ᐅ Floor plan for a 150 sqm single-family house with a double garage

Created on: 19 Sep 2018 12:45
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marcn
Hello everyone,

We would be very grateful if you could review our floor plan. What works well, and what doesn’t? Is something missing or could something be improved or made more practical?

As you can read below, we are not satisfied with the placement of the garage in front of the house. What options do you see, and how could it be done better?

Development Plan / Restrictions
Plot size:
1218 sqm (13,106 sq ft)

Slope:
Less steep to the north, drops 3 m (10 ft) towards the south

Site coverage ratio: 0.3

Floor area ratio: 0.6

Building window, building line, and boundary:
3 m (10 ft)

Boundary construction:
Garage / carport may be built on the boundary line

Number of parking spaces:
2 in the garage

Number of floors:
2 full stories

Roof type:
Gable roof, approx. 20° pitch

Style:

Orientation:
South

Maximum heights / limits
Further requirements

Homeowners’ requirements
Style, roof shape, building type

Basement, floors:
No basement

Number of occupants, ages:
2 people (28 and 31), planning for 1 child

Room requirements on
Ground floor: kitchen, pantry, dining-living area, utility/technical room, guest toilet
Upper floor: bedroom, walk-in closet, bathroom, children’s room, office

Office: family use or home office?

Guests per year:
Occasional

Open or closed architecture:
Open

Conservative or modern style:
Modern

Open kitchen, kitchen island:
Kitchen island, pantry

Number of dining seats:
6

Fireplace:
No

Music/speaker wall:
No

Balcony, roof terrace:
No

Garage, carport:
Garage with workshop and storage space

Utility garden, greenhouse:
No

Other requests / special features / daily routine:
Since we have an unobstructed view to the south and west, we want to bring as much nature and light into the house as possible. An open kitchen-dining area with a subtle separation to the living room is important to us. On the upper floor, you should be able to enter the walk-in closet and bathroom directly from the bedroom.

House design
Who designed the plan:
Mainly ideas and rough drafts come from us, inspired by model homes and the internet. Final planning by the real estate developer’s architect.

What do you particularly like? Why?

What do you dislike? Why?
The placement/use of windows on the south side (terrace) is not optimal yet.
The biggest issue is the garage placement in front of the house. Due to the slope, the house should be positioned as far north as possible on the south side of the plot. However, we don’t really like the idea or plan to position the garage directly in front of the house/entrance.
We have thought about placing the garage beside the house on the west side. However, this creates a very long driveway and, since we don’t want to move too far south because of the plot’s situation, the space for maneuvering a car becomes quite tight.
We would be very grateful for any innovative ideas on how to best position the garage in relation to the house.

Price estimate according to architect/planner: 350,000
Personal price limit for the house, including fixtures: 400,000
Preferred heating technology:

If you have to make compromises, which details/upgrades
- can you do without:
- cannot do without:

Why did the design become what it is now? E.g.
The design was created from freehand sketches on paper and our own work on the PC, based on our wishes and requirements. The architect adopted most of this and optimized a few rooms/walls.

What is the most important/fundamental question about the floor plan summarized in 130 characters?
How can we elegantly fit the desired double garage on the plot considering the terrain, without it standing out too much in front of the house/entrance?

Thank you very much for your help, feedback, and suggestions.

Ground floor plan of a house with kitchen/dining, living, toilet, driveway and double garage.


First floor plan: child’s room, office, bedroom, bathroom, walk-in closet, storage, hallway, staircase.


Satellite image of the plot with yellow boundary lines and north arrow.
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marcn
21 Sep 2018 15:41
Obstlerbaum schrieb:
Then I assume the architect simply named the room according to standard practice and you don’t actually have a child, correct?

That is correct, a child is planned for.
11ant schrieb:
..the dimensions of the wall openings (except for the room doors) look like solid construction...

It will be built using timber frame construction.
hanse987 schrieb:
I find the 3m (10 feet) distance from the garage neither one thing nor the other. Either 5m (16 feet) distance, so visitors can park in front of the garage, or the garage right at the corner. My favorite is the 5m (16 feet).

What kind of work is planned at the workbench in the garage? With an interior length of about 6.4m (21 feet) and a car length of around 4.7m (15.5 feet) (e.g., Audi A4 Avant) plus some clearance between the car and the door, there isn’t much space left.

You are absolutely right, it’s obviously difficult to park a car in front of the garage like this. The reason is the predefined building envelope. When we received these plans, it was not yet clear whether building beyond the envelope would be approved. So the layout was planned a bit “space-saving.”
Only minor tasks will be done at the workbench, nothing that would require several meters of space. If needed, the cars would just have to be moved out during that time.
Escroda schrieb:
The questionnaire regarding the development plan is very incomplete. Maybe you should provide a plan here to improve the quality of answers. Height data would also be helpful.

What do the blue dashed lines in the ground floor plan indicate?

I will definitely add that soon. The blue dashed lines mark the predefined building envelope. Originally, the ridge direction was specified rotated by 90 degrees in the development plan, which doesn’t make sense for this plot in terms of orientation. Approval to rotate the ridge direction, as shown in our plan, is not a problem. That is why the house extends beyond the building envelope.
11ant schrieb:
Normally, we have the opposite discussion here, that with a second door locking is feared. Who showers with the bathroom door open??

We openly admit to being open-door showerers.
ypg schrieb:
The location of the bathtub is unsuitable for relaxing: window and two doors are three too many distractions.
The cloakroom needs to be larger and out of sight from the kitchen. We have a similar setup but with a longer hallway. Storage space in the kitchen is far too small.

Thanks for the tip. Since you have a similar setup, how long is the distance from the entrance area to the start of your kitchen?

Regarding the parapet height,
honestly, it hasn’t really caught our attention so far, and I can’t tell if the measurement is from the rough floor or the finished floor level. We will clarify that soon, as the window position is very important to us. Unfortunately, we haven’t discussed exact dimensions with the architect, only rough measurements and some photos of what we liked.

Thank you for your honest feedback so far; it really helps us with several points.

Oh, and since we will be on vacation for two weeks now, I will respond again after that.
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chrisw81
21 Sep 2018 16:14
kbt09 schrieb:
@chrisw81 ... so what is the height of your window opening then?
The question here is what the drawing might represent. It could be either, depending on the settings of the drafting software. And, starting from the top edge of the unfinished floor slab, there would already be a window or patio door, with the glass ending at about 200 cm (79 inches) height. Who would want that?

My window opening height is 1.385 m (54.5 inches) with a sill height of 1 m (39 inches). Patio doors have a height of 2.385 m (94 inches).
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Obstlerbaum
21 Sep 2018 16:55
marcn schrieb:
That is correct, a child is included in the planning

That was a rhetorical question, you can already see it in the floor plan...