ᐅ Floor Plan Design and Placement – Single-Family Home of Approximately 200 m² on a 900 m² Plot

Created on: 4 May 2021 20:49
S
Samantheus
Hello everyone,

we would like to get feedback on our current planning for a single-family house. Here is the completed questionnaire.

Development Plan / Restrictions
Plot size: 911m² (9,800 sq ft)
Slope: no
Site coverage ratio: 0.3
Floor area ratio: 0.45
Building envelope, building line and boundary
Edge development: garage only
Number of parking spaces: 4
Number of floors: 2
Roof shape: gable roof
Architectural style:
Orientation: The garden faces southwest, the house is about 5m (16 ft) from the street, parallel to the street
Maximum heights / limits
Other requirements

Owners’ Requirements
Architectural style, roof shape, building type: single-family house, modern, gable roof main building, green flat roof extension and garage
Basement, floors: basement, ground floor, upper floor
Number of people, age: currently 2 adults (mid-30s), 1 small child; planned for 2 adults and 2–3 children
Space requirements on ground and upper floors: see floor plan
Office: home office (working professionally from home, 2 offices required)
Guests per year:
Open or closed architecture: open
Conservative or modern construction: modern
Open kitchen, cooking island: open kitchen in U-shape with counter or kitchen with cooking island
Number of dining places: 6
Fireplace: optional, rather not
Music / stereo wall: yes
Balcony, roof terrace: no
Garage, carport: double garage with two parking spaces in front (currently 1 car, possibly 2 in the future)
Utility garden, greenhouse: only recreational garden
Other wishes / special features / daily routine, including reasons why certain things should or should not be: Professional work from home, therefore two large offices are required. The plot is a corner lot on two streets, so the L-shaped house design aims to shield somewhat from the streets and create a protected garden area. If a third child arrives, one office should be converted into a third child’s bedroom. Then a small office area will be separated off in the master bedroom with a drywall partition or a basement room will be finished.

House Design
Who is responsible for the design: planner from a construction company (with some do-it-yourself input)
What do you particularly like? Why?: 2 equally sized children’s bedrooms, 2 offices with enough space for full-time work (>40 hours per week), large living/dining/kitchen area, extension provides light and noise protection from the street
What do you dislike? Why?: staircase ends at front door, which might lead to dirt being carried inside
Price estimate according to architect/planner: about 700k for KfW 55 standard including garage and basement, solid construction
Personal price limit for house including fittings: about 800k including exterior landscaping
Preferred heating system: air-to-water heat pump

In the living/dining/kitchen area, the kitchen should be U-shaped with a counter or a cooking island on the far left. Afterwards comes the dining area, then the sofa. The stereo system with large floor-standing speakers should be on the wall opposite the kitchen. The extension should house a piano and a tipi (children’s play tent). Alternatively, the sofa could be placed in the bottom right corner and the speakers at the end of the extension.
The offices should have space for a large desk (2m x 1m (6.5 ft x 3.3 ft)), a bookshelf wall, and a small seating area.

If you have to give up something, which details / expansions
-can you give up: fireplace / stove
-can you not give up: offices

Why is the design the way it is now?

Combination of our suggestions and ideas from the planner during a joint site visit

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

The most important in 130 characters:
  • Is the floor plan good from your perspective, or have we overlooked something important?


Detailed questions about the floor plan:
  • Does the entrance area seem too large?
  • Do you have alternative ideas for designing the staircase better (we are currently considering either a U-shaped staircase with landing or an L-shaped staircase with landing)? We had a version drawn with an entrance bay so the staircase doesn't end right at the door. But that costs more and might make the entrance area too large?
  • We are still considering reducing the number of windows in the living/dining/kitchen area. What do you think? We are afraid it might get too hot in summer because of the southern orientation (external blinds are planned).
  • Another consideration is external roller shutters or blinds on the upper floor?
  • Regarding the living room layout, we’re unsure. On one hand, we want two large floor-standing speakers optimally placed for a stereo triangle, on the other hand, we want to have a view of the garden from the sofa.
  • About the windows on the upper floor, we're unsure: Does a floor-to-ceiling window make sense in the children’s rooms, or is it rather a safety risk? We have planned a window next to the bed (on the same wall as the head of the bed). I'm unsure if that might look strange in reality or if the bed should be placed on the opposite wall (but then the headboard would face the children’s room window).

Questions about placement:
  • There is a busy street at the bottom side and a less busy street on the right side. Currently, the house is about 5m (16 ft) from the busy street and 8m (26 ft) from the right street. If we move the house further upwards, we would have more quiet from the street, but the garden would become smaller and the "wasted front garden area" would increase. What do you think?
  • Do you have any creative ideas to shift or stretch the house further to the right? On the left side is a garage, which we would like to build directly onto.


Option 1:

Modern white single-family house with garage, entrance, garden and roses in the foreground

White, modern two-story villa with large glass windows and garden flowers.

Modern white villa with side flat-roof extension, garden and flowers in foreground.


Basement floor plan: hallway connects four basement rooms, building services.

House floor plan: open living/dining/kitchen area, office, hallway, stairs, garage

House floor plan with hallway, bathroom, children’s rooms and bedroom


Option 2:

Modern two-story house with large garage, entrance area and garden

House floor plan: open kitchen, living/dining/kitchen, two offices, hallway, WC, storage room


Placement:

Floor plan of a house with garage, several rooms, stairs and measurements



Thank you in advance!

Best regards
Samantheus
Y
ypg
21 Jun 2021 23:49
Samantheus schrieb:

We are planning a built-in wardrobe/coat closet to the right of the entrance door on the wall.

Probably not, since your bathroom is wider. If you place the downpipe in the right corner, it will exit in the office next to the window. You need to draw it yourself—I can’t compare the measurements on my phone. Do you understand the issue?
If the architect suggests corners or loops, like an S-shaped bend (I’m not even sure if that’s allowed), I would definitely reject that as the client.
S
Samantheus
22 Jun 2021 00:04
Ah, okay, I understand. I thought the pipe could simply start somewhere in the bathroom floor, but it apparently needs to start at a bathroom wall. On the ground floor, there aren’t really any walls that are suitable or positioned like the bathroom walls on the upper floor. With this background information, I can now ask more specific questions. Thank you very much!
RomeoZwo22 Jun 2021 08:04
Samantheus schrieb:

Children's bathroom: What bothers you about it? Is it that you might hear noise from the shower in the children's bedroom? Or something else? I don't think the idea of placing the shower in the utility room is a bad one in principle. We don't want a shower with a glass partition.

Ground floor toilet: The size is intended to keep the option open of adding a shower later if needed. As long as that's not the case, it will be used as a large cleaning closet. The door placement can still be reconsidered... Would you put it right next to the basement stairs? So that the wall facing the garage offers the maximum cupboard space?

I just don't like that corner in the second children's bedroom. As the saying goes, you can’t mess up a good floor plan ;-) . Therefore, I would try to keep the children's bedroom wall straight. The bedrooms are large enough so that you don’t necessarily need 60cm (24 inches) of space behind the door for a closet, meaning you might still be able to play with the wall/door arrangement between the children's bathroom/utility room (or make the utility room accessible from the bathroom).

Yes, the door right next to the stairs. I would also have the shower in the ground floor bathroom installed right away—just the fittings and the drainage, no partition. You can always place a cabinet in front later, but installing a partition would be a bigger renovation (new tiling, new plumbing). And how often do you retile anyway, maybe every 40 years?

P.S.: Where is a closet supposed to go in the dressing room? There are only windows there...
RomeoZwo22 Jun 2021 08:25
So, I’m still not 100% satisfied, but here’s a suggestion for the upper floor (first floor).


Floor plan: upper floor with two children’s rooms, master bedroom with walk-in closet, hallway, shower, utility room.
Y
ypg
22 Jun 2021 08:34
RomeoZwo schrieb:

So I’m not 100% satisfied yet, but here’s a suggestion for the upper floor...

[ATTACH alt="Bild1.jpg"]62860[/ATTACH]

That’s also more or less how I would see it.
However, I’d like to point out that a walk-in closet should also have enough space for a stool (better two) and a mirror. Ok, a mirror could fit well on the opposite wall in Romeo’s example. I’m not sure about the orientations, but I would try swapping the kids’ rooms with the master area: master bathroom above the guest toilet, bedroom at the top left of the floor plan, children’s bathroom to the right of the stairs… this would also work better with the drainage pipe.
M
Myrna_Loy
22 Jun 2021 08:46
ypg schrieb:


However, I would also like to mention that a walk-in closet should ideally have enough space for a stool (preferably two) and a mirror.
Otherwise, it’s just a walk-in wardrobe 😀