ᐅ Floor plan of a single-family house approximately 170 m², without a basement, featuring a carport

Created on: 6 Jun 2022 20:07
S
SandyBlack
Questionnaire about your floor plan

Development plan / Restrictions

Plot size 477 m² (5,134 ft²)
Slope No
Site coverage ratio 0.3
Floor area ratio 0.8
Building envelope, building line and boundary 14 x 14 meters (46 x 46 feet)
Setbacks South/North 5 m (16 ft); East/West 2.50 m (8 ft)
Number of parking spaces 2 (side by side)
Number of floors 2
Roof type Gable roof
Architectural style
Orientation East/West
Maximum heights / limits
Other regulations

Homeowners’ requirements
Style, roof type, building type Gable roof
Basement, floors No basement, 2 floors
Number of people, ages 3: 33, 32, and 1.5 years (4th planned)
Space requirements on ground floor, upper floor
Ground floor: kitchen, living room, guest room, guest WC/shower, utility room, storage room, pantry
Upper floor: bathroom, laundry room, work corner, bedroom, 2 children’s rooms
Office: family use or home office? Home office 3 days per week
Guests per year approx. once a month grandparents visit overnight; plus approx. 3–6 additional visits per year
Open or closed architecture open
Conservative or modern construction modern?
Open kitchen, kitchen island open, island preferred but not a must
Number of dining seats
Fireplace No
Music/home cinema wall Guest room to include “cinema”; 7.2.4 speakers + screen or TV
Balcony, roof terrace No
Garage, carport Double carport (5.50 m wide x 6 m long (18 x 20 ft) + storage room (5.5 m wide x 3 m long [18 x 10 ft])
Utility garden, greenhouse No

House design
Who designed it:
- Architect Architect of the house supplier
What do you like most? Why? Open layout; living room somewhat separated; straight staircase (not a must); guest WC not directly by the entrance but nicely connected to guest room; long corridor upstairs for window seat and extra play area for children; large children’s rooms; large bathroom; appealing corner terrace solution possible (NW)
What don’t you like? Why? Pantry too small – probably not very practical this way; guest room too small – integrating cinema difficult; living room too narrow (3.50 m / 11.5 ft); only 1 m (3.3 ft) width between staircase and wall (too narrow?); guest WC big enough?; kitchen too small? Kitchen (half) island probably hard to implement well; no dedicated home office space

Estimated price according to architect/planner: 500,000
Personal price limit for house including fixtures: 550,000
Preferred heating technology: air-to-water heat pump

If you have to give up, which details/extensions
- can you do without: straight staircase; guest WC not next to front door; kitchen island; possibly pantry accessible from kitchen; children’s rooms could be a bit smaller
- can’t you do without: guest room; open kitchen/dining area; guest WC with shower; home office space; bathroom with walk-in, level-access shower & bathtub

Why has the design turned out the way it is? E.g. standard design from planner? Developed jointly according to our wishes
What makes it especially good or bad in your view? Many of our wishes already implemented

What is the most important/basic question about the floor plan in 130 characters?

Are we overlooking anything fundamental? What changes should we make? Is a narrow corridor a big issue?

The carport is planned as a double carport on the south side adjoining the recess of the utility room. It is intended to be 5.5 m (18 ft) wide x 9 m (30 ft) long, including a storage room with a length of 3 m (10 ft). Is the planned width sufficient for two cars side by side assuming no SUVs? We plan to use a station wagon like a Skoda Superb and a small car such as a Mercedes A-Class or Toyota Leaf.
The carport positioning is planned as follows:

Floor plan of a plot plan with the buildings barn and inn plus boundary dimensions.

The house itself would be pushed fully to the eastern building boundary to maximize the western garden area.

The current floor plan from the architect looks like this:

Two floor plans: ground floor left with kitchen, living; upper floor right with bathroom, bedrooms.


We have already considered some optimizations.
Central to our considerations is adding a second recess on the north side where the living room is, measuring 1 m (3.3 ft) long and 4 m (13 ft) wide, and including a laundry room on the upper floor to house washer and dryer.
This would allow reducing the size of the utility room on the ground floor significantly. We would shorten the utility room by 0.7 m (2.3 ft), leaving about 9 m² (97 ft²). The freed-up space would benefit the guest WC, guest room, and living room.

In the kitchen, we would like to extend the pantry fully along the wall and place the kitchen before it. We have tried to mark our ideas on the floor plan:

Floor plan of a house with living/dining, kitchen, study, hall, utility and WC/shower.

Is the kitchen large enough for a household of 3 to 4 people? An island solution will probably be difficult to realize, right?

Upstairs, the gained space from the recess would be used for the laundry room. In the plan shown below, we placed the study next to the laundry room; however, we have reconsidered and now prefer to position the work corner where the storage space currently is. The work corner doesn’t need much space, primarily just a desk about 1.60 m (5.2 ft) wide. If there is room for a small cabinet, that’s nice but not essential. Where we marked the study, we would instead plan a walk-in closet. Unfortunately, we have not found a better location for the work corner. We also considered moving it near the children’s rooms, but then the child bedrooms would probably become rather small (about 12–13 m² / 130–140 ft²). These will definitely be adjusted to the same size regardless.
Maybe you have some ideas.
The windows on the ground and upper floor are not finalized yet; these are currently placeholders.
We welcome all comments 🙂.

Upper floor plan: corridor, children’s rooms, bedroom, walk-in, laundry, bathroom, storage.


P.S.: Here is the old planning thread:
https://www.hausbau-forum.de/threads/bebauung-Grundstück-keller-ja-oder-nein.42556/

The planning has fundamentally changed since then, and the plot has meanwhile been remeasured.

Site plan: colored building zones, green outlined rectangle with N, blue square buildings.


Site plan: parcels 6803, 6777, and 6802 with boundary lines, measurements and north arrow.


Site plan of a plot with boundary lines, parcel numbers and measurements.


Site plan of a plot with buildings, parcels, road layout and scale 1:500.
B
Benutzer 1001
7 Jun 2022 08:15
And this unnecessary recess—if it were only on one floor and covered the entrance, that would be fine, but as it is, it just adds cost.
S
SandyBlack
7 Jun 2022 08:24
Why does the recess cost so much? The recess actually adds living space on both the ground floor and the upper floor. In contrast, a bay window only adds space on the ground floor. In terms of cost compared to added living space, the recess is clearly more economical than a bay window.

I also need to defend our architect a bit. We gave her the floor plan because we really liked it as it was. In the first step, she basically only enlarged the utility room by creating the recess. Of course, she could have pointed out the negative aspects, but well...

You really made us think… which is great because we can still change everything now.

What do you think about a building footprint of approximately 14 x 8 meters (46 x 26 feet)? That way, we would have the largest continuous garden area to the north, about 10 meters (33 feet) long. We would then have the architect create a completely new design. Another idea was to take a floor plan we once found here on the forum as a new starting point. I have attached it.

Unfortunately, I no longer remember who shared it, but anyway, many thanks for the idea 🙂

What do you think? Should we use that as a base or start completely fresh with as wide a building footprint as possible?

Floor plan of a residential house with kitchen, dining room, living room, hallway, bathroom, bedroom and stairs


Floor plan of a house: kitchen, bedroom, bathroom, hallway and stairs, with dimensions.
D
driver55
7 Jun 2022 08:30
SandyBlack schrieb:

I also have to somewhat defend our architect. We had given her the floor plan because we liked it so much.
That explains everything… 🙄
Katja has already covered everything, especially the staircase, the too narrow L-shaped living/dining/kitchen area, the overall orientation…

The architect should start working. There is still a lot to be done.
S
SoL
7 Jun 2022 09:06
Procedure:
Figure out what you want
Prioritize
Present a list to the architect
Have the architect design specifically for your plot of land

The woman studied this, and you are paying her for it. Just let her show you what she can do.
K
Kreisrund
7 Jun 2022 09:25
If you liked the floor plan so much, maybe you can figure out which specific aspects appealed to you. Surely it wasn’t the rooms being too narrow, but perhaps the arrangement of the kitchen, dining, and living rooms around a corner. Just as an example.
K a t j a7 Jun 2022 10:34
ypg schrieb:

Or completely to the north in a crosswise position. Then make the house as narrow as possible.

If I were you, I would try this approach. The plot is small, and you can’t ignore the surrounding buildings. I also wouldn’t underestimate the likely house to be built on the west side, no matter what the neighbor promises. These days, some people need money quickly, and just like that, the land gets sold.
ypg schrieb:

There is a related thread by @Samsonite, who has almost the same problem with a similar orientation.

It feels like only leftover plots end up here (sorry, no offense meant about your property).

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