ᐅ Floor plan design shortly before submitting the building permit application

Created on: 2 Oct 2017 23:25
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R.Hotzenplotz
Hello everyone!

As some users have requested before, I’m now starting a new thread with the current planning of our detached house, which is about to be finalized.

These are the preliminary drawings for the building permit / planning permission application, and I have one last chance to review them and point out any issues.

It still seems to me that there is less than 1.20m (4 feet) of space between the two wardrobes in the dressing room. Or am I seeing this wrong? Apparently, the rooms on the left and right were overlooked and not adjusted accordingly.

Two Velux ceiling spotlights are still planned to illuminate the upper floor hallway.

In the basement, on the right side in the upper room, a window similar to the one on the left basement side is an option.

We still haven’t decided on the T30 fire-rated door to the garage, even though it is shown in the plans. Most likely, for safety reasons and the limited use of the kitchen at the other end of the house, we will eventually forgo it.

User 11ant pointed out that the right window in child’s room 2 is suboptimally positioned. However, this could still be changed after submitting the building permit / planning permission application. Our architect thinks moving the window to the left would negatively affect the house’s exterior appearance. We’ll have to see about that.

Grundriss Kellergeschoss mit 3 Kellerräumen, Abstellraum, Flur, Haustechnik und Treppe.


Grundriss eines Hauses mit Keller, Flur KG, Haustechnik KG, Abstellraum KG und Treppen


Grundriss eines Hauses: Garage, Büro, Garderobe, Diele, WC, Küche, Wohn-/Essbereich.


Grundriss Dachgeschoss: Schlafzimmer, Ankleide, Bad, Dusche, zwei Kinderzimmer, Flur HWR Dachterrasse


Technischer Grundriss: Zentraler, ungenutzter DG-Bereich (193 m²) mit umlaufenden Dachschrägen.


Schnitt durch mehrstöckiges Wohnhaus mit Keller, Treppe, Dachkonstruktion und Maßlinien.


Moderne Wohnhausansicht: zweigeschossiges Gebäude mit Garage links und großen Fenstern.


Architektonischer Haus-Elevationsplan: Keller bis Dachgeschoss, Dach, Fenster, Geländeprofil.


Moderne zweigeschossige Hausansicht mit Flachdach, Balkonen, großen Fenstern und Garage.


Zweistöckiges Haus mit dunkler Fassade, grauem Dach, Balkon rechts und Garten mit Bäumen.
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Alex85
13 Sep 2018 06:22
Snowy36 schrieb:
We are not getting a screed but an industrial floor instead, which has a much lower floor construction height. We currently have exactly 2.13 m (7 ft) and our door will be ordered at about 2.12 m (6 ft 11.5 in).

It shouldn’t make much more than a 5 cm (2 inch) difference, right? Or what do you mean by “much lower”?
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MayrCh
13 Sep 2018 10:20
R.Hotzenplotz schrieb:
Those are the external lines that go through the garage roof.

But those are just ventilation openings leading directly outside, not connected to the central ventilation system of the house, right?
R.Hotzenplotz schrieb:
From the 2.135 meters you still have to deduct the screed, he says.

That would mean about 13 cm (5 inches) of screed thickness in the garage. I would definitely have that clarified by the expert. What type of screed is in the garage? Is it bonded screed or floating on insulation? The latter seems rather unlikely for an unheated garage.
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R.Hotzenplotz
13 Sep 2018 11:22
MayrCh schrieb:
These are just ventilation openings that simply lead outside, meaning they are not connected to the building’s central ventilation system, right?

The air for the entire building is drawn in and expelled through the garage roof.
MayrCh schrieb:
What kind of flooring is in the garage? Is it a bonded screed, or a floating screed over insulation? Although the latter seems unlikely for an unheated garage.

It is called a cement screed (suitable for vehicle traffic).
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Snowy36
13 Sep 2018 12:54
Alex85 schrieb:
It probably doesn’t make much difference beyond a 5cm (2 inch) difference, right? Or what do you mean by “much lower”?

I think the floor is less than 3 cm (1 inch) high... so increasing it by 10 cm (4 inches) would help if he currently has 13 cm (5 inches) due to the screed.
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Bookstar
13 Sep 2018 14:03
But screed is usually only about 5cm (2 inches) thick, right?
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R.Hotzenplotz
13 Sep 2018 14:20
Bookstar schrieb:
But usually, screed is only about 5cm (2 inches) thick, right?

No idea. In any case, they measured from the raw floor up to the unfinished ceiling, and that was 2.14m (7 feet).