ᐅ Single-Family House Floor Plan – Can It Be Made Narrower? Initial Ideas
Created on: 4 May 2020 23:05
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PyneBite
Hello everyone,
Today, I would like to share my first floor plan attempt (ground floor) with you.
The building will be a one-and-a-half-story single-family house with a gable roof, and our biggest challenge is the layout for the ground floor.
Attached is the partially dimensioned sketch.
It is quite difficult for me to judge in front of the screen whether the floor plan is practical for everyday use.
Here are some preliminary notes on the floor plan:
- The doors to the living and dining areas are planned as sliding doors (the staircase next to the sofa already has a height of over 2 m (6 ft 7 in))
- The straight staircase in the hallway is intended to be a focal point
- The sofa and the entertainment wall are drawn to scale
- The windows are only placeholders
- The front door should open in the opposite direction, but the software could not do this
- The utility room is 2.50 m (8 ft 2 in) wide
- North is at the bottom by the entrance
My wishes/ideas are as follows:
- Lift-and-slide door approximately 3.50 m (11 ft 6 in) long (ideally centered, but this will probably not work due to the living area layout)
- Dining table 2 m (6 ft 7 in) long
- Kitchen with an island
- Guest toilet as small as possible (two bathrooms are planned upstairs)
- Ideally, I would prefer the house to be 1 m (3 ft 3 in) narrower (7.45 m (24 ft 5 in) instead of 8.45 m (27 ft 9 in))
Questions:
- Is there enough room to move around comfortably?
- Can the house be about 1 m (3 ft 3 in) narrower? Our main goal here is to reduce the floor area and improve the appearance. We want the house to be narrower but struggle with the implementation due to the staircase.
- What would you change?
I will work on part 2 afterwards and then upload everything complete with a filled-in questionnaire.
Today, I would like to share my first floor plan attempt (ground floor) with you.
The building will be a one-and-a-half-story single-family house with a gable roof, and our biggest challenge is the layout for the ground floor.
Attached is the partially dimensioned sketch.
It is quite difficult for me to judge in front of the screen whether the floor plan is practical for everyday use.
Here are some preliminary notes on the floor plan:
- The doors to the living and dining areas are planned as sliding doors (the staircase next to the sofa already has a height of over 2 m (6 ft 7 in))
- The straight staircase in the hallway is intended to be a focal point
- The sofa and the entertainment wall are drawn to scale
- The windows are only placeholders
- The front door should open in the opposite direction, but the software could not do this
- The utility room is 2.50 m (8 ft 2 in) wide
- North is at the bottom by the entrance
My wishes/ideas are as follows:
- Lift-and-slide door approximately 3.50 m (11 ft 6 in) long (ideally centered, but this will probably not work due to the living area layout)
- Dining table 2 m (6 ft 7 in) long
- Kitchen with an island
- Guest toilet as small as possible (two bathrooms are planned upstairs)
- Ideally, I would prefer the house to be 1 m (3 ft 3 in) narrower (7.45 m (24 ft 5 in) instead of 8.45 m (27 ft 9 in))
Questions:
- Is there enough room to move around comfortably?
- Can the house be about 1 m (3 ft 3 in) narrower? Our main goal here is to reduce the floor area and improve the appearance. We want the house to be narrower but struggle with the implementation due to the staircase.
- What would you change?
I will work on part 2 afterwards and then upload everything complete with a filled-in questionnaire.
PyneBite schrieb:
I completely disagree. As long as the position of the staircase is not fixed, I cannot design the upper floor.Well then, good luck with that...
PyneBite schrieb:
The scale is actually 1:25That doesn’t help much since we are viewing the images online and not printing them out to measure. I didn’t mean the scale as a reduction factor. I meant that there is a scale bar at the edge with meters, but below the drawing there is a grid where about 4.66 squares correspond to one meter — and that doesn’t help with orientation. So it’s difficult to determine distances in the drawing by counting squares.PyneBite schrieb:
A straight staircase has to be installed because I need to minimize the load on my left knee.That doesn’t mean the straight staircase has to be a single flight (?)PyneBite schrieb:
But I can only start on that once the floor plan upstairs is finalized. By the way, that will be relatively straightforward.You didn’t listen well: I just explained this a few days ago — although not in your thread — why it’s better to start with the upper floor. Because the upper floor is not straightforward at all (the misconception comes from many amateur planners assuming fewer wishes upstairs means it’s simpler — and then they wonder why the task suddenly turns out to be so difficult). https://www.hausbau-forum.de/threads/neubauvorhaben-Einfamilienhaus-im-bergischen-staedtedreieck.34702/page-6#post-399132
PyneBite schrieb:
I think the opposite. As long as the stair position is not fixed, I cannot design the upper floor.Exactly the opposite is true. Try it out. saralina87 schrieb:
Google “Gussek Haus myLine 140” — the floor plan is a bit similar to yours and I think it's quite well designed.Wasn’t that also your base model?https://www.instagram.com/11antgmxde/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/bauen-jetzt/
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saralina875 May 2020 13:3111ant schrieb:
Wasn’t that also your basic model?
Yes, originally it was.
By now, everything has changed, but overall I still find the basic floor plan very appealing.
saralina87 schrieb:
By now, everything has changed,When exactly, and what changed? – I haven’t seen any updates from you in this thread this year (?)https://www.instagram.com/11antgmxde/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/bauen-jetzt/