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Wintersonne18 Mar 2020 19:59tumaa schrieb:
20We have 18, 20 would have been better. You had to be careful where everything intersects. Most of the empty conduits are located in the ceilings.Müllerin schrieb:
I’m confused and starting to doubt my perspective... I know you’re not building on a peninsula You don’t have to imagine the picture as if it’s on a flat screen but rather on a sphere. When I open it in my phone gallery, there is a button at the top right that activates the 360° view.Wintersonne schrieb:
We used 18, 20 would have been better. So you had to be careful where things crossed. Most of the empty conduits are in the ceilings anyway.I have 18 on the ground floor. Honestly, I didn’t pay much attention to crossings; I think there should be something on the upper floor in one spot, but it should be okay.
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Wintersonne18 Mar 2020 20:24The issue was the thickness of the insulation needed to fit all the pipes. Some acquaintances had 16.5cm (6.5 inches), and sometimes the concrete ceiling had to be adjusted slightly to allow certain pipes to cross while still fitting within the insulation height. Using 20cm (8 inches) or more for the insulation would likely have made things easier.
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Alessandro19 Mar 2020 07:55guckuck2 schrieb:
Yes, because it fits perfectly.
A total failure in planning.
This has nothing to do with taste.
Client, planner, tiler. All three have failed. I wouldn’t put it that harshly. There are things you only decide or choose afterward.
You’ll see tiles everywhere in everyday life that have been cut, fiddled with, or simply laid unevenly because the wall isn’t perfectly straight.
You only notice this when you deal with it yourself. Otherwise, it doesn’t stand out at all.
I bet that if I had posted a photo of the bathroom pointing out the lead crystal wash basin, no one or at least very few would have noticed the grout line.
tumaa schrieb:
20What exactly is included in the floor construction? Apparently, it also includes the concrete poured over the precast floor slab, because that’s where all the pipes for the controlled residential ventilation system and electrical wiring are ultimately concealed.
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