ᐅ Floor plan for a 160 sqm urban villa – Requesting advice!

Created on: 28 Jan 2019 09:23
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Bauherrin92
Hello everyone,

we are planning to build an urban villa with 160 sqm (1720 sq ft) plus a basement in rural Bavaria. Since we are now in the crucial phase of floor plan design, we would really appreciate your opinions and suggestions for improvements.

The following issues concern us the most:
1. Arrangement of the house and garage on the plot: The garage has been deliberately placed on the west side to create distance from the neighbor. To catch the evening sun, the house has been set back. However, I wonder if this looks "good," as I have never seen such an arrangement before. We are also undecided whether the garage should be detached or attached to the house (possibly with access through the pantry?). On the plans, the garage is at the neighbor’s boundary. There is currently no house there.
2. The cloakroom and dressing room seem too small to comfortably place proper wardrobes and move around freely.
3. In general, I feel the overall design could still be improved, including the arrangement of windows.

Here is the questionnaire:

Development plan / restrictions
Plot size: 800 sqm (8,600 sq ft)
Slope: no
Floor area ratio: 0.35
Floor space index: 0.7
Building window, building line and boundary: 3 m (10 ft) to the street
Edge development: garage yes
Number of parking spaces: 2
Number of storeys: 2
Roof style: open construction

Homeowners’ requirements
Style, roof type, building type: urban villa, 2 full storeys, hipped roof
Basement, storeys: basement, ground floor, first floor
Number of people, age: two adults, schoolchild, expecting a baby
Space requirements ground floor, upper floor: three bedrooms, spacious living-dining area, separate cloakroom, shower toilet on the ground floor
Office: none
Guest bedrooms per year: none
Open or closed architecture: open
Conservative or modern construction: modern
Open kitchen, kitchen island: yes
Number of dining seats: 4–10 (when guests visit)
Fireplace: yes
Garage, carport: prefabricated double garage
Other wishes / special features / daily routine, also reasons why this or that should or should not be included:
- Cloakroom in a niche
- Shower toilet on the ground floor, later for the teenage daughter
- Large children’s rooms with floor-to-ceiling windows facing the garden
- Dressing room in the master bedroom
- Pantry for yellow bags (recycling waste bags), vacuum cleaner, cleaning supplies, pasta stock, etc.

House design
Who made the plan: planner from a construction company
What do you particularly like? Why?
- Basement: fine as is
- Ground floor: large pantry, L-shaped kitchen/living/dining area
- Upper floor: large children’s rooms
What don’t you like? Why?
- Ground floor: layout of toilet and cloakroom
- Upper floor: dressing room and bathroom possibly too small
- detached garage
Preferred heating technology: undecided so far

If you had to give up something, which details/upgrades would you skip?
- Could give up: access from garage into the house
- Could not do without: pantry, dressing room, cloakroom

Why has the design turned out as it is now? Our wishes were implemented by the planner

We look forward to your advice!!!

P.S.: The red circle is supposed to indicate north, sorry, it couldn’t be done otherwise!
Floor plan: living/dining, kitchen, hallway, toilet, cloakroom, pantry; staircase.


Floor plan of a house with bathroom, corridor, dressing room, sleeping and children’s rooms, staircase.


Site plan with pink building areas, yellow streets, blue boundary lines and grey edge zones.
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Bauherrin92
29 Mar 2019 20:14
So, the plans have arrived.

Floor plan of a house with living room, dining area, kitchen, hallway, guest toilet, and cloakroom.


Floor plan of a house: staircase in the middle, bathroom, bedroom, walk-in closet, two children’s rooms.
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ypg
29 Mar 2019 20:58
I really have no words for this... 41 pages for nothing.
Are you experiencing communication issues on your side? Are potential bottlenecks, meaning problem areas, not communicated at all by you?
11ant29 Mar 2019 23:04
ypg schrieb:
41 pages for nothing

The first person who will make a significant change to the plan will be the structural engineer.
https://www.instagram.com/11antgmxde/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/bauen-jetzt/
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Yosan
29 Mar 2019 23:21
I haven’t read all the pages, but looking at today’s plans, I immediately wondered why the bedroom and the walk-in closet aren’t swapped on the upper floor. That way, you would enter the sleeping area through the walk-in closet. The closet would then be closer to the bathroom, and you wouldn’t have to walk past the bed again. Of course, the windows wouldn’t be as easily arranged as they are now, but personally, I would prefer less symmetry on the outside in exchange for more practical routes inside.
kaho67429 Mar 2019 23:30
A bit has already been done. The family wants the rest as it is. I wouldn’t expect any structural issues—after all, there is a solid wall in the middle.

In my opinion, the kitchen door should be moved further to the right according to the plan; otherwise, people will bump into the kitchen cabinets later. The bedroom and kitchen definitely need to be furnished. I don’t see nightstands next to the bed yet—at least not on both sides.

I would try to center the windows on the front facade a bit more.
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kbt09
29 Mar 2019 23:51
The dressing room and bedroom need to be swapped, but no matter what, it’s unlikely that more than just under 3 m (10 feet) of wardrobe space will fit. Otherwise, maybe add a dresser.

Overall, I would like to see the plan with the intended furniture layout. That will likely reveal some problematic areas.