger and allocate more storage space...
Would you change anything else or are we overlooking something? We have no load-bearing walls and could still make some adjustments before construction starts (even if it costs more).
H
hanghaus202326 Feb 2023 12:52You should definitely clarify the topic of the heating, ventilation, and air conditioning (HVAC) system and bathroom relocations with the contractor. In my opinion, the front door should be moved toward the north and hinged on the left side.
Nida35a schrieb:
I didn’t expect it to be that bad, Yes, of course – I wouldn’t get so worked up about the sloppy workmanship just for the sake of pedantry. It’s mainly because of the problems it causally causes with the lap measurement (before the masons turn it into a guessing game, they simply saw the last brick laid in the respective course and mortar it into the joint that’s supposed to remain dry. Naturally, the cutting is not done with watchmaker precision, so it only occasionally complies with the standards purely by chance. When planned in sync, laying bricks is at least a task suitable for unskilled labor over the long term, meaning the certified specialists handle the corners and can then leave the rest to helpers. With fantasy measurements, however, you basically have to watch the workers constantly. And all this just because today’s young architects don’t consider mastering the small eight times eight (the octameter) necessary. They just plan digitally as if bricklaying were not an analog activity. The second reason I react strongly to this is because this laissez-faire attitude is usually not selective but representative. Therefore, I regularly experience the ignorance of the octameter as an indicator that the specifications for mortar application (how to apply mortar, which mortar for what purpose) are not properly followed either. The "smearing" of the otherwise actually dry bed joints is regularly done with the same mortar already on the trowel for the bed joints of the next brick course.
Nida35a schrieb:
Our construction manager knows the octameter and strictly forced us to follow the grid, saying he wouldn’t build any other way. That’s good to hear. How does he handle cavity walls?
EinmalimLeben schrieb:
That really doesn’t sound good...
So should you reverse course and contact the architect and local building authority again?
Or watch the bricklaying more closely with experts? No, you still don’t get it. You can be completely relaxed about the brick facing. The “random bond” is basically already established here and is actually preferred by most homeowners anyway. This can not only be well compensated for but is also technically unproblematic. Where special cautious inspection is truly required is the masonry of the inner (i.e., actual) structural wall leaf. I don’t understand the suggestion of reversing course or contacting the building authority – has the planning already been approved? Then our discussion is basically pointless.
hanghaus2023 schrieb:
You can always take such changes into account in the detailed design phase. As long as you don’t encroach on setback distances, that shouldn’t be an issue. Exactly. So my Plan A suggestion is, as said, adjusting the dimensions (including the overall house length to, as mentioned, 17.115 or 17.24 meters (56 ft 2 in or 56 ft 6 in) instead of 17.15 meters (56 ft 3 in); that means 3.5 cm (1.4 inches) less or 9 cm (3.5 inches) more, with the latter being my preferred option). For the other three sides of the house, feel free to contact me. Plan B would be to triple the supervision intensity of the surveyor during the shell construction with the fantasy measurements – as mentioned, avoidable if architects took their training more seriously.
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11ant schrieb:
I'm glad to hear that. How does he handle cavity walls in this case?The general contractor doesn’t build cavity walls, he only uses Liaplan expanded clay blocks,
and uses a software program during planning that generates the material lists for the blocks, which are then pre-assembled for the construction sites at the block factory.
xMisterDx schrieb:
Did you nail OSB boards fully across the entire roof directly onto the roof rafters? I was strongly advised against doing that by everyone (roofer, construction manager, drywall installer)... Just want to quickly answer the question.. We have a concrete ceiling. Beams were installed on top of it to attach the OSB boards. Thick insulation was applied on the concrete ceiling.
E
EinmalimLeben26 Feb 2023 15:38Okay, understood!
As mentioned in the original post, we already have the building permit / planning permission. Therefore, the question is how to proceed with it.
As mentioned in the original post, we already have the building permit / planning permission. Therefore, the question is how to proceed with it.
X
xMisterDx26 Feb 2023 16:06This is important information to prevent anyone from trying this who only has a suspended ceiling with a vapor barrier.
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