Here is our floor plan. Maybe someone still has a few useful tips for us... We would really appreciate it.
It is a semi-detached house in the Bauhaus style...




1st image: upper floor
2nd image: ground floor
3rd image: rear view of the house
4th image: front view of the house
5th image: rear view of the house
Best regards,
Family Böhm




It is a semi-detached house in the Bauhaus style...
1st image: upper floor
2nd image: ground floor
3rd image: rear view of the house
4th image: front view of the house
5th image: rear view of the house
Best regards,
Family Böhm
If I’m not mistaken, you planned windows with muntins at the top. Bauhaus style is a bit more than just floor-to-ceiling windows ;-)
Here is the confirmation that it’s a semi-detached house :-D
The straight staircase takes up a lot of space; consider a 3/4-turn staircase and place it along the central wall (west side?), roughly in the middle, so that you can plan two rooms on the upper floor (south side?) and a full floor below (north side?), with the bathroom located northwest for the wastewater pipes and the bedroom in the east (with a window facing south) — though that could get uncomfortably hot with those window sizes. Between the stairs’ width, place a hallway, which would also have windows on the left side (east?), where you could put a chair and/or a desk.
With a garage inside the building envelope, it’s no longer more than an end-terrace house floor plan. Unfortunately, other options don’t work. But there are variations here, too, that are interesting and functional :-)
Yes, many guest bathrooms have no window, but most of these “many” are found in social housing. A dark room has little to do with quality of life.
Architects don’t necessarily have more ideas, but they have the knowledge and can calculate.
Your full corner windows, for example, cannot structurally support the upper floor, which is actually logical. You’ll see the point. Where else should the foundation slab rest? That’s why it’s worth visiting the library or getting some magazines sometimes, because sometimes less (windows) really is more ;-)
Why actually include a (double?) garage within the building?
Here is the confirmation that it’s a semi-detached house :-D
The straight staircase takes up a lot of space; consider a 3/4-turn staircase and place it along the central wall (west side?), roughly in the middle, so that you can plan two rooms on the upper floor (south side?) and a full floor below (north side?), with the bathroom located northwest for the wastewater pipes and the bedroom in the east (with a window facing south) — though that could get uncomfortably hot with those window sizes. Between the stairs’ width, place a hallway, which would also have windows on the left side (east?), where you could put a chair and/or a desk.
With a garage inside the building envelope, it’s no longer more than an end-terrace house floor plan. Unfortunately, other options don’t work. But there are variations here, too, that are interesting and functional :-)
Yes, many guest bathrooms have no window, but most of these “many” are found in social housing. A dark room has little to do with quality of life.
Architects don’t necessarily have more ideas, but they have the knowledge and can calculate.
Your full corner windows, for example, cannot structurally support the upper floor, which is actually logical. You’ll see the point. Where else should the foundation slab rest? That’s why it’s worth visiting the library or getting some magazines sometimes, because sometimes less (windows) really is more ;-)
Why actually include a (double?) garage within the building?
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