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.
That’s quite funny, though rather sad.
You could only reduce the ground floor to a limited extent.
The upper floor is already "relatively" low at about 2.60 m (8.5 ft).
But how much do you actually need to reduce?
It can only be a maximum of 15-20 cm (6-8 inches) – as if that would really affect the building’s exterior appearance... unbelievable, the authorities.
You could only reduce the ground floor to a limited extent.
The upper floor is already "relatively" low at about 2.60 m (8.5 ft).
But how much do you actually need to reduce?
It can only be a maximum of 15-20 cm (6-8 inches) – as if that would really affect the building’s exterior appearance... unbelievable, the authorities.
R
R.Hotzenplotz14 Dec 2017 19:28I’m curious to see how much they want to lower it. On the upper floor, there’s basically no change possible. Bringing the ground floor to the same height would “only” gain 23 cm (9 inches).
What I don’t see is that switching from a hip roof to a flat roof would make a difference, since the wall height is explicitly mentioned here.
What I don’t see is that switching from a hip roof to a flat roof would make a difference, since the wall height is explicitly mentioned here.
R.Hotzenplotz schrieb:
What I don’t see is that changing from a hip roof to a flat roof would make any difference, since the wall height is explicitly mentioned here. Yes, the roof height is irrelevant here; it only concerns the wall below the roof. What was the ceiling height in the previous building, or rather the eave height of that building?
https://www.instagram.com/11antgmxde/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/bauen-jetzt/
R
R.Hotzenplotz14 Dec 2017 22:01I don’t know. There used to be a one-story bungalow with a gable roof having a right-angled pitch there.
R.Hotzenplotz schrieb:
There is basically no work happening on the upper floor. Why?
R.Hotzenplotz schrieb:
I don’t know. There used to be a single-story bungalow with a hipped gable roof there. So you didn’t measure it or get any drawings? The best option is to ask your neighbors (and have them show you any drawings they might have). Besides the exact dimensions, the variation range is also important—both for the shell structure height and the clear interior height.
https://www.instagram.com/11antgmxde/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/bauen-jetzt/