ᐅ Floor-to-ceiling windows – Why choose floor-to-ceiling windows? Advantages and disadvantages?
Created on: 27 Jul 2018 16:45
Y
ypg
In the past, people used to talk about their "own four walls," but nowadays it would be more accurate to say: "my own four / six / eight windows" – depending on how many floor-to-ceiling and nearly ceiling-high windows break up and interrupt the walls. Floor-to-ceiling windows have gone from being a status symbol to a matter of course; they represent a contrast to the traditional windowsill and flowerpot world that new-build residents want to leave behind. These windows can be tilted or even opened, provided they have fall protection, but the question remains: Can you really love them?
In fact, buying a floor plan can stir emotions when you see the bright, airy rooms and seemingly weightless walls in the graphical simulations provided by the real estate agent. Glass reaching to the floor was previously only known from high-rise scenes in major films and extravagant museum buildings. Just the prospect of floor-to-ceiling windows gives a sense of becoming a more open, lighter, and brighter person.
In the public perception, these windows convey something solemn, dramatic, visionary. For example, when the Handelsblatt profiles the leading conservative talk show figure Hans-Olaf Henkel, the very first paragraph notes that the vigorous AfD official looks out through floor-to-ceiling windows from his penthouse in Berlin-Mitte towards "his goal," the government district. Gerhard Schröder, on the other hand, offers a reversed perspective in his book Decisions: My Life in Politics. The former chancellor writes about the moment after Oskar Lafontaine’s resignation in 1999: "When Joschka was outside again and Heye had also said goodbye, I stood as usual—whenever faced with a confusing situation—by the floor-to-ceiling window through which a late sun sent its last rays. Early spring and a faint light green in the park of the Federal Chancellery."
However, most people who stand before floor-to-ceiling windows in confusing situations are more likely to see withering turf or a chaotic collection of ride-on toys, children's bicycles, scooters, skateboards, unicycles, and rubber boots: springtime in a new residential development in Munich-Oberföhring, Hamburg-Ottensen, or Berlin-Prenzlauer Berg. Especially where housing is built for families, floor-to-ceiling windows are now the standard design feature, and even Germany’s best-selling house model "Flair 113" features floor-to-ceiling windows beneath its pitched roof.
The rise of underfloor heating was probably the trigger: since new buildings are heated from below, radiators no longer need to be placed under the windows, and the windows can extend all the way to the floor. This results in more light inside and makes the façades appear less bulky and unwelcoming.
Planning is one thing, but the reality for residents is another. Or, in the words of Anne Zuber, editor-in-chief of the magazine Häuser: "Reality is the moment when you glance into the fridge while walking past, shove two slices of salami into your mouth, and get watched by neighbors from three different directions." Zuber’s advice to future architects and planners: "Don’t forget the salami zones."
For now, however, the pleasure belongs to pleated blind manufacturers. These blinds, which can be slid up and down within the window frame, are ideal for turning floor-to-ceiling windows back into windows you can look through only up to hip level. However, these windows then appear like strictly skirted governesses among the openings in the walls. Others use frosted adhesive film, which always raises the question: Why have floor-to-ceiling windows if you cover them up?
A walk through a new development shows that residents simply block some of their floor-to-ceiling windows over time. It looks odd because the backs of furniture are hardly decorative façades. But what else can one do when a children's room has one wall with a door, one with a wardrobe, and two walls with floor-to-ceiling windows? Anyone living with floor-to-ceiling windows quickly realizes that these windows demand things from you that you cannot always provide. Writer Anke Stelling has just released an illuminating novel about a mother's existential crisis in Prenzlauer Berg. Her book is titled Floor-to-Ceiling Windows. In it, the narrator reflects, "The new building looks from the outside exactly as you want it nowadays. But the floor-to-ceiling windows honestly make furnishing difficult—at least if you didn’t know during the initial floor plan design who would sleep where and with how many people and pieces of furniture you would move in. The windows demand a coherent overall concept."
Every move, especially if building your own home, feels like a fresh start, like the chance to finally have that "coherent overall concept," the hope to take control of your own life. But once you’re living there, the windows bring you back down to earth—right to the ground they reach. Yes, architects praise the exchange between private and public space in residential complexes, and design furniture catalogs suggest that minimalist living is possible in everyday life, but in the end, the floor-to-ceiling windows remind you: everything remains improvisation, nothing is really coherent.
My daughter is turning eight; she was just born when we moved into the new building. She only knows floor-to-ceiling windows. In her room, she has three of them. When asked before her birthday what she wished for, she said: "A windowsill." Why’s that? "So you can sit comfortably on it. Or lean on it. With a cushion or something. Or put something on it." And what would that be? "A flowerpot."
Photo: Till Raether, source: Schlafzimmer-Süddeutsche
In fact, buying a floor plan can stir emotions when you see the bright, airy rooms and seemingly weightless walls in the graphical simulations provided by the real estate agent. Glass reaching to the floor was previously only known from high-rise scenes in major films and extravagant museum buildings. Just the prospect of floor-to-ceiling windows gives a sense of becoming a more open, lighter, and brighter person.
In the public perception, these windows convey something solemn, dramatic, visionary. For example, when the Handelsblatt profiles the leading conservative talk show figure Hans-Olaf Henkel, the very first paragraph notes that the vigorous AfD official looks out through floor-to-ceiling windows from his penthouse in Berlin-Mitte towards "his goal," the government district. Gerhard Schröder, on the other hand, offers a reversed perspective in his book Decisions: My Life in Politics. The former chancellor writes about the moment after Oskar Lafontaine’s resignation in 1999: "When Joschka was outside again and Heye had also said goodbye, I stood as usual—whenever faced with a confusing situation—by the floor-to-ceiling window through which a late sun sent its last rays. Early spring and a faint light green in the park of the Federal Chancellery."
However, most people who stand before floor-to-ceiling windows in confusing situations are more likely to see withering turf or a chaotic collection of ride-on toys, children's bicycles, scooters, skateboards, unicycles, and rubber boots: springtime in a new residential development in Munich-Oberföhring, Hamburg-Ottensen, or Berlin-Prenzlauer Berg. Especially where housing is built for families, floor-to-ceiling windows are now the standard design feature, and even Germany’s best-selling house model "Flair 113" features floor-to-ceiling windows beneath its pitched roof.
The rise of underfloor heating was probably the trigger: since new buildings are heated from below, radiators no longer need to be placed under the windows, and the windows can extend all the way to the floor. This results in more light inside and makes the façades appear less bulky and unwelcoming.
Planning is one thing, but the reality for residents is another. Or, in the words of Anne Zuber, editor-in-chief of the magazine Häuser: "Reality is the moment when you glance into the fridge while walking past, shove two slices of salami into your mouth, and get watched by neighbors from three different directions." Zuber’s advice to future architects and planners: "Don’t forget the salami zones."
For now, however, the pleasure belongs to pleated blind manufacturers. These blinds, which can be slid up and down within the window frame, are ideal for turning floor-to-ceiling windows back into windows you can look through only up to hip level. However, these windows then appear like strictly skirted governesses among the openings in the walls. Others use frosted adhesive film, which always raises the question: Why have floor-to-ceiling windows if you cover them up?
A walk through a new development shows that residents simply block some of their floor-to-ceiling windows over time. It looks odd because the backs of furniture are hardly decorative façades. But what else can one do when a children's room has one wall with a door, one with a wardrobe, and two walls with floor-to-ceiling windows? Anyone living with floor-to-ceiling windows quickly realizes that these windows demand things from you that you cannot always provide. Writer Anke Stelling has just released an illuminating novel about a mother's existential crisis in Prenzlauer Berg. Her book is titled Floor-to-Ceiling Windows. In it, the narrator reflects, "The new building looks from the outside exactly as you want it nowadays. But the floor-to-ceiling windows honestly make furnishing difficult—at least if you didn’t know during the initial floor plan design who would sleep where and with how many people and pieces of furniture you would move in. The windows demand a coherent overall concept."
Every move, especially if building your own home, feels like a fresh start, like the chance to finally have that "coherent overall concept," the hope to take control of your own life. But once you’re living there, the windows bring you back down to earth—right to the ground they reach. Yes, architects praise the exchange between private and public space in residential complexes, and design furniture catalogs suggest that minimalist living is possible in everyday life, but in the end, the floor-to-ceiling windows remind you: everything remains improvisation, nothing is really coherent.
My daughter is turning eight; she was just born when we moved into the new building. She only knows floor-to-ceiling windows. In her room, she has three of them. When asked before her birthday what she wished for, she said: "A windowsill." Why’s that? "So you can sit comfortably on it. Or lean on it. With a cushion or something. Or put something on it." And what would that be? "A flowerpot."
Photo: Till Raether, source: Schlafzimmer-Süddeutsche
C
chand198629 Jul 2018 22:31That a study even had to be done on this.
Of course, the significantly increased amount of scattered light from the floor results in brighter rooms – who would have thought.
And I am actually very much in favor of studies.
Of course, the significantly increased amount of scattered light from the floor results in brighter rooms – who would have thought.
And I am actually very much in favor of studies.
11ant schrieb:
I have never had a garden on the upper floor But we do have balconies!
This is about floor-to-ceiling windows on the upper floor, in case you have been following the discussion and read the original post.
In our “old-fashioned” house, we only have two floor-to-ceiling elements, namely the patio doors. We were often laughed at and sometimes criticized because we didn’t want floor-to-ceiling windows everywhere, but rather windows with a sill.
By now, many of those who initially mocked us have changed their minds because they either have their windows sealed shut, put blinds in front of them, or have furniture placed there.
Upstairs, we simply chose a sill height of 55 cm (22 inches), combined with window sizes of either 1.70 x 1.60 meters (5.6 x 5.2 feet) or 1.20 x 1.60 meters (3.9 x 5.2 feet), and we have wonderfully bright rooms. The kids love to sit on the window ledge and place things there. Downstairs, it’s simply cozy for us that the sofa fits entirely behind the sill, and having a sill in the kitchen and bathroom is also practical.
However, in the new-build areas around here, you can hardly see anything other than floor-to-ceiling windows. But I’m not surprised when I think back to some of the criticism we had to endure during the planning stage.
By now, many of those who initially mocked us have changed their minds because they either have their windows sealed shut, put blinds in front of them, or have furniture placed there.
Upstairs, we simply chose a sill height of 55 cm (22 inches), combined with window sizes of either 1.70 x 1.60 meters (5.6 x 5.2 feet) or 1.20 x 1.60 meters (3.9 x 5.2 feet), and we have wonderfully bright rooms. The kids love to sit on the window ledge and place things there. Downstairs, it’s simply cozy for us that the sofa fits entirely behind the sill, and having a sill in the kitchen and bathroom is also practical.
However, in the new-build areas around here, you can hardly see anything other than floor-to-ceiling windows. But I’m not surprised when I think back to some of the criticism we had to endure during the planning stage.
M
Mottenhausen30 Jul 2018 15:19You can't just place beautiful plants on the floor; that only works if they are positioned at railing height.
Also in the bathroom: what’s wrong with sitting in the bathtub by candlelight in winter, looking out at the snowy garden? This is only possible with a floor-to-ceiling window, or the bathtub needs a 50cm (20 inches) platform.
I mean: either the bathroom is overlooked (by the street, neighboring houses, etc.), in which case you need privacy screening regardless of how high or low the windows are, or it isn’t overlooked. Do people really walk naked in an overlooked bathroom without window privacy screens just because “the windows aren’t floor-to-ceiling”?
Those who haven’t planned properly end up placing their furniture in front of the windows: putting the wardrobe in front of a standard-height window, or mounting the TV there. Again, this has nothing to do with window height: windows planned in the wrong place = bad, windows planned in the right place = good.
Also in the bathroom: what’s wrong with sitting in the bathtub by candlelight in winter, looking out at the snowy garden? This is only possible with a floor-to-ceiling window, or the bathtub needs a 50cm (20 inches) platform.
I mean: either the bathroom is overlooked (by the street, neighboring houses, etc.), in which case you need privacy screening regardless of how high or low the windows are, or it isn’t overlooked. Do people really walk naked in an overlooked bathroom without window privacy screens just because “the windows aren’t floor-to-ceiling”?
Those who haven’t planned properly end up placing their furniture in front of the windows: putting the wardrobe in front of a standard-height window, or mounting the TV there. Again, this has nothing to do with window height: windows planned in the wrong place = bad, windows planned in the right place = good.
ypg schrieb:
Roof Slopes You have already identified the issue. While some may find sloped ceilings cozy, they are counterproductive when it comes to a sense of spaciousness, openness, and the feeling of having a bright room.
BauBob7 schrieb:
You’ve already identified the mistake. Some may find sloped ceilings cozy, but in terms of openness, spaciousness, and the feeling of a bright room, sloped ceilings are counterproductive.Well, some people do find sloped ceilings very pleasant when it comes to coziness, for example in bedrooms.
But I can reassure you: this is about affordable single-story housing – not everyone is interested in the mainstream city villa.
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