ᐅ Garage Location on the Property, Requirements in the Development Plan (Building Permit / Planning Permission)
Created on: 25 Jun 2023 21:02
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Alexander_A
Alexander_25 Jun 2023 21:02Hello everyone,
In our development plan, the location drawing roughly indicates the position of the house and garage. For better south/west orientation, we would prefer to place the garage on the right side of the house instead of on the left. Before commissioning a homebuilder, we would like to know if this is possible. The text section of the development plan does not specify any restrictions on this. Perhaps there are forum members with experience in such changes/deviations from the development plan (plot 78).
Development Plan / Restrictions
Plot size – 600 sqm (6,458 sq ft)
Slope – 1.8 m (5.9 ft) height difference over 30 m (98 ft)
Site coverage ratio – 0.35
Floor area ratio – 0.5
Building envelope, building line, and boundary – see development plan
Border development – permitted for garages
Number of parking spaces – double garage desired
Number of floors – 2
Roof type – pitched roof
Architectural style – urban villa
Orientation – see development plan
Maximum heights / limits – see development plan
Other specifications – none
Owners’ Requirements
Architectural style, roof type, building type – urban villa with pitched roof
Basement, number of floors – no basement
Number of occupants, age – 2
Space requirements on ground floor and upper floor – 70 sqm (753 sq ft), 70 sqm (753 sq ft)
Office: family use or home office? – guest room
Guests per year – once per month
Open or closed architecture – partially open
Conservative or modern design – modern
Open kitchen, kitchen island – yes
Number of dining seats – 6
Fireplace – no
Music/sound wall – no
Balcony, roof terrace – no
Garage, carport – 6 x 9 m (20 x 30 ft)
Utility garden, greenhouse – only hedge and lawn area
Others – no special wishes or requirements, no daily routine, happy to explain why certain features are or are not wanted – none
House Design
Who designed it:
- Planner from a construction company – own plan / prefab house provider
- Architect – not yet appointed
- Do-it-yourself – no
What do you particularly like? Why? – passage from house to garage
What do you not like? Why? –
Price estimate according to architect/planner: open
Personal price limit for the house, including fittings: open
Preferred heating technology: district heating
If you have to give up on which details/extras
- can you do without: external venetian blinds (shutters)
- cannot do without: garage
Why is the design the way it is now? For example:
Standard design from the planner? Partly
Which wishes were implemented by the architect? Yes
A mixture of many examples from various magazines? Yes
What makes it particularly good or bad in your eyes? – tailored to our needs
In our development plan, the location drawing roughly indicates the position of the house and garage. For better south/west orientation, we would prefer to place the garage on the right side of the house instead of on the left. Before commissioning a homebuilder, we would like to know if this is possible. The text section of the development plan does not specify any restrictions on this. Perhaps there are forum members with experience in such changes/deviations from the development plan (plot 78).
Development Plan / Restrictions
Plot size – 600 sqm (6,458 sq ft)
Slope – 1.8 m (5.9 ft) height difference over 30 m (98 ft)
Site coverage ratio – 0.35
Floor area ratio – 0.5
Building envelope, building line, and boundary – see development plan
Border development – permitted for garages
Number of parking spaces – double garage desired
Number of floors – 2
Roof type – pitched roof
Architectural style – urban villa
Orientation – see development plan
Maximum heights / limits – see development plan
Other specifications – none
Owners’ Requirements
Architectural style, roof type, building type – urban villa with pitched roof
Basement, number of floors – no basement
Number of occupants, age – 2
Space requirements on ground floor and upper floor – 70 sqm (753 sq ft), 70 sqm (753 sq ft)
Office: family use or home office? – guest room
Guests per year – once per month
Open or closed architecture – partially open
Conservative or modern design – modern
Open kitchen, kitchen island – yes
Number of dining seats – 6
Fireplace – no
Music/sound wall – no
Balcony, roof terrace – no
Garage, carport – 6 x 9 m (20 x 30 ft)
Utility garden, greenhouse – only hedge and lawn area
Others – no special wishes or requirements, no daily routine, happy to explain why certain features are or are not wanted – none
House Design
Who designed it:
- Planner from a construction company – own plan / prefab house provider
- Architect – not yet appointed
- Do-it-yourself – no
What do you particularly like? Why? – passage from house to garage
What do you not like? Why? –
Price estimate according to architect/planner: open
Personal price limit for the house, including fittings: open
Preferred heating technology: district heating
If you have to give up on which details/extras
- can you do without: external venetian blinds (shutters)
- cannot do without: garage
Why is the design the way it is now? For example:
Standard design from the planner? Partly
Which wishes were implemented by the architect? Yes
A mixture of many examples from various magazines? Yes
What makes it particularly good or bad in your eyes? – tailored to our needs
Alexander_ schrieb:
In our development plan, the site layout drawing roughly indicates the house and garage positions. For a better south/west orientation, we would prefer to place the garage on the right side of the house rather than the left. Before commissioning a home builder, we would like to know if this is possible. The text section of the development plan does not specify any requirements regarding this. Perhaps there is already experience in the forum with such changes or deviations from the development plan (plot 78). Although your development plan, in my view, interprets the planning drawing regulation somewhat unconventionally, I would not consider the symbolic illustrations to be so binding that you would need a formal exemption to make this change. However, I interpret the red lines at the light green lines near the gables of the house symbols as building lines, meaning the developer apparently requires a consistent facade alignment for the houses (both the first and the second row). Therefore, your garage could likely be moved to the upper side of the house on the plan—but the house itself may not shift towards the "bottom" of the plan. [Attached, I have transferred your plan excerpt from the "hijacked" thread here.]
"Before commissioning a home builder" sounds to me a bit like you intend to rely on the somewhat questionable assistance of a supplier’s own draftsman, which I would advise caution about. It is a pity that despite your commendable completion of the questionnaire, you have not shown the house design as well.
https://www.instagram.com/11antgmxde/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/bauen-jetzt/
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WilderSueden26 Jun 2023 10:35H
hanghaus202326 Jun 2023 11:44I had to pay 700 euros to the district office for a similar deviation from the building plan and had to wait 8 weeks for the approval.
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hanghaus202326 Jun 2023 13:58I took a look at it on the map. It seems that almost any deviation is possible in the building area.
There is a height difference of 2.2 m (7.2 ft) diagonally across the plot, and inside the building itself, it is about 90 cm (35 inches).
There is a height difference of 2.2 m (7.2 ft) diagonally across the plot, and inside the building itself, it is about 90 cm (35 inches).
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Alexander_26 Jun 2023 17:2311ant schrieb:
Although, in my opinion, your development plan interprets the planning drawing regulations somewhat unusually, I wouldn’t consider the symbolic markings so binding that a formal exemption would be required for this request. However, I interpret the red lines alongside the light green lines at the gables of the house symbols here as building lines, meaning the plan issuer apparently wants a uniform building alignment for the façades (both the first and the second rows of houses). Therefore, your garage could probably be moved to the upper side of the house according to the plan—but the house itself would not be allowed to shift downward on the plan. [Attached is your plan excerpt taken from the “hijacked” thread.]
“Before commissioning a house builder” sounds to me somewhat like you want to entrust yourselves to one of the often questionable in-house draftsmen, which raises a slight question mark in my view. By the way, it’s a pity that, despite your commendable completion of the questionnaire, you didn’t show the house design as well.This is how we would like it. Unfortunately, I could only draw a gable roof in the program, but it is supposed to be a hip roof.
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