ᐅ Floor plan design shortly before submitting the building permit application
Created on: 2 Oct 2017 23:25
R
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.









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.
The wall section, which is now planned as a room divider, I would place against the office wall.
But what I’m wondering right now... wasn’t 620cm (20 feet 4 inches) the key dimension because of the TV placement? With the TV in the center of the room, this doesn’t seem to fit at all.
R
R.Hotzenplotz15 Nov 2017 18:47kbt09 schrieb:
I would place the partitioning wall section against the office wall.Then I would need a new sofa, as it isn’t adjustable. Also, it doesn’t make sense because the reclining position is also the TV viewing position, and I want to look directly at the TV, not at an angle.
kbt09 schrieb:
But I’m wondering... wasn’t 620cm (20 feet 4 inches) the key dimension because of the TV placement? With the TV in the middle of the room, that doesn’t fit at all.It’s not the key dimension but the ideal solution. That’s true. Let’s just forget about it and keep it as it is currently drawn.
R
R.Hotzenplotz15 Nov 2017 23:19kaho674 schrieb:
I would also prefer mounting it on the ceiling.We have something like this in mind for the future as well. But of course, we can’t just buy every new thing right now.
Do you have a dropped ceiling? If not, you need to plan for the cables now. If you do, it would be a piece of cake to install the cables at this stage.
The freestanding floor-standing speakers will be gone as soon as the kids start moving around the room anyway.
Aside from that, can’t you just place them against the back wall? Nowadays, everything is measured and calibrated, right, or is that a huge faux pas?
The freestanding floor-standing speakers will be gone as soon as the kids start moving around the room anyway.
Aside from that, can’t you just place them against the back wall? Nowadays, everything is measured and calibrated, right, or is that a huge faux pas?
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