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
haydee schrieb:
Because of the huge tree, it might not even look like a residential tower I also looked up residential towers, but even those are wider than 4 or 5 meters (13 or 16 feet). With the angles and curves here, it’s hardly feasible.
So, you bought an inexpensive plot of land because the others were too expensive, but you can only build on it if you put something extraordinarily unusual there.
Whether it will actually be cheaper overall is something I seriously doubt...
But Kaho, the designs are good; this way, you can get the best out of it.
However, just that curved wall alone will cost a fortune.
Whether it will actually be cheaper overall is something I seriously doubt...
But Kaho, the designs are good; this way, you can get the best out of it.
However, just that curved wall alone will cost a fortune.
Climbee schrieb:
But just that curved wall alone will cost a fortune.Yeah, no one can afford it. But it would be really cool.kaho674 schrieb:
Yes, nobody can afford it. But it would be cool. Especially with the amazing view of the oak tree from every angle of the house. Even the brilliant Japanese can’t match that.
haydee schrieb:
Are you sure the curve will be that expensive? I think so. You also have to consider the roof – flat roof is the only option here. Naturally, that’s the most expensive.
Underground garage – that’s a nightmare.
Another issue: you can’t just hire cheap apprentices from some small town. Anything that deviates from the standard causes problems. So, you end up paying more.