ᐅ Floor Plan of a Narrow, Rectangular L-Shaped House on a Triangular Plot with an Oak Tree
Created on: 4 Nov 2018 10:54
O
Oakland
Hello everyone!
We have purchased a triangular plot of land. As if that weren’t complicated enough, there is also a large oak tree that must be considered during the planning. In our initial considerations, it quickly became clear that the floor plan will have an L-shape.
Does anyone here have experience with this type of plot and a correspondingly shaped floor plan? What additional information is needed to get meaningful advice?
Best regards
We have purchased a triangular plot of land. As if that weren’t complicated enough, there is also a large oak tree that must be considered during the planning. In our initial considerations, it quickly became clear that the floor plan will have an L-shape.
Does anyone here have experience with this type of plot and a correspondingly shaped floor plan? What additional information is needed to get meaningful advice?
Best regards
Oakland schrieb:
Believe me: I don’t have any plans yet, only my hand sketches! Do you really want to see them? Are you accusing us of spitefulness? What would you call what you write, and especially how you write it?
Oakland schrieb:
I really don’t understand why you’re so impatient.
Believe me: I don’t have any plans yet, only my hand sketches! Do you really want to see them?
...
Again: I have no intention of taking anything without giving input!Why did you start this thread?
You asked in your initial post what needs to be submitted next, and we answered.
If you don’t have exact measurements, you could have said so around post #5 or so: “sorry, I’ll provide them later, bye.”
Instead, there were one- or two-line replies, which can hardly be called informative.
It came across somewhat as mockery on your part... yes, that’s how I interpreted it. Some here were more patient, others less so. But that’s just how it is when you ask questions and aren’t even willing to be straightforward about the information available or missing.
Almost everyone here is left with a bitter aftertaste.
The downside for you: you’ve driven away those who were enthusiastic about such a challenge. And now you’re complaining here because no one is willing to piece together your brief replies, knowing that the site plan is still missing, so there’s no way to identify the building plot.
Think it over with close
Kbt and Kaho have already drawn floor plans that would make some architects ashamed of their mental diarrhea.
Kbt even created one for you based on estimates.
Ypg is really good at spotting mistakes and has good ideas.
Binsig, everyone here tends to encounter resistance to advice, lack of information, and naivety.
Criticism is more entertaining when you don’t profit from the original poster and don’t have to figure out how to gently tell your friend that it’s not going to work.
Escroda can probably give you some tips on making the most of the building limits / zoning boundaries.
Kbt and Kaho have already drawn floor plans that would make some architects ashamed of their mental diarrhea.
Kbt even created one for you based on estimates.
Ypg is really good at spotting mistakes and has good ideas.
Binsig, everyone here tends to encounter resistance to advice, lack of information, and naivety.
Criticism is more entertaining when you don’t profit from the original poster and don’t have to figure out how to gently tell your friend that it’s not going to work.
Escroda can probably give you some tips on making the most of the building limits / zoning boundaries.
C
chand198615 Nov 2018 07:15A simple statement like “Surveying hasn’t been done yet but has been commissioned; results will be provided later” within the first 10 comments would have halved the thread length and saved you a lot of frustration.
Criticism is just different when you’re not a client whose money is wanted.
Otherwise, the help from experts like Escroda and highly skilled amateurs like Kerstin here is free and invaluable. But that’s only possible if your information is complete.
What’s missing: precise measurement of both the plot and the building.
Everything else is just follow-up discussion that must be unproductive without this information.
As a previously silent reader, I would really regret the thread being closed because this is genuinely difficult and therefore interesting.
Criticism is just different when you’re not a client whose money is wanted.
Otherwise, the help from experts like Escroda and highly skilled amateurs like Kerstin here is free and invaluable. But that’s only possible if your information is complete.
What’s missing: precise measurement of both the plot and the building.
Everything else is just follow-up discussion that must be unproductive without this information.
As a previously silent reader, I would really regret the thread being closed because this is genuinely difficult and therefore interesting.
haydee schrieb:
Kbt and Kaho have already drawn floor plans that would make some architects ashamed of their poor work. Kbt even created one for you based on an estimate. Ypg is really good at spotting mistakes and has great ideas. haydee schrieb:
Escroda can surely give you tips on maximizing the building boundaries (building permit / planning permission limits).Sorry for the spam, but the description somehow reminds me of the movie *The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen* with Sean Connery )))))