ᐅ L-shaped house on a trapezoidal plot of land

Created on: 21 Feb 2021 10:23
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Tejasvini
[A friendly hello] to the forum community from the tri-border area A/CH/D!

After spending several days browsing here first as a guest and now as a registered user, and wishing some posts were available in book format – so much information, excitement & entertainment – I’ll briefly introduce myself and start my first thread (the first of probably many to come 😉)

The [short] facts about the topic (more detailed info will follow once the first floor plans are ready; I’ll answer the list of questions there since it seems more appropriate):


We have been talking for years about tearing down our parents’ house (about 200 years old, oil and wood stoves only in occupied rooms, not all rooms properly insulated, ceiling and room heights so low it’s frustrating… can you feel my enthusiasm? … but it does have a very nice location – except for the [lovely] relatives who built next door – see attachment) and building something new instead. Finally, *hurray*, we now have a timeline and a budget.
  • The land is in Austria/ Vorarlberg near Lake Constance (no lake view… that would be something), just over 700 sqm (7,535 sq ft) – a large protected area to the southwest – level ground
  • Originally planned about 120 sqm (1,292 sq ft) living space for two people (as mentioned, more details to come… otherwise I’ll probably annoy you a lot in this first post and have many questions later that will keep you busy for a while)
  • Ground floor + 1st floor – no basement – flat roof
  • We will live upstairs and sleep downstairs (that’s a fact; it will be hard to change our minds on that). If necessary, we’ll have a stairlift or a small elevator.

Attached are pictures of the land and our house – the one with the red roof on the *curvy corner* (I can upload photos of the garden and views from the property on request) and my first plans. Honestly, the initial plan was created with an online planner, fully furnished, with decorations, pictures and all my plants – and there are quite a few *gg* . It was quite a challenge remodeling everything every time a wall was changed.

But I’m somewhat teachable and have now gotten a ruler, pencil, and of course an eraser. I’m no longer drawing decorations, and I’ll get graph paper soon, I promise!

I hope you can follow the plan; only the exterior walls are drawn, marked in red on the ground floor and orange hatch for the upper floor. The plot dimensions and the 3 m (10 ft) setback distance are also indicated. South is at the bottom as usual … until now in my plans the bottom was always where I placed the entrance, but as I said, I’m learning…

Now that you’ve had a look here, I’m interested in what you would build differently and how the cost differences are roughly affected by walls with flush corners, more corners and edges, shifted upper floors, etc. The question is less about why the garage length varies or why wall lengths differ from plan to plan, but rather about the basic layout and location and to what extent extras impact costs financially.

I hope I included some informative data (which should be highlighted) and now I’ll let you critique me — I’m really looking forward to your opinions and suggestions so that our first house won’t be built for the enemy…. because building three times is out of the question.

PS: In case no one noticed, I really don’t have a clue about planning, so in plain English: a complete novice 🙂
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icandoit
21 Feb 2021 22:54
Will there be a roof terrace on the northwest side? What will be on the southeast side? Exactly facing the large wall?
DaSch1722 Feb 2021 00:27
First of all, welcome to the forum!

You have a very entertaining and amusing writing style. Very likeable. It somehow reminds me a bit of Karla Kolumna, the lovable busy reporter from my childhood.
Tejasvini schrieb:

Budget will be discussed in more detail in the floor plan thread ... will follow shortly, or within a few days ... roughly 400k

From what I have read here and seen in the drawings, you seem to want to build something modern and extravagant in the Bauhaus style.

I imagine that your area down there is probably not the cheapest when it comes to construction costs.

You mention 400k. Is that the amount of external financing or the total budget?

Bauhaus style like the one you have in mind is certainly in the price range of €3,000 per square meter (approx. $330 per square foot) plus additional construction incidental costs and extras.

More information about the budget would therefore be very helpful.
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Nice-Nofret
22 Feb 2021 11:41
Hmm, with a building structure like that and those ideas, the cost quickly rises to 2500–3000 per square meter (230–280 per square foot) instead of 2200–2500...
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icandoit
22 Feb 2021 12:59
Glass palaces simply cost more.
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icandoit
24 Feb 2021 13:10
Has the well of ideas run dry? I am still waiting for the architect's spatial concept.