Hello everyone,
We are just starting to plan a single-family house.
Today, after a long wait, we received an offer for a plot of land. I have attached a picture.
It is plot number 14.
Now I naturally have some questions. The access is from the south, which is not ideal. On the other hand, it is a dead-end street, so the garden can be oriented towards the south, right?
What do you think about the overall orientation? It is important to me not to have sunlight only until midday.
Is it possible to estimate from the plan how long the sun will shine on the property?
Thank you very much for your support.
Best regards
We are just starting to plan a single-family house.
Today, after a long wait, we received an offer for a plot of land. I have attached a picture.
It is plot number 14.
Now I naturally have some questions. The access is from the south, which is not ideal. On the other hand, it is a dead-end street, so the garden can be oriented towards the south, right?
What do you think about the overall orientation? It is important to me not to have sunlight only until midday.
Is it possible to estimate from the plan how long the sun will shine on the property?
Thank you very much for your support.
Best regards
Andrea3004 schrieb:
I think we are going to go for it Andrea3004 schrieb:
Huge thanks to you all again. I’m approaching this now with a good feeling. That is the most important thing.
Andrea3004 schrieb:
Sure, some requirements aren’t really our dream, but we can live well with them. With a clinker allergy, you’d probably have to avoid the Münsterland region widely, but there are worse things.
And I truly appreciate having a development plan that protects us from cookie-cutter “Tuscan” villas—pardon, “Tuscany-style” houses. Hey, architecture with extra cheese, you know?
Andrea3004 schrieb:
I didn’t even know there were city villas with gable roofs… The city villas from the Kaiser to Weimar period often had a classic (or sometimes Mansard) hipped roof, and otherwise have nothing in common with the modern KfW cubes with their pyramid roofs (a hipped roof without a ridge). Gables are usually found at the entrance rather than on the sides, so gable roofs are rather uncommon. Another common feature is two full stories.
Caspar2020 schrieb:
What would “bother” me is that the garage has to be placed perpendicular to the ridge direction. Caspar2020 schrieb:
You can forget about the double garage in your mind. It would have to be inside the building envelope. Exactly. As a double garage, a gable roof oriented correctly (if it’s a classic square shape) could be considered. However, as it uses up the house width, I would leave out the enclosed space for the second car.
https://www.instagram.com/11antgmxde/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/bauen-jetzt/
Are you familiar with the body of water there?
Everything is possible, from a mosquito infestation to a smelly pond in summer, especially if there are commercial areas nearby – I would be extremely cautious about that.
From a distance, I definitely wouldn’t claim these are prime spots. Casper already mentioned the general location; for me, it wouldn’t be suitable, but I don’t know the surroundings or the chances of finding something else or better either.
Everything is possible, from a mosquito infestation to a smelly pond in summer, especially if there are commercial areas nearby – I would be extremely cautious about that.
From a distance, I definitely wouldn’t claim these are prime spots. Casper already mentioned the general location; for me, it wouldn’t be suitable, but I don’t know the surroundings or the chances of finding something else or better either.
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