ᐅ Floor Plan of a Single-Family Home on a Sloped Site with Basement
Created on: 30 Jan 2024 09:22
V
Vivusorg
Development Plan/Restrictions
Plot size 2000m² (21,500 sq ft)
Slope approx. 10%, see attachment
Site coverage ratio
Floor space index max. 2 full stories
Building window, building line, and boundary see attachment
Edge development
Number of parking spaces
Number of floors
Roof shape free
Architectural style free
Orientation free
Maximum heights/limits 12m (39 feet)
Further requirements
Client Requirements
Architectural style, roof shape, building type: Gable roof
Basement, floors: Basement
Number of people, age: 5 (children <= 6 years)
Space requirements on ground floor and upper floor
Office: Family use or home office?: Two offices required
Overnight guests per year: Offices should be able to be repurposed.
Open or closed architecture: rather open
Conservative or modern construction: functional
Open kitchen, cooking island: open
Minimum dining seats: 5
Fireplace: no
Music/stereo wall: no
Balcony, roof terrace facing north and northwest
Garage, carport yes, not included in plan
Utility garden, greenhouse
Additional wishes/special features/daily routine, also including reasons why some options are excluded
House Design
Origin of the design: by me, before meeting with architect
What do you particularly like? Why?
What do you dislike? Why?
Price estimate according to architect/planner:
I expect 3000 to 3100 EUR / m² (279 to 289 USD / sq ft)
Personal price limit for the house, including equipment: 900,000 EUR plus garage
Preferred heating technology: heat pump with horizontal trench collector
Why is the design the way it is now? e.g.:
We have now drawn several floor plans. All our ideas and priorities have been included. We would like your opinions on where you see potential for improvement. The building’s layout is very important to us. We deliberately avoid dormers, bay windows, etc.
Attached you will find the floor plan and site plan. (The house is to be built parallel and as close as possible to the street)
The difference between two contour lines is 1m (3.3 feet).
The arrangement of the rooms is intentionally chosen. Please do not discuss that the children’s rooms are on the north side.
Currently undeveloped, entirely meadow.
We would greatly appreciate your feedback and even more your suggestions for improvements.
Plot size 2000m² (21,500 sq ft)
Slope approx. 10%, see attachment
Site coverage ratio
Floor space index max. 2 full stories
Building window, building line, and boundary see attachment
Edge development
Number of parking spaces
Number of floors
Roof shape free
Architectural style free
Orientation free
Maximum heights/limits 12m (39 feet)
Further requirements
Client Requirements
Architectural style, roof shape, building type: Gable roof
Basement, floors: Basement
Number of people, age: 5 (children <= 6 years)
Space requirements on ground floor and upper floor
Office: Family use or home office?: Two offices required
Overnight guests per year: Offices should be able to be repurposed.
Open or closed architecture: rather open
Conservative or modern construction: functional
Open kitchen, cooking island: open
Minimum dining seats: 5
Fireplace: no
Music/stereo wall: no
Balcony, roof terrace facing north and northwest
Garage, carport yes, not included in plan
Utility garden, greenhouse
Additional wishes/special features/daily routine, also including reasons why some options are excluded
House Design
Origin of the design: by me, before meeting with architect
What do you particularly like? Why?
What do you dislike? Why?
Price estimate according to architect/planner:
I expect 3000 to 3100 EUR / m² (279 to 289 USD / sq ft)
Personal price limit for the house, including equipment: 900,000 EUR plus garage
Preferred heating technology: heat pump with horizontal trench collector
Why is the design the way it is now? e.g.:
We have now drawn several floor plans. All our ideas and priorities have been included. We would like your opinions on where you see potential for improvement. The building’s layout is very important to us. We deliberately avoid dormers, bay windows, etc.
Attached you will find the floor plan and site plan. (The house is to be built parallel and as close as possible to the street)
The difference between two contour lines is 1m (3.3 feet).
The arrangement of the rooms is intentionally chosen. Please do not discuss that the children’s rooms are on the north side.
Currently undeveloped, entirely meadow.
We would greatly appreciate your feedback and even more your suggestions for improvements.
ypg schrieb:
It should be a quarter-turn staircase with two equal flights.No, just take a look at the basement and ground floor below.H
hanghaus202330 Jan 2024 10:43Where is north?
In which direction does the slope go?
Is the plot serviced? Where are the utility connections located?
Do you already own the plot?
Is it designated as building land?
In which direction does the slope go?
Is the plot serviced? Where are the utility connections located?
Do you already own the plot?
Is it designated as building land?
hanghaus2023 schrieb:
Where is north?
Which direction does the slope go?
Is the plot connected to utilities? Where are the connection points?
Do you already own the plot?
Is it designated as building land?North is marked in the top left corner of each screenshot. The site map is oriented north.
The slope goes from right (highest point) to left (lowest point).
The plot is fully serviced. The utility connections are shown on the site plan where the blue arrow points (fresh water, sewage, electricity, and fiber optic).
Yes, we own the plot.
Yes, it is designated as building land. The development plan has no restrictions besides a maximum building height of 12m (39 feet) and a maximum buildable area of 500m² (5380 square feet).
For the staircase, I have marked the direction of travel again. Hopefully, this makes it clearer.
H
hanghaus202330 Jan 2024 11:23The slope is about 12-15%, probably heading west if north is at the top of the site plan. In my opinion, the main challenge here is the location and orientation. This calls for a good architect rather than a DIY approach or a planner from the developer. With this budget, I wouldn’t make compromises.
In my opinion, the positioning of the buildings is rather suboptimal. It’s also important to know how the surrounding area is planned. There seems to be a development plan. Where can it be found? Please do not post any links here, as the forum rules prohibit that. Just tell us its name, and we can look it up ourselves.
In my opinion, the positioning of the buildings is rather suboptimal. It’s also important to know how the surrounding area is planned. There seems to be a development plan. Where can it be found? Please do not post any links here, as the forum rules prohibit that. Just tell us its name, and we can look it up ourselves.
I am concerned that the staircase from the ground floor to the upper floor reduces the headroom of the staircase from the basement to the ground floor, since the second flight of the ground floor to upper floor staircase crosses the second flight of the basement to ground floor staircase.
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