ᐅ Creating a Submission Plan for a 140m² Single-Family Home – Feedback and Tips?
Created on: 18 Apr 2017 17:31
Z
zuluindia
Hello dear community,
We are planning to build a single-family house next year and believe we are ready to have a permit plan created.
The plot is 21m (69 feet) wide and 31m (102 feet) long.
The groundwater level is very high, so no basement.
The zoning regulations require both the house and the garage to have a gable roof.
The garden is located to the north behind the house; we deliberately placed the terrace on the north(west) side because we both prefer not to be exposed to the sun for long periods.
25 cm (10 inches) bricks + 20 cm (8 inches) insulation.
The house will be heated with geothermal energy (KNV Topline 1145) using a trench collector system.
The garage will be built without a door, essentially as a carport, allowing side access to the main entrance.
The roof above the mechanical room (in the attic) will simply be extended.
The guest toilet/bathroom on the ground floor will partially fit under the staircase.
Zoning restrictions/requirements: gable roof, eave height 5m (16 feet)
Plot size: 650 m² (7,000 sq ft)
Slope: no
Floor area ratio: 0.3
Building envelope, building line and boundary: 3m (10 feet), garage recessed 5m (16 feet)
Edge development: my "garage" adjacent to existing neighbor’s garage
Number of stories: 2
Roof style: gable roof
Architectural style: rather modern
Orientation: south-facing if possible
Maximum heights/limits: 5m (16 feet) eave height/roof edge
Homeowner requirements
No basement (due to high groundwater)
2 people (planning for 4)
Office: only intended as a storage room/guest room, for future needs
House design
Who designed it:
I designed it myself
We planned the kitchen in the “niche” so it is not the center of the room when entering and because it faces the street, letting us follow what is happening outside a bit.
The living room is on the darker north side since light from the south or west can be distracting when watching TV on the couch (as it is currently).
Thanks in advance,
Christian
We are planning to build a single-family house next year and believe we are ready to have a permit plan created.
The plot is 21m (69 feet) wide and 31m (102 feet) long.
The groundwater level is very high, so no basement.
The zoning regulations require both the house and the garage to have a gable roof.
The garden is located to the north behind the house; we deliberately placed the terrace on the north(west) side because we both prefer not to be exposed to the sun for long periods.
25 cm (10 inches) bricks + 20 cm (8 inches) insulation.
The house will be heated with geothermal energy (KNV Topline 1145) using a trench collector system.
The garage will be built without a door, essentially as a carport, allowing side access to the main entrance.
The roof above the mechanical room (in the attic) will simply be extended.
The guest toilet/bathroom on the ground floor will partially fit under the staircase.
Zoning restrictions/requirements: gable roof, eave height 5m (16 feet)
Plot size: 650 m² (7,000 sq ft)
Slope: no
Floor area ratio: 0.3
Building envelope, building line and boundary: 3m (10 feet), garage recessed 5m (16 feet)
Edge development: my "garage" adjacent to existing neighbor’s garage
Number of stories: 2
Roof style: gable roof
Architectural style: rather modern
Orientation: south-facing if possible
Maximum heights/limits: 5m (16 feet) eave height/roof edge
Homeowner requirements
No basement (due to high groundwater)
2 people (planning for 4)
Office: only intended as a storage room/guest room, for future needs
House design
Who designed it:
I designed it myself
We planned the kitchen in the “niche” so it is not the center of the room when entering and because it faces the street, letting us follow what is happening outside a bit.
The living room is on the darker north side since light from the south or west can be distracting when watching TV on the couch (as it is currently).
Thanks in advance,
Christian
C
Caspar202020 Apr 2017 16:20Double-layer wall thickness on both sides works for 10.5cm (4 inches).
For 15cm (6 inches), I can already do triple layers on both sides using thicker 75mm (3 inches) studs.
For 15cm (6 inches), I can already do triple layers on both sides using thicker 75mm (3 inches) studs.
11ant schrieb:
Maybe someone will eventually develop a useful plugin for house design programs that shows the clearances under stairs My house design software has a section and dimensioning feature that makes it easy to check this clearly.
zuluindia schrieb:
What I meant was, instead of the top 2 steps, maybe staying horizontal for about 30cm (+/-) first and then leading the steps down (this would provide ceiling height in the floor below).
But I really have no idea, so it might just not be possible... Yes, that’s the problem ... no knowledge about stairs ... the one currently planned is already quite steep, so your idea won’t work.
kbt09 schrieb:
My little house design program has a section and dimensioning feature that makes it easy to check everything wonderfully .Which one do you use?
I was specifically thinking of something for beginners that gives a warning sound or makes the line blink red if you draw a low-clearance staircase.
https://www.instagram.com/11antgmxde/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/bauen-jetzt/
kbt09 schrieb:
That’s what Brain 1.0 is for I use it practically “several times a day”; it can solve certain layer-8 problems. But I was actually asking which software you use to create the drawings that you use here to illustrate your suggestions to the questioners.
Or did I already ask this, and should I find your answer file in Brain 1.0?
https://www.instagram.com/11antgmxde/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/bauen-jetzt/
No, sorry, @11ant. I use Virtual Architecture Home Designer Professional 4.01 .. I have been using it for about 8 to 9 years (that's how long I've had it) and it originally cost 99 euros. It used to be EU software, but now it seems to have been integrated into the Arcadia products.