ᐅ Single-family house floor plan, approximately 150 sqm, with east-facing garden

Created on: 9 Jan 2020 21:17
O
OWLer
Hello everyone,
after reading many threads here about how well-intentioned floor plans are expertly dissected, I’m now stepping out from the shadows. We plan to build this year and have already purchased the plot. We are currently in discussions with two providers. Provider 1 never really impressed us with their designs and plans very large houses without offering much living space. I’m bringing Provider 2 into the discussion here because, apart from the points mentioned below, we still like their design.

We hope the collective forum expertise will point out some pitfalls and maybe even help solve our hallway dilemma.

Sorry for the rough sketches of the measurements.

Development Plan / Restrictions
Plot size:
610 sqm (648 with purchased noise barrier)
Slope: approx. 70cm (28 inches) over 19m (62 feet), sloping from north to south
Site coverage ratio: 0.4
Floor area ratio: 0.8
Building envelope, building line and boundary: 3m (10 feet) from the street, 3m (10 feet) to neighbors north/south, building envelope 10m (33 feet) east-west
Edge development
Number of parking spaces
Number of stories:
2
Roof type: gable roof ≤45°
Architectural style
Orientation:
ridge running north-south
Maximum heights / limits: max. ridge height 10.5m (34 feet), eaves max. 6.0m (20 feet)
Other requirements: On the east side, a noise barrier is built along half of the plot, with forest behind it. Due to the noise barrier, the garden is practically not visible from outside.

Clients’ Requirements
Style, roof type, building type:
rather classic
Basement, number of floors: basement, 1.5 floors
Number of residents, age: currently 2 (ages 33 and 27 – planning 2 children)
Space requirements on ground floor: shower WC, open living space (kitchen, dining, living), study; upper floor: 2 kids’ rooms, bathroom, master bedroom (walk-in closet)
Office: home office (teaching profession)
Overnight guests per year: approx. 15
Open or closed architecture: rather open
Conservative or modern construction: conservative and brick-faced
Open kitchen, kitchen island: yes
Number of dining seats: 6
Fireplace: preferably yes, budget permitting
Music / stereo wall: no
Balcony, roof terrace: no
Garage, carport: carport / budget permitting
Utility garden, greenhouse: no
Further wishes / special features / daily routine, also reasons for why or why not something is desired

House Design
Designer: planner from a construction company
What do you particularly like? Why?
We really like the upper floor. Room sizes fit well. We can’t really assess the master bedroom on the south side yet. The kids’ rooms seem the right size and have a good layout in my opinion.
A guest room was not a requirement – apparently there was space on the upper floor. We are not unhappy about that.
The living-dining area really appeals to me. Kitchen opening to the terrace. My wife likes the pantry options with access to the garden, basement, and carport.

What don’t you like? Why?
What we don’t like is the narrow corridors. I imagine 1.2m (4 feet) and 1m (3 feet) very cramped. Between the carport and along the stairs, this wouldn’t bother me so much, but the entrance definitely should be wider.
The master bedroom on the south side does not convince me much.

Price estimate according to architect/planner: >440k€
Personal price limit for the house, including fittings: approx. 440k€
Preferred heating system: gas heating required by the plot purchase contract.

If you had to give up something, which details / features could you do without:
I could do without the pantry and use that space for the WC instead. My wife, however, sees this differently.
Which features can you not give up:
The study on the ground floor is a must due to my teaching profession. The idea is to be able to drop things off in the study after returning from school, close the door, and have some downtime without needing to go upstairs or downstairs.
The basement is also essential. Many friends and acquaintances who have built in recent years do so mostly without basements. It takes iron discipline to keep utility rooms “tidy.” We manage that in our rental now but want to move away from that. We don’t want to become hoarders but want more space to spread out. Also, I want to be able to store all my tools in the basement and comfortably repair my bicycles.

Why was the design made the way it is?
Standard design from the planner?
Which wishes were implemented by the architect?

Large windows on the ground floor facing the garden, as it is not directly visible.
A bay window on the street side is mandatory for the look. The planned flat-roof bay will definitely be changed to a pitched roof. The plaster on the bay will be replaced by brick cladding. We find the bay window to the garden quite nice. Not a must-have, but it was part of the planning basis we provided and, in my opinion, positively impacts the kids’ rooms.

A mix of many examples from various magazines...
What makes it particularly good or bad in your eyes?

What is the most important / fundamental question about the floor plan, summarized in 130 characters?
How do you evaluate the usability of the pantry—does it work as well as we imagine it? What other ways, besides widening the house, do you see to widen the corridors? Does the indicated wardrobe area fit?

In principle, I would like to build it this way if only the narrow corridors weren’t an issue. Making the house 25-50cm (10-20 inches) wider is not technically feasible and probably financially difficult.

Floor plan of a house with terrace, living, dining, kitchen, hallway, WC, study, storage room.


Floor plan of upper floor: bedroom, walk-in closet, bathroom, guest room, two kids’ rooms, gallery.


Modern two-story east façade: brick on lower level, dark vertical cladding, large windows.


South elevation: red brick house with gable roof, large windows; two people on left.


Modern brick façade with brown roof, white central wall, garage and two people on right.
K
kbt09
9 Mar 2020 21:03
11ant schrieb:

For the cabinets, I would revert to the wall layout originally planned between the children's rooms.
I agree, otherwise it will be very inconvenient for the children's rooms. I would even consider moving the wall between the office and child 1 a bit further to the left, extending it straight from the bottom to the top of the plan.
OWLer13 Jun 2020 19:11
After being in discussions with the general contractor for 11 months and struggling with our plans here in the forum since January, the time has finally come. We have resolved everything and will be signing the contract next week. Many thanks to all of you for your contributions in this forum! It has been very helpful, and we especially followed the input from @kaho674, which made us super happy!

On the floor plan, the top is always east.

This is how the exterior will look. The bay window facing the street (west) will be plastered—probably light gray or a light earth tone—while the rest will be brick-clad. The bay window around the staircase will have external venetian blinds. We are still deciding whether the roof tiles will be laid flat, in a straight or alternating pattern. The roof eaves will not be extended outward.

Four facades of a modern house (north, east, south, west) with carport, cars, people.


Ground Floor:

Floor plan of a house: carport, driveway, entrance hall, WC, living/dining area, kitchen, stairs, terrace.


Upper Floor:
Please don’t be confused by the stairs and the spiral staircase in the office. In this design, we had it checked where and how we could add a staircase later if we decide to finish the attic. We will have the wooden roof structure prepared in the dressing room so that a space-saving staircase could be installed there. However, this is still a long way off, especially since the ventilation and heating concept above would not fit then.

Floor plan of a house with several rooms: bedroom, dressing room, bathroom, and two children’s rooms.


Basement:

Floor plan: lower level with two cellar rooms, hobby room, corridor, utility room, and stairs.


The house will have a mechanical ventilation system with heat recovery and a heat pump. I’m particularly looking forward to the room-by-room heating load calculation for the heat pump. This will be interesting, especially considering the many questions online about bathrooms not warming up properly.

Thanks again to the forum. Soon, I’ll probably be more active in the photo thread. Construction is scheduled to begin by September at the latest.
T
tumaa
13 Jun 2020 19:39
About the floor plan:
It is clear and I like it.

I'm just not a fan of having two doors leading to the living and kitchen areas.
OWLer14 Jun 2020 11:44
tumaa schrieb:

I'm just not a fan of having two doors leading to the living and kitchen area.

We’ve discussed this topic countless times with various people and reviewed the walking routes. We always ended up deciding that we want to enter the kitchen directly from the front door and also have direct access from the kitchen to the basement. So, a door to the kitchen is definitely necessary. The same applies for the living area, for example, when you need to go to the restroom.

And just like that, there are two doors. They will stay. If we ever realize that we could manage with just the door in the living area, then the door to the kitchen will simply be closed off.

But thanks for the compliment on the floor plan!
Y
ypg
14 Jun 2020 12:27
OWLer schrieb:

Please don’t be confused by the stairs and the spiral staircase in the office. In the design, we had it checked to see where and how we could add a staircase going up later if we decide to convert the attic. We will now have the wooden roof structure in the walk-in closet prepared in a way that would allow us to install a space-saving staircase there to access the upper floor.

Why from the walk-in closet?
Will it be removed because the bedroom will be up there? Or what is supposed to be upstairs?
hausnrplus2514 Jun 2020 13:02
We also find it very convenient to be able to move in a circle between the kitchen, living/dining area, and hallway!

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