ᐅ Single-family hillside house with basement for 2 people, including a home office and hobby rooms

Created on: 15 Apr 2020 07:48
W
wibble
Development Plan / Restrictions
Plot Size
Slope: see attachment. Quite steep near the street at the bottom, fairly flat at the "garden" area at the top
Floor Area Ratio 0.4
Building Coverage Ratio 0.8
Building envelope, building line, and boundary: irregular building envelope, see attachment, 18 meters
Edge development: not permitted except for ancillary buildings
Number of parking spaces: 2
Number of floors: not specified
Roof shape: not specified
Architectural style: not specified
Orientation: not specified
Maximum heights / limits: eaves height (section from exterior wall to roof covering at street level) 7.5 meters (24.6 feet), ridge height not specified.
Other requirements

Homeowners’ Requirements
Architectural style, roof shape, building type: gable or hip roof, preferably with dormers to add variation to the large roof
Basement, floors: basement, then ground floor, then upper floor with 1.40-meter (55 inches) knee wall
Number of occupants, age: 2 adults around 30 years old, 3 cats, no children planned but 2 rooms on the upper floor specifically desired for hobbies
Space requirements on ground and upper floors: see floor plan
Office: family use or home office? Both working from home, so office needed on upper floor and a partially finished basement for a second office (this layout is desired)
Guest stays per year: about 6 nights per year
Open or closed layout: ?
Conservative or modern construction: ?
Open kitchen, island: no kitchen island, closed kitchen
Number of dining seats: 4
Fireplace: yes
Music / stereo wall: no
Balcony, roof terrace: no
Garage, carport: garage for 2 cars with a wide door
Utility garden, greenhouse: no
Further wishes / special features / daily routine, including reasons: garage access to basement is important because of frequent off-site appointments, so I don’t want to walk through wind and rain. This elongated room is the sports room and must be kept as is.

House Design
Who designed it:
- Do-it-yourself
What do you particularly like? Why? Laundry room next to the bathroom, as I want a laundry chute for dirty clothes here.
What don’t you like? Why? After about 100 redesigns, everything is now satisfactory.
Price estimate according to architect/planner: no cost estimate yet for this floor plan.
Personal budget limit for the house, including fittings: 500,000
Preferred heating technology: air-to-water heat pump with underfloor heating

If you had to give up, which details / extensions
- could you do without: second hobby room on upper floor, guest room on ground floor, instead use rooms in the basement.
- cannot give up: everything else

Why did the design end up as it is?
It’s a mix of many examples from various magazines… then tailored to our needs and the required functions of each room. Considerations included whether a room should be on the ground or upper floor, orientation, adjoining rooms, and traffic flows. Bedroom next to dressing room and bathroom, facing the garden, not above the living room, because my partner often has visitors in the evenings when I want to sleep. Office with no morning sun because sunlight disturbs me when working on screens, and I usually work early in the morning. Bathroom facing the garden.

What do you think makes it particularly good or bad?

What is the most important / fundamental question about the floor plan in 130 characters?

Do you have any suggestions for improvement?

The garage is planned on the left side of the house. The street is on the south side, and the garden extends to the northeast. The terrace should wrap around the corner near the living and dining area to get evening sun, but also provide shade during the summer midday heat. It is a south-facing slope. The neighboring houses are only bungalows built into the slope, so they do not block the light.

Technical sketch: rectangular table box with FAR and BCR values 0.4 and 0.8 as well as a triangle.


Top view technical diagram with dimension lines, angle (20–35°), and circular triangles; area.


Floor plan of open living and dining area with kitchen, sofa, dining table, stairs, and bedroom


Apartment floor plan: kitchen, bathroom, sleeping area; hallway and stairway; measurements in cm.


Architectural plan: curved pink area with blue edge, green spaces and dimension lines.
H
haydee
20 Apr 2020 10:18
Please mark the 2m (6.6 feet) in your upper floor plan.
W
wibble
20 Apr 2020 10:21
kaho674 schrieb:

These are 5 people from 3 households. As far as I know, only 2 people from 2 households are allowed.

In public areas, not on private property!
H
haydee
20 Apr 2020 10:32
Every state acts independently.

Where we live, you are not even allowed to visit your parents, except to provide assistance.
Y
ypg
20 Apr 2020 12:00
wibble schrieb:

As I already mentioned, the windows on the sloped roof are skylights, as I said.

No, I am talking about the gable walls. If windows cannot fit there, the rooms need to be adjusted accordingly.
wibble schrieb:

In public areas, not on private property!

No, also on private property.
Why? Because an architect cannot approve something like this: windows that cannot be installed in the gable wall or garages that are 4 meters (13 feet) deep. There must have been quite a bit of alcohol involved.
11ant20 Apr 2020 15:39
ypg schrieb:

Because an architect wouldn’t approve something like this: windows that can’t be installed in the gable, or garages that are 4 meters deep (13 feet). A lot of alcohol must have been involved.

"Substances" in Malmsheimer’s sense work just as well.
https://www.instagram.com/11antgmxde/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/bauen-jetzt/
W
wibble
7 May 2020 21:54
ypg schrieb:

No, I’m referring to the gables. And if no windows fit there, the rooms need to be adjusted accordingly.

No, also private property.

That’s nonsense. This was even overturned in court, and such a regulation has never existed in my federal state. Check the relevant ordinance. Up to 5 people are officially allowed.
And even if not, it doesn’t matter here.
And no, no alcohol. The issue was simply about my overall floor plan; it should be obvious, even to me, that where there are roof surfaces, only skylights can be installed.