ᐅ Single-family house, 200 sqm, with basement and double garage – what are your thoughts?
Created on: 8 Dec 2016 11:26
S
SebastianV.
What changes or errors have we made in the layout of the individual floors?
Is the building cost estimate realistic? (According to the architect, approximately 13% additional incidental construction costs are to be expected.)
City villa / hipped roof
Plot size: 740 sqm, 31m x 23.9m (33,597 sqft, 102ft x 78ft)
Orientation: Entrance east, garden area west
Number of parking spaces: 2 plus double garage
Number of floors: 2 full stories
Roof type: Hipped roof
Style: Modern
Client requirements:
Style, roof type, building type: City villa, modern
Basement, floors: Fully basement, 2 full stories
Room requirements on ground floor and upper floor: Everything included in the floor plan
Office: Family use or home office?: Home office
Conservative or modern construction: Modern
Open kitchen
Number of dining seats: 10
Fireplace: Yes
Balcony, roof terrace: Yes
Garage, carport: Garage
Additional garden features: Pool approx. 9 x 3 m² (29.5 x 9.8 ft), oriented west, adjacent to terrace
Energy: Geothermal + solar thermal (no gas supply)
Thank you in advance.
Is the building cost estimate realistic? (According to the architect, approximately 13% additional incidental construction costs are to be expected.)
City villa / hipped roof
Plot size: 740 sqm, 31m x 23.9m (33,597 sqft, 102ft x 78ft)
Orientation: Entrance east, garden area west
Number of parking spaces: 2 plus double garage
Number of floors: 2 full stories
Roof type: Hipped roof
Style: Modern
Client requirements:
Style, roof type, building type: City villa, modern
Basement, floors: Fully basement, 2 full stories
Room requirements on ground floor and upper floor: Everything included in the floor plan
Office: Family use or home office?: Home office
Conservative or modern construction: Modern
Open kitchen
Number of dining seats: 10
Fireplace: Yes
Balcony, roof terrace: Yes
Garage, carport: Garage
Additional garden features: Pool approx. 9 x 3 m² (29.5 x 9.8 ft), oriented west, adjacent to terrace
Energy: Geothermal + solar thermal (no gas supply)
Thank you in advance.
S
SebastianV.8 Dec 2016 14:31I don’t see any purpose in the sloped ceiling, that’s correct.
We plan to store clothes in the bedroom, which is why it is sized accordingly. Since there is a bathroom with a shower on the ground floor, we consider the bathroom upstairs sufficient. (Changing and dressing can be done right next door.)
The room for child 1 is intended 99% as an office, which is why it has a balcony.
The bedroom faces northwest.
We plan to store clothes in the bedroom, which is why it is sized accordingly. Since there is a bathroom with a shower on the ground floor, we consider the bathroom upstairs sufficient. (Changing and dressing can be done right next door.)
The room for child 1 is intended 99% as an office, which is why it has a balcony.
The bedroom faces northwest.
Climbee schrieb:
Yes, please jpg.
What catches my eye at first glance:
Why the slanted door upstairs for the bedroom and child’s room? What is the benefit of that???
Almost 33 m² (355 sq ft) for bedroom and dressing area, but only 14 m² (150 sq ft) for a bathroom to be used by 4 people. That seems unbalanced to me...
One child has balcony access, the other gets nothing, which isn’t ideal either.
Why do you need 23 m² (248 sq ft) for the bedroom? Is anything else planned for that room besides sleeping?
I also miss a north direction, but I assume the bedroom faces south in the best case scenario.
Therefore, I would completely redesign the upper floor:
Equal children’s rooms with balcony access for both (or skip the balcony entirely; based on experience it is rarely used if there is a garden) facing south.
Make the bedroom smaller and enlarge the bathroom or (even better) plan a children’s bathroom.
S
SebastianV.8 Dec 2016 14:39Not really necessary, but I believe it’s better to have a bit more space than to cut corners and end up with too little. A robot vacuum helps a lot with cleaning, as it takes care of most of the work (dusting and mopping usually don’t take much time).
The utility room is intended to be used as a pantry, so you don’t have to go down to the basement for small items all the time. Cooking will be done exclusively in the kitchen.
The utility room is intended to be used as a pantry, so you don’t have to go down to the basement for small items all the time. Cooking will be done exclusively in the kitchen.
j.bautsch schrieb:
I guess you already have the budget, but do you really need a 200m² (2,150 sq ft) house with a fully finished basement for 4 people? Who’s going to clean all of it? Without a basement and with appropriate spare rooms on the ground floor and upper floor, I can understand 200m² (2,150 sq ft), we are planning something similar (rooms are not tiny, but also not huge). But if you have an entire extra floor available?
I have the impression you planned the ground floor, and the rest of the area just filled in as it did. Maybe consider making the upper floor smaller than the ground floor. Or move the multipurpose and utility rooms to the basement?
B
Bauexperte8 Dec 2016 21:40ypg schrieb:
Lots of space, little house.
Some details remind me of the 1980s.Stairs, urinal, bathtub, and shower
... maybe also the 1990s
Regards
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