Hello, today I had to wait for an hour and only had my notebook with me... so I just doodled a bit.
This is my very first draft of the ground floor, and it probably still has quite a few mistakes.
What I’m curious about is whether there are any major errors here (for example, the staircase?).
North is at the bottom right.
One square represents half a meter (0.5 m / 20 inches).
This is my very first draft of the ground floor, and it probably still has quite a few mistakes.
What I’m curious about is whether there are any major errors here (for example, the staircase?).
North is at the bottom right.
One square represents half a meter (0.5 m / 20 inches).
Baufie schrieb:
I wouldn’t do that. Having a structural engineer turn your plans into the "final" design.
Let me guess, the structural engineer is cheaper than the architect, right?
M
MIA_SAN_MIA__22 Jun 2017 15:02Baufie schrieb:
Having a structural engineer create the "final" plan based on your designs.
Let me guess, the structural engineer is cheaper than the architect, right? No, that is not the decisive factor. I know the structural engineer and his work quite well, as well as previous clients. The overall concept is quite solid.
Baufie schrieb:
Having a structural engineer create the "final" plan based on your designs. I agree that it’s better to avoid this. When the homeowner has little sense of scale and proportions, I expect that a structural engineer will most likely just turn an awkward draft into flawless construction drawings of that same awkward draft. Their clients will probably all be satisfied because the engineer built exactly "their" design. The kitchen will be saved by the specialist sales advisor.
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M
MIA_SAN_MIA__22 Jun 2017 21:1911ant schrieb:
I agree that it’s better to avoid that. When the client has little sense for dimensions and proportions, I expect a civil engineer most likely to translate an awkward design into flawless construction drawings of that awkward design. His clients will probably all be satisfied because he built “exactly their” design. The kitchen will be saved by the specialist salesperson. Why should a civil engineer lack a sense for things like that?
MIA_SAN_MIA__ schrieb:
Why wouldn’t a civil engineer have a sense for something like this?
If they did, they would have become an architect.
Since they lack creativity, they chose the profession of civil engineering instead.
Regards, Yvonne
M
MIA_SAN_MIA__22 Jun 2017 21:42ypg schrieb:
If he had that, he would have become an architect.
But since he lacks creativity, he chose the profession of civil engineering.
Regards, Yvonne One could also say that we engineers live the practical side, otherwise we would have become architects.
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