ᐅ Floor Plan Optimization for a Single-Family Home of Approximately 150 sqm on a Small Plot

Created on: 18 Aug 2020 20:31
Y
Yaso2.0
Hello everyone,

After what felt like forever, we finally received the floor plan (without exact dimensions) today from our preferred general contractor. Although the planner noted our requests during the meeting, some of them don’t seem to have been fully incorporated.

The price offer will be prepared once the floor plan is finalized, especially if the size increases.

I would like to share the floor plan with you and hear your suggestions for improvements!

Development plan / Restrictions
Plot size: 389sqm (4187 sq ft)
Sloping site
Site coverage ratio 0.35
Floor area ratio 0.70
Building envelope, building line, and boundary
Edge development
Number of parking spaces: 2
Number of floors: 2
Roof type
Architectural style
Orientation
Maximum heights / limits
Additional requirements

Client requirements
Architectural style, roof type, building type: City villa
Basement, number of stories: 2 stories, no basement
Number of occupants, ages: 3 persons (44, 38, 9)
Space requirements on ground floor and upper floor
Kitchen, living room, guest WC, utility room, and if possible, a small office
Office: family use or home office?
Guests for overnight stays vary widely
Open or closed architecture partly/partly
Conservative or modern style: a healthy mix of both
Open kitchen, kitchen island: semi-open kitchen, kitchen island not mandatory
Number of dining seats: 6–8
Fireplace: possibly
Music / stereo wall
Balcony, roof terrace
Garage, carport
Utility garden, greenhouse, garden for pleasant evenings
Additional wishes / special features / daily routines, including reasons why certain elements are wanted or not

We want a larger but semi-open kitchen because I cook and/or bake daily. A pantry would be great but I would also give it up if it means more counter space in the kitchen.

Ideally, I would like a laundry room on the upper floor since all the laundry tasks happen upstairs.

House design
Planner:
- Planner from a construction company
What do you particularly like? Why? Pantry room,
In the upper floor, the bedroom does not directly adjoin the children’s rooms
What do you dislike? Why?
Kitchen accessible only through the living room, hallway seems like wasted space??, kitchen counter size too small,
Cost estimate by architect/planner: still open, to follow after floor plan and house size are finalized
Personal budget limit for the house including fixtures and fittings:
Preferred heating system:

If you had to compromise, on which details / additions
- Could you do without: walk-in closet
- Could you not do without: “larger” kitchen

Why is the design the way it is now?
The general contractor’s planner asked about our preferences and created the floor plan accordingly. Apparently, an office didn’t fit. The requirement was that we ideally don’t want more than 150sqm (1615 sq ft), a kitchen size of at least 13sqm (140 sq ft) would be nice, and if possible, no straight staircase.

What makes it particularly good or bad in your eyes?
The hallway seems to take up too much space without much utility, the kitchen feels too small.

The walk-in closet is “enclosed” and should be accessible via the corridor.

We like that the children’s rooms are exactly the same size. The future child planning is currently flexible.

What is the most important / fundamental question about the floor plan in 130 characters?
How can we make the kitchen accessible through the hallway and semi-open, without making it too small?

Would a different staircase allow for a better layout?
Or are our wishes not feasible within 150sqm?

Thanks in advance!

Ground floor plan: open living/dining/kitchen area, hallway, pantry, utility room, WC, carport.


Upper floor plan: Child 1, Child 2, bedroom/walk-in closet, bathroom, gallery.


Site plan of the property: house with carport, car, measurement lines and dimensions.
K1300S31 Aug 2020 06:36
Yaso2.0 schrieb:

I didn’t give the architect anything, just communicated our ideas.

It doesn’t have to be perfect on the first or second try, but the architect should still know which furniture with which dimensions needs to fit, so the rooms can accommodate them. Our initial design would have only worked for a 2.5-meter (8 feet 2 inches) sofa, but it was adjusted accordingly.
Y
ypg
31 Aug 2020 11:30
Yaso2.0 schrieb:

The specification was a maximum of 150sqm (1,615 sq ft), currently the architect has planned about 140sqm (1,507 sq ft).

I would make the house 1 meter (3.3 feet) longer. For your room requirements, 140sqm (1,507 sq ft) is too little. You can see it here: the living area feels cut off.
The staircase could use 20cm (8 inches) more space, with the rest added to the living area.
The wardrobe is not sufficient for 4 people: simply deepen the niche by 30cm (12 inches) (at the expense of the adjacent room, but a kitchen can also benefit from that). Behind a sliding door, there will then be plenty of storage space, which can hold your shoes on two rows in the lower section.
The kitchen layout should be roughly planned directly in the drafts with workable options (it is missing again), including a patio door where it is actually needed, right at the kitchen workspace.
Upstairs, I would place the children’s rooms facing south and west. The bathroom needs to be rearranged – as it is now, you stand with your back to the daylight and the toilet is on full display.
Ideally, the bathroom should be positioned above the downstairs toilet. The shower spot is poorly chosen, which makes the bathroom quite small.
The elevations are not the worst. However, more attention should be paid to the eastern sunlight. Maybe consider fixed glass walls in the kitchen.
11ant31 Aug 2020 11:43
ypg schrieb:

I would make the house 1 meter longer (3 feet 3 inches).
Personally, I would prefer to completely rethink the design – it clearly focuses on the facade and is obsessed with a square shape.
https://www.instagram.com/11antgmxde/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/bauen-jetzt/
Yaso2.02 Sep 2020 09:09
11ant schrieb:

I would prefer to completely scrap the design – it is clearly focused on the facade and obsessed with square shapes.

Good thing I’m not obsessed with squares..

I gave it another try myself..
And tried to draw it on paper..
Hand-drawn two-story floor plan sketch with rooms, doors, and stairs.


Would the staircase work without hitting your head when going to the bathroom?
S
Shiny86
2 Sep 2020 13:58
The floor plan of my parents’ house is quite similar. The staircase works well. It is no longer close to head height in the hallway leading to the restroom.
11ant2 Sep 2020 15:17
Yaso2.0 schrieb:

Would the staircase work without hitting your head when going to the bathroom?
For Olivia Jones, but without mega heels. The "office" is enough as a place to put your laptop bag and for the annual tax declaration session, but for regular home office use only with controlled residential ventilation.
https://www.instagram.com/11antgmxde/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/bauen-jetzt/

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