ᐅ Floor plan – Experiences with converting into a separate apartment?
Created on: 15 Jul 2023 09:35
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andre41468A
andre4146815 Jul 2023 09:35The floor plan was originally designed as a granny flat but is now intended to become a small practice. For this purpose, two rooms (15 m² (161 sq ft) + 8 m² (86 sq ft)) and a small storage room of about 3-5 m² (32-54 sq ft) are needed. All interior walls are non-load-bearing, made only of drywall.
It will be a physiotherapy practice. Does anyone have experience with this?

It will be a physiotherapy practice. Does anyone have experience with this?
andre41468 schrieb:
It is going to be a physiotherapy clinicI’m not trying to be rude, but you should specify what you want or what needs to be included inside. There are people here who have never been inside a physiotherapy clinic.andre41468 schrieb:
For this, 2 rooms (15 m² (160 ft²) + 8 m² (86 ft²)) and a small storage room of about 3-5 m² (32-54 ft²) are necessary.What will the rooms be used for? A waiting area?A
andre4146815 Jul 2023 12:15This means the following are needed: 1 restroom, 1 room of 15m² (160ft²), 1 room of 8m² (86ft²), 1 small storage room of 3–5m² (32–54ft²), and 1 small reception area. There will usually be only one patient at a time, with only brief overlaps when an additional patient is present, so a small entrance area is sufficient. Does anyone have any suggestions? How would you design it?
What is the current construction status?
Did you complete your training as a physiotherapist only after planning your house with a standard granny flat / accessory dwelling unit?
https://www.instagram.com/11antgmxde/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/bauen-jetzt/
Did you complete your training as a physiotherapist only after planning your house with a standard granny flat / accessory dwelling unit?
https://www.instagram.com/11antgmxde/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/bauen-jetzt/
andre41468 schrieb:
This means the following are needed: 1 restroom, 1 room of 15sqm (160 sqft), 1 room of 8sqm (86 sqft), 1 small storage room of 3–5sqm (32–54 sqft), and 1 small reception area. Usually, there will be only one patient at a time, with only brief overlaps when an additional patient is present, so a small entrance area is sufficient. Does anyone have suggestions? How would you design it? Hmm… For example, I can imagine an area where clothing can be taken off, such as a chair or bench behind a screen. Then a treatment table that can be accessed from all sides. There are also practices where much work is done using wall ladders, bars, mirrors, and other equipment. A floor mat might be necessary…
You’ll need to provide some information. The rooms are not unlimited in size, but already exist. How are the walls constructed? Are they drywall? Has the screed been laid yet?
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