ᐅ Floor plan of 200 sqm with an integrated conservatory and gallery

Created on: 24 Apr 2015 23:53
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merlin83
Hello,

We are currently planning the following floor plan, and I am not sure if it all makes sense or if some elements might be problematic or simply do not fit well together in reality.

I am open to any advice and ideas and would be grateful for your input.

Note:

  • The toilet will be taken out of the sloped ceiling area (the bathroom still needs to be organized)
  • The dressing room still needs to be worked out.
  • Glazing will be adjusted and mostly added.

The house requires a waterproof concrete shell (white bathtub); the plot is flat. The eaves height is 4.25 meters (14 feet).

Thank you very much and best regards


Grundriss eines Hauses: Garage mit Auto davor, offener Küchen-/Ess-/Wohnbereich, Diele, Bad, Treppe.

Grundriss eines Stockwerks eines Wohnhauses mit Schlafzimmer, Kinderzimmer, Bad und Flur.

Kellergeschoss-Grundriss mit Flur, Keller, Hobby, Technik und Treppe.


Luftbild eines Wohngebiets mit gelbem Kreis, rotem Baufenster und gelb/orangen Linien über Gebäuden.
Y
ypg
25 Apr 2015 11:03
So much living space... But when the fifth child arrives (if all goes well ), you have to convert the office into a bedroom. The rooms you actually need become tight in the house, while there is an abundance of (re)presentation space. A gallery is nice, but you have too many corners that just collect dust in everyday life with a normal daily routine. With such a large living area, you could plan a more functional kitchen and include spaces that can optionally be converted using partition walls.
M
merlin83
25 Apr 2015 11:34
ypg schrieb:
So much living space... But when the fifth child arrives (if all goes well ), you’ll have to convert the office into a nursery. For the rooms you actually need, the house becomes tight, yet you have plenty of space for (re)presentation. The gallery is nice, but you have too many corners that just gather dust in everyday life with a typical daily routine. With such a large living area, you could design a more functional kitchen and include spaces that can be adapted with partitions if necessary.

Hello ypg,

Thank you very much for your advice.

Would this already work better (see attachment)? Or does it need a complete redesign?

Ground plan of a single-family house with garage, carport, kitchen, dining/living area, hallway, and bathroom.
M
merlin83
25 Apr 2015 11:36
ypg schrieb:
So much living space... But when the fifth child arrives (if all goes well ), you will have to convert the office into a nursery. For rooms you actually need, the house will feel cramped, but you will have plenty of (re)presentation space. The gallery is nice, but you have too many corners that will just collect dust in everyday life with a typical daily routine. With such a large living area, you could design a more functional kitchen and plan spaces that can potentially be converted with partitions.



Hello ypg,

thank you very much for your advice.

Would this work better as it is now (see attachment)? Or does it need a complete redesign?

The study or third nursery would now be about 18 sqm (193 sq ft). I can imagine that the TV area could be closed off with a sliding door.
L
Legurit
25 Apr 2015 12:24
So, we have 187 m² (2010 sq ft) and four full-sized rooms of about 16 m² (170 sq ft) each on the upper floor, plus a master bedroom with an en-suite bathroom (is that the correct term?) on the ground floor, including a small separate shower room accessible only from the bedroom. Our open living, dining, and kitchen area is 55 m² (590 sq ft) — you have to save square meters somewhere. We also have a utility room of about 8 m² (86 sq ft) on both the ground and upper floors. However, the bathroom on the upper floor is smaller for us.

If that matches your requirements and you have the budget for it, I find the floor plan nice. I would change the walk-in closet and the bedroom, though — I’d rather have the bedroom as a closed-off room and use the closet as a "bridge" to the bathroom. The back-and-forth between closet and bathroom will happen more often than going back into the bedroom. Also, this way you don’t disturb anyone still sleeping in the bedroom while someone else is getting ready.

Another point might be the kitchen layout — why are there two chairs at the counter? That doesn’t actually make it more functional.
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Manu1976
25 Apr 2015 12:35
Have you ever lived in a house with a mezzanine? There is no privacy there, especially with children. Food smells, conversations, TV noise, children screaming, kids’ music, and so on travel perfectly from downstairs to upstairs and vice versa. Not to mention, you’re sitting comfortably with guests in the conservatory, having a glass of wine, and the possibly moody teenager has to rush past the mezzanine in pajamas, a shirt, and a towel to get to the bathroom (or the other way around).

I would skip the mezzanine and instead try to include an additional bathroom for the children. In my opinion, a mezzanine with kids is wasted space.
Y
ypg
25 Apr 2015 12:52
Kitchen work paths are simply too long. There is no storage space for baking trays next to the oven for setting them down or pouring ingredients. Where will the stove be placed? Where is the countertop workspace then? In any case, the classic work triangle of preparation, storage (fridge), and washing doesn’t work. The counter is used as a seating nook.
Regards, Yvonne