ᐅ Explanation of the Hypes

Created on: 17 Jul 2017 07:46
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blablub1234
Hello,

My wife and I visited a model home park for prefabricated houses yesterday, and we noticed that each house offered various features and floor plans whose practical benefits I don’t quite understand. That’s why I’m starting this thread, hoping you can explain the advantages of these choices or point out what I might be missing and why it still makes sense to design a house that way:

1. Almost every house had floor-to-ceiling windows installed. What’s the purpose of these? I imagine they would be terrible both in summer and winter. Wouldn’t it get extremely hot in summer? And in winter, don’t you constantly have to lower the blinds so that anyone passing by can’t look directly into the living room or inside the house? Also, isn’t the effort to clean those windows huge? Am I missing something? Do they have advantages that I don’t see?

2. There wasn’t a single house where the kitchen and dining area were separated from the living space; at best, the kitchen was separated from the dining area. I understand that having everything open makes the space appear larger and is better for hosting many people, but isn’t it very impractical? If I’m frying or cooking something in the kitchen, doesn’t the whole living room end up smelling like food? It would also bother me that as soon as my wife or I have guests over, the other person couldn’t sit in the living room and watch TV quietly, for example. This might sound a bit picky, but for me, it’s important that everyone can invite their friends without the other person always being within earshot or needing to get out of the way somehow. Why are open-plan ground floors so common? What are the real advantages?

3. The balconies on the upper floor are always accessible from one of the children’s bedrooms and the parents’ bedroom. Doesn’t that significantly affect privacy? I can’t imagine it’s great if my child can constantly knock on our bedroom door via the balcony, for example. Also, if you have two children, wouldn’t the one without a balcony be at a disadvantage?

I don’t want to bias you with my opinions here—I’m completely open to your views because I’d like to be convinced of the benefits. So I would like to know your reasons for including such features in your plans. Alternatively, has anyone built in a more “traditional” way and can speak to the practicality of these layout choices?

Best regards
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haydee
21 Jul 2017 15:28
We have one, even hydronic. Curious to see how we benefit from it.
Climbee21 Jul 2017 15:58
11ant schrieb:
Could these two not have been planned as a single heating circuit for this room as well?

Possible, but that was the homeowner’s decision, not mine, as I am only the tenant.
11ant21 Jul 2017 17:15
Climbee schrieb:
Possible, but it was the homeowner's decision, not mine, since I am just a tenant.

Alright then. But whoever has the authority to decide could simply change this one small point in my opinion, and then the result would also "fit" as needed.
https://www.instagram.com/11antgmxde/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/bauen-jetzt/
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Alex85
21 Jul 2017 18:49
How did people manage to dry towels before towel warmers existed… they simply hung them on something like a rod. They would dry perfectly fine on their own, as the room is heated and ventilated.
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ypg
21 Jul 2017 22:55
Alex85 schrieb:
How did people dry towels before towel warmers existed ... they just hung them up, on something like a rod. They dry easily on their own, the room is heated and ventilated after all.

We are NOW placing them over a chair or a basket armchair.
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Alex85
21 Jul 2017 22:59
ypg schrieb:
We are NOW placing it over a chair, or rather an armchair

We have lived in apartments with these frames (meaning the radiators, not your rattan furniture). Yes, they’re not bad; they definitely work. A bar for hanging towels—that’s what we have now and also had in my parents’ home before. Because it really doesn’t matter whether a towel dries in 4 or 6 hours. I only shower every 24 hours, and towels are replaced based on usage, not because they take too long to dry.