ᐅ Self-Designed Floor Plan – Realized Single-Family Home

Created on: 23 Sep 2021 15:10
G
Georgian2019
Hello, I have been following this forum for a long time and find it always interesting. I thought I might share our planning here. We started planning at the end of 2018, began construction in 03/2019, and moved in by 12/2019.

We planned the floor plans, dimensions, materials, etc., ourselves and then hired a retired architect to create the construction drawings and structural engineering, as well as to submit the building permit / planning permission application. He also handled the approvals and insurance.

Since we live in a historic preservation area with classical architecture, we wanted to reflect this style in our house and I did a lot of research. I know nothing is perfect and it is a series of compromises (size, budget, historic style). We wanted about 120sqm (1292 sqft) of living space, aimed not to exceed a certain budget, and wanted to choose and plan all the trades ourselves (this really saves a lot of money!). I have almost no craftsmanship skills, yet we still did or helped with many tasks ourselves (preparations for the electrician, applying window and facade plaster molding ourselves, ceiling molding, wooden baseboards, cladding the carport, assembling the garden shed, distributing 55t (60 US tons) of soil, planting, manually drilling a garden well, etc.). Ok, my father-in-law helped a lot because he is handy.

We wanted to keep as much symmetry as possible and had a rough idea inspired by a Georgian house. Wooden sash windows and front door made by the local carpenter, facade plaster molding, ceiling height of 2.75m (9 ft) on the ground floor, and a hipped roof with clay tiles.
The staircase was a bit challenging because the hallway is central and the dimensions we set (somewhat arbitrarily) limited a straight staircase. The stair builder managed it nevertheless using some tricks (a bit steeper and with a longer tread or something like that).

Since I talked a lot with energy consultants and wanted a reasonable price-performance/use balance, we made the following decisions:
* Energy standard just enough to meet requirements (saves construction costs)
* Therefore, deliberately only double-glazed windows
* Gas condensing boiler with underfloor heating and gas fireplace
* Solar thermal system for hot water (I would have preferred to skip this as a cost driver; in summer you don’t need 270l (71 gallons) of hot water and in winter the sun usually isn’t sufficient despite the south-facing side)
* No electric window openers (but conduits were installed)
* 36.5cm (14.4 inches) aerated concrete walls on the outside and 17.5/11.5cm (6.9/4.5 inches) limestone interior walls
* Interior walls plastered with cement plaster to Q3 level (relatively smooth)
* Plumbing and heating company installed everything. Toilets, sinks, faucets were bought by us (all Villeroy & Boch and GROHE, mostly via eBay)
* Floor tiles and parquet also bought by us and then installed by professionals

The total cost excluding the land was €297,000 (about USD 320,000) including connections and exterior works, garden planting (partly €500 (about USD 540) per tree), double carport, 12sqm (129 sqft) garden shed, 150sqm (1615 sqft) paving, 24sqm (258 sqft) travertine terrace, insurance, surveying, 55t (60 US tons) of topsoil (we added about 20-30cm (8-12 inches) of soil), kitchen and appliances, electric garden gate, and masonry gate pillars (including historically accurate pillar caps) etc.

Land size: 680sqm (7320 sqft)
Living space: 122sqm (1313 sqft)
* 29sqm (312 sqft) living room
* 11.5sqm (124 sqft) kitchen
* 7.5sqm (81 sqft) utility room (laundry hangs from the ceiling with Foxydry)
* approx. 9.5sqm (102 sqft) hallway downstairs
* 11.5sqm (124 sqft) children’s room
* 9sqm (97 sqft) guest room/library/study
* approx. 9.3sqm (100 sqft) bathroom with shower, freestanding bathtub, toilet, bidet, washbasin
* approx. 20sqm (215 sqft) bedroom with walk-in closet/wardrobe
* The attic is currently an unheated storage room but could still be developed.

The space is sufficient, sometimes missing 0.5-1m (1.6-3.3 ft) here and there, but more space would have come at significantly higher construction costs.

What do you think of the floor plan? Any questions?

I’ve attached some pictures to give you a rough idea.

Two-story house with green entrance, red roof, stone path and garden beds.


Living room with fireplace, clock on the mantel, candles, leather armchair, coffee table, picture frames on the wall.


Living room with fireplace, TV area, sofa, armchair and glass coffee table, curtains.


Entrance area with black and white tiles, staircase on the right, bench on the left, door straight ahead.


Floor plan of a single-family house: hall, kitchen, living room, WC, dressing room, terrace.


Upper floor plan: bathroom, guest room, dressing room, bedroom, children’s room, hallway.


Bathroom with shower, toilet and bidet; dark tiles, toys and plant.


Modern bathroom: bathtub on the left, sink with wooden base, mirror frame, colorful towels.


Bright bathroom with sink, mirror, window with striped roller blind and antique wooden cabinet.
S
Snowy36
4 Oct 2021 10:33
And there are many things I wouldn’t want either, like how you usually step straight into the middle of the living room as soon as you enter through the front door…

It’s also incredible how affordable the prices are for all the renovations they do.
J
JuliaMünchen
4 Oct 2021 10:42
ypg schrieb:

And which of you women work and therefore have to carve out free time for these things, or who has full daytime free time to just indulge in fragrant lavender and shabby chic furniture?
Mind you; Joanna Gaines doesn’t do anything herself either, except decorating 😉

I don’t fully understand your point. Probably almost everyone here works (or is only temporarily on parental leave), because somehow these beautiful houses have to be financed 🙂 But some people are simply more interested in interior design or decoration and like to spend their free time on it (while others watch TV, dig in the garden, or ride their bikes).
Others, like the good Joanna or the lady with the lavender, have turned this interest into a profession and make money spending their whole day dealing with these topics. I find it quite normal that Ms. Gaines only decorates a bit at the end since she set the entire project in motion and now, besides her children, also has to run the TV show. The preliminary work is naturally delegated to the staff, just like a chief surgeon doesn’t sew every stitch personally at the end.

Regarding the wall cabinets in the kitchen, there are also designs without them or with open shelves that I really like, and surely some people don’t need that much storage space. But we also enjoy cooking a lot and simply have a few items I prefer to keep in a wall cabinet rather than in the basement (baking pans, fondue set, wok). Apart from the fact that I don’t like dusting, which would be a personal horror when it comes to shelves with decorative items or cereal containers 🙂 A small step stool is definitely necessary in every kitchen anyway, as I am unfortunately rather short at 1.58m (5’2”) 🙂

You can never transfer the American style one-to-one to German houses because even the dimensions, floor plans, and things like built-in closets are different. But style elements such as coffered details in the kitchen, white baseboards, kitchen islands, or certain lamps can easily be adopted and some people simply like them better than the widely popular concrete look in German kitchens 🙂
Y
ypg
4 Oct 2021 21:01
haydee schrieb:

Why not have an HGTV team go through your house?
In der Ruine schrieb:

And unfortunately, the great setups on HGTV are quite unrealistic.

That’s a company, and what we see is just advertising 😉 Don’t they have—if I’m not mistaken or confusing it—an online store?
G
Georgian2019
5 Oct 2021 20:40
haydee schrieb:

Do you have a built-in kitchen or rather individual pieces of furniture, like a table, sink unit, shelves, and sideboard, as used to be common?
A combination of built-in kitchen, sideboard, and shelving units.

Bright kitchen with white cabinets, window with floral curtain, sink, and dining table with lemons.


Bright kitchen area with white display cabinet, large pendant lamp, and blue wall.


Modern kitchen: fitted kitchen with oven, sink, coffee machine, toaster, and blender
S
Snowy36
5 Oct 2021 20:49
Very nice and cozy, just the way I like it
M
matte
5 Oct 2021 20:51
Yes, cozy is a good description. And I mean that in a positive way. 😉 I like it.