Hello,
Has anyone here built a house without a basement on a slope? I would appreciate some pictures to get a better idea. We have an elevation difference of about 5 m (16 feet) from the street to the property boundary, which is approximately 25 m (82 feet) away, and the finished floor level (FFL) is planned to be 1.66 m (5.4 feet) above the street, with the garage 0.5 m (1.6 feet) lower.
Has anyone here built a house without a basement on a slope? I would appreciate some pictures to get a better idea. We have an elevation difference of about 5 m (16 feet) from the street to the property boundary, which is approximately 25 m (82 feet) away, and the finished floor level (FFL) is planned to be 1.66 m (5.4 feet) above the street, with the garage 0.5 m (1.6 feet) lower.
icandoit schrieb:
The second one, well. Why does the planner design an urban villa if the client wants a gable roof? I didn’t want to go into that in such detail – I only see the current draft as, at best, a slight improvement, and apart from removing the massive noise protection walls, no real stroke of genius. The planner didn’t exactly go out of their way either to implement your suggestion with the measurements.
https://www.instagram.com/11antgmxde/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/bauen-jetzt/
11ant schrieb:
I didn’t want to go into that much detail here—I just see the current draft as at best a minor improvement, and aside from removing the massive noise barrier walls, no real stroke of genius. The planner also didn’t make a big effort to implement your suggestion with precise measurements.As I mentioned before, these are the first new plans I have received, which is why I uploaded them here for suggestions on improvements. Valuable tips have already been given. I’m also not entirely happy with the garage and adjoining rooms because something about them doesn’t quite appeal to me. I don’t fully understand what is considered very bad about this floor plan? Regarding the roof type, I have not committed to anything yet; it was simply carried over from the old plan.Andyru94 schrieb:
I don’t quite understand what is supposed to be very bad about this floor plan?What I mainly meant was that the improvement in quality from the designer was smaller than the suggestions (including drawn ones) that have been provided here in the meantime.https://www.instagram.com/11antgmxde/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/bauen-jetzt/
M
Myrna_Loy8 Mar 2021 09:13I think the floor plan is nice—very typical for the era with the open layout on the ground floor. Not exciting, but functional and modern. Given the large available space, I would have allocated a bathroom for the children instead of placing the only second shower in the guest toilet.
I’m also quite sure that these open layouts won’t stay modern forever and would consider how the kitchen could possibly be separated from the living area later on, for example by providing a stove connection on a wall, and not just in the kitchen island area. From my experience, dressing rooms tend to be inefficient space consumers (unless you’re a Kardashian with 1000 m² (10,764 sq ft) of living space), but apparently, they are a luxurious must-have for many today—I personally prefer to plan for more built-in wardrobes. So mostly minor details.
I’m also quite sure that these open layouts won’t stay modern forever and would consider how the kitchen could possibly be separated from the living area later on, for example by providing a stove connection on a wall, and not just in the kitchen island area. From my experience, dressing rooms tend to be inefficient space consumers (unless you’re a Kardashian with 1000 m² (10,764 sq ft) of living space), but apparently, they are a luxurious must-have for many today—I personally prefer to plan for more built-in wardrobes. So mostly minor details.
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