ᐅ Floor Plan Optimization for Urban Villa + Considerations for Land Elevation
Created on: 31 Jan 2020 13:29
S
Shiny86
Plot size 492 sqm (5293 sq ft)
Slope yes
Site coverage ratio?
Floor area ratio?
Building envelope, building line, and boundary?
Boundary development?
Number of parking spaces 2
Number of floors 2
Roof type Pyramid roof, 25 degrees
Architectural style Modern urban villa
Orientation Main entrance facing north
Maximum heights/limits
Additional requirements?
Clients’ Requirements
Style, roof type, building type
Modern urban villa with pyramid roof, 25 degrees
Basement, floors 2 full floors without basement
Number of occupants 4
Open kitchen, kitchen island
Number of parking spaces 8-10
Garage
House design
Who designed it?
-Architect
What do you particularly like? Why?
Large living area, master bathroom
What don’t you like? Why?
Utility room quite small and master bedroom small, children’s room somewhat too large
Why is the design as it is now?
The architect implemented the corresponding wishes
What do you think is especially good or bad about it?
Good: large living area
I am uncertain about the half-height window sizes and the swing direction of the doors
What is the most important/basic question about the floor plan summarized in 130 characters?
What do you think about the floor plans?
Slope yes
Site coverage ratio?
Floor area ratio?
Building envelope, building line, and boundary?
Boundary development?
Number of parking spaces 2
Number of floors 2
Roof type Pyramid roof, 25 degrees
Architectural style Modern urban villa
Orientation Main entrance facing north
Maximum heights/limits
Additional requirements?
Clients’ Requirements
Style, roof type, building type
Modern urban villa with pyramid roof, 25 degrees
Basement, floors 2 full floors without basement
Number of occupants 4
Open kitchen, kitchen island
Number of parking spaces 8-10
Garage
House design
Who designed it?
-Architect
What do you particularly like? Why?
Large living area, master bathroom
What don’t you like? Why?
Utility room quite small and master bedroom small, children’s room somewhat too large
Why is the design as it is now?
The architect implemented the corresponding wishes
What do you think is especially good or bad about it?
Good: large living area
I am uncertain about the half-height window sizes and the swing direction of the doors
What is the most important/basic question about the floor plan summarized in 130 characters?
- Where could it still be optimized? Would you recommend different window dimensions or sill heights?
- What do you think is poor or what would you do differently?
- A partition wall will be added in the walk-in closet. That would theoretically allow watching TV from the bed. I am considering a lightweight wall. I plan to place a 211cm (83 inches) Pax combination wardrobe in the closet. The closet is planned with a raw width of 218cm (86 inches). Do you think 218cm is enough for the Pax once the walls are plastered, or how wide should the rough dimensions preferably be?
- Is the hallway on the ground floor too narrow?
- Would you raise the ground level? The house would be 40cm (16 inches) below street level. If I build a terrace into the garden, it would be about 1m (3 ft) difference. You could raise only the house level, resulting in approximately 1.6m (5 ft) difference between terrace and garden. I don’t know anyone living below street level. Raising the garden would probably not be allowed without permits, and affected neighbors likely wouldn’t agree. On the sides of the house adjacent to neighbors, raising is permitted only up to certain limits. I am overwhelmed with the decision.
- Do you have any ideas for arranging the sofa differently and placing the TV sensibly? My husband doesn’t want the sofa back facing a window. I still need to get used to placing the sofa in the middle of the room.
- Is the kitchen size sufficient for a nice kitchen with an island?
What do you think about the floor plans?
11ant schrieb:
You all seriously underestimate the clumsy bear paws of the framing crew. What should I be prepared for?
I can live with a niche. I’ll manage some kind of wardrobe. They can clearly see it’s a wardrobe niche and will make it deep enough.
But if I say, for example, the living room is 3.35 meters (11 feet) long, what can I realistically expect?
I’m paying for every 0.10 meter by 0.10 meter (4 inches by 4 inches) of extra house. So they should be able to get that almost exactly right, right?
Please clarify what is realistic here.
Shiny86 schrieb:
What should I be prepared for? Expect to get interpretations of the drawn dimensions that are only accurate to about half a decimeter (2 inches), including tolerances, and of course, right angles somewhere between 89 and 91 degrees (in case you’re wondering: neither Celsius, Fahrenheit, nor Réaumur!).
Shiny86 schrieb:
They see it’s a wardrobe niche and make it deep enough. They won’t even consider whether you’re planning to use an Ikea or Möbelfranz wardrobe; in fact, they don’t even interpret the niche as a wardrobe. For all they care, you could just as well put a terrarium there. Soon you could charge admission for the cute things your child says.
Shiny86 schrieb:
Are 201/13x windows too wide in terms of wear and tear? If they are single-pane, then yes.
https://www.instagram.com/11antgmxde/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/bauen-jetzt/
11ant schrieb:
Single-leaf would be the case, yes.No, I meant double-leaf.
With a central mullion, that would be recommended for such wide openings, or is a French door (rebated door) just as good?
Shiny86 schrieb:
For such wide openings, would a mullion be recommended, or does a stulp work just as well?Due to the stress on the hinges, you definitely need to divide the total width. Having a mullion or not determines whether the two leaves are equally operable – with a stulp, it would be awkward if you only want to open the second leaf. With a mullion at this size and a symmetrical division, it might be borderline for use as a required emergency escape route.https://www.instagram.com/11antgmxde/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/bauen-jetzt/
In our case, the masonry was done very precisely, with only a few millimeters difference at most, all clearly under one centimeter (about 0.4 inches). Whether you plan to put a wardrobe there or not doesn’t really matter to anyone; the masons simply follow their execution plans. If you check everything daily and occasionally point out that a particular measurement is very important to you, it will work out fine.
Best regards
Sabine
Best regards
Sabine
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