ᐅ Floor Plan Optimization / Ground Floor Layout for a Semi-Detached House
Created on: 3 Oct 2019 16:53
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duke1085
Hello dear forum,
First of all: I am new here, so please forgive me if any information is missing; I can gladly provide it upon request. We are about to purchase a newly built semi-detached house (construction starting next year) and would appreciate your tips and comments. I have tried to follow the guide, but I think in my case it would go beyond the scope, as I am only interested in a detailed optimization of the ground floor rather than a complete redesign of the floor plan.
In my opinion, the relevant information is as follows:
Client Requirements
Style, roof design, building type – Modern, pitched roof, semi-detached house
Basement, floors – No basement / 2 floors
Number of occupants, age – 2 x 35 years + eventually 1–2 children
Open or closed architecture – open
Conservative or modern construction – modern
Open kitchen, kitchen island – An eat-in kitchen with a U-shaped kitchen or kitchen island
Number of dining seats – 4–6
Fireplace – no
Music/stereo wall – Yes, at least 2 m (6 feet 6 inches) wide
Balcony, roof terrace – Balcony may still be planned
Garage, carport – Yes
Utility garden, greenhouse – Garden as per floor plan
House Design
Designed by:
- Planner from a building company
What do you dislike? Why? Living room too small, layout difficult due to current furniture
What is the key/basic question about the floor plan summarized in 130 characters?
The house will be built on a relatively small plot (210 m² (2260 sq.ft)). Therefore, the external dimensions are quite limited. Our main priority was a relatively large living/dining/kitchen area. However, this area is only about 41 m² (441 sq.ft) total here. We are quite satisfied with the layout of the other floors, so I have largely left those aside as mentioned above.
The following furniture should fit here:
A U-shaped kitchen or kitchen island (we currently have an island kitchen with the following dimensions:
Back kitchen wall 3 m (10 feet) wide / peninsula 2.10 m x 1.17 m (6 feet 10 inches x 3 feet 10 inches)
A dining table 2 m x 1 m (6 feet 6 inches x 3 feet 3 inches)
An L-shaped sofa 3 m x 1.90 m (10 feet x 6 feet 3 inches) on the longest side
A lowboard for TV / audio system about 2 m (6 feet 6 inches) wide
The following changes were considered:
Remove the partition wall between kitchen and living area
Replace 2 doors to kitchen and living room with one large glass door centered (1.60 m (5 feet 3 inches) wide)
Replace two 2 m (6 feet 6 inches) terrace doors with one large 5 m (16 feet 5 inches) sliding glass door
Increase clear ceiling height on the ground floor from 2.61 m to 2.70 m (8 feet 7 inches to 8 feet 10 inches)
Move washer/dryer to a storage room on the first floor
What do you think about the idea of integrating the staircase into the living room?
How would you integrate the kitchen into the space?
What options do you see to make the room appear larger, at least visually?
I’m aware that the possibilities are probably quite limited here but still look forward to your suggestions.
Best regards!
First of all: I am new here, so please forgive me if any information is missing; I can gladly provide it upon request. We are about to purchase a newly built semi-detached house (construction starting next year) and would appreciate your tips and comments. I have tried to follow the guide, but I think in my case it would go beyond the scope, as I am only interested in a detailed optimization of the ground floor rather than a complete redesign of the floor plan.
In my opinion, the relevant information is as follows:
Client Requirements
Style, roof design, building type – Modern, pitched roof, semi-detached house
Basement, floors – No basement / 2 floors
Number of occupants, age – 2 x 35 years + eventually 1–2 children
Open or closed architecture – open
Conservative or modern construction – modern
Open kitchen, kitchen island – An eat-in kitchen with a U-shaped kitchen or kitchen island
Number of dining seats – 4–6
Fireplace – no
Music/stereo wall – Yes, at least 2 m (6 feet 6 inches) wide
Balcony, roof terrace – Balcony may still be planned
Garage, carport – Yes
Utility garden, greenhouse – Garden as per floor plan
House Design
Designed by:
- Planner from a building company
What do you dislike? Why? Living room too small, layout difficult due to current furniture
What is the key/basic question about the floor plan summarized in 130 characters?
The house will be built on a relatively small plot (210 m² (2260 sq.ft)). Therefore, the external dimensions are quite limited. Our main priority was a relatively large living/dining/kitchen area. However, this area is only about 41 m² (441 sq.ft) total here. We are quite satisfied with the layout of the other floors, so I have largely left those aside as mentioned above.
The following furniture should fit here:
A U-shaped kitchen or kitchen island (we currently have an island kitchen with the following dimensions:
Back kitchen wall 3 m (10 feet) wide / peninsula 2.10 m x 1.17 m (6 feet 10 inches x 3 feet 10 inches)
A dining table 2 m x 1 m (6 feet 6 inches x 3 feet 3 inches)
An L-shaped sofa 3 m x 1.90 m (10 feet x 6 feet 3 inches) on the longest side
A lowboard for TV / audio system about 2 m (6 feet 6 inches) wide
The following changes were considered:
Remove the partition wall between kitchen and living area
Replace 2 doors to kitchen and living room with one large glass door centered (1.60 m (5 feet 3 inches) wide)
Replace two 2 m (6 feet 6 inches) terrace doors with one large 5 m (16 feet 5 inches) sliding glass door
Increase clear ceiling height on the ground floor from 2.61 m to 2.70 m (8 feet 7 inches to 8 feet 10 inches)
Move washer/dryer to a storage room on the first floor
What do you think about the idea of integrating the staircase into the living room?
How would you integrate the kitchen into the space?
What options do you see to make the room appear larger, at least visually?
I’m aware that the possibilities are probably quite limited here but still look forward to your suggestions.
Best regards!
duke1085 schrieb:
Too bad, that would have been the solution... Yes, maybe it’s possible to convince the builder to move the house one more meter to the east. Then there would be enough space for the car and the walkway side by side. The terrace would then be fully located in the southwest. But the building partner will probably oppose that.
It’s really frustrating—you don’t want to overemphasize the fact that the kitchen with dining area can’t occupy the entire southwest façade. Still, it would bother me so much that I’d start doubting the entire property.
Moving it east won’t be possible because the neighboring house would no longer maintain the required 3 meters (10 feet) distance to the next property.
What if the two parking spaces (or just the one at the back) were kept as planned? So, without a garage. Or do you think the entrance would be too tight? You would have to walk past the cars on the side, but that could also make the garden larger.
What if the two parking spaces (or just the one at the back) were kept as planned? So, without a garage. Or do you think the entrance would be too tight? You would have to walk past the cars on the side, but that could also make the garden larger.
duke1085 schrieb:
And what if the two parking spaces were left as planned? So without a garage. Or do you think it would be too tight by the entrance?I’m afraid so. Once the car is parked there, you can hardly get out the front door.You could consider, more radically, placing the parking space on the east side.
The one-meter (3 feet) difference makes a big difference for the path to the front door but little difference for the view from the living room toward the garden fence. The terrace would then consistently be on the southwest side.
Is the house on the left side of the street already built? If not, it wouldn’t be unlikely that its garage might be placed on the other side...
The terrace facing the other direction already has the nicer view, and the garden would become even narrower that way.
The house on the left is already there; it’s an existing property that is being fully renovated. But on that side, the 3 meters (10 feet) setback would still have to be observed.
If you only had one parking space on the left side and placed the entrance at the left corner, it should still fit, right?
The house on the left is already there; it’s an existing property that is being fully renovated. But on that side, the 3 meters (10 feet) setback would still have to be observed.
If you only had one parking space on the left side and placed the entrance at the left corner, it should still fit, right?
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