ᐅ House with ground floor and upper floor—do you know any recommended house design software?
Created on: 5 Aug 2018 20:37
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Brontosaurus
Hello everyone,
I registered here because we want to build our own home.
We have already ordered house builder catalogs and will soon visit a model home park.
Are there any online home planners that cover all the important questions? Can you recommend any? Just so we have a direction for where we want to go.
We want a house with a ground floor and an upper floor, totaling around 120–150 sqm (1,290–1,615 sq ft).
Preferably with a geothermal heat pump, blinds everywhere, controlled ventilation, and six rooms.
Can you point us in the right direction?
Land plots here cost around 100,000 EUR.
BrontosaurusR
I registered here because we want to build our own home.
We have already ordered house builder catalogs and will soon visit a model home park.
Are there any online home planners that cover all the important questions? Can you recommend any? Just so we have a direction for where we want to go.
We want a house with a ground floor and an upper floor, totaling around 120–150 sqm (1,290–1,615 sq ft).
Preferably with a geothermal heat pump, blinds everywhere, controlled ventilation, and six rooms.
Can you point us in the right direction?
Land plots here cost around 100,000 EUR.
BrontosaurusR
Egon12 schrieb:
First of all, the location matters, and then nothing else for a long time; otherwise, anyone could just build somewhere in the countryside.
What is that supposed to mean?
It means that the location where you build is extremely important. In a rural village, you might get developed land for 45.10 per square meter (0.09 per square foot). But living there means lacking infrastructure—no shops, no schools, and everything has to be reached by car. Some people might be fine with that and could even buy 800 square meters (8,600 square feet) or more, perhaps with a small paddock for ponies. However, for most people, that doesn’t work. So, what do I want? What do I need? That’s what determines where to build. This decision also dictates how much of my budget I will spend on the land, and the house must then be built within the remaining budget. In short: in a rural area, you could build large and stylish; at the city outskirts, you may only afford small and modest. Karsten
Egon12 schrieb:
You should also consider the basic question: solid construction or timber frame I think that’s nonsense. If you don’t have a personal preference, there’s no need to get caught up in religious disputes like “brick or sand-lime brick” and so on. Every builder has their preferred wall material—in that sense, prefab house manufacturers are builders just like any other.
Non-professionals tend to overestimate the importance of the shell structure. Building a house is a complex undertaking. If you focus too much on the wall materials, you might end up choosing the wrong heating system—simply because the capacity to learn is limited, and in detail, everything is more or less like doctoral theses.
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I would first consider what kind of house I want.
Good and affordable (energy-saving regulations, no rain shower, simple tiles)
Energy-saving regulations – KFW – Passive house
Low-emission interior, upscale features like large-format tiles, whirlpool, KNX systems, etc.
Tradespeople only locally around the church tower
After that, I would choose my building partner.
Good and affordable (energy-saving regulations, no rain shower, simple tiles)
Energy-saving regulations – KFW – Passive house
Low-emission interior, upscale features like large-format tiles, whirlpool, KNX systems, etc.
Tradespeople only locally around the church tower
After that, I would choose my building partner.
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