Bungalow floor plan 150 sqm, closed kitchen, covered terrace

  • Erstellt am 2019-06-30 07:05:20

illvisionz

2019-06-30 07:05:20
  • #1
Hello,
we are still in the planning phase and are currently not making much progress. Although it has already become really good for the most part, it is still not exactly what we imagine.
The plan is a bungalow with approximately 150 sqm. A separate parent/child area was important to us. The kitchen should be closed and there should be a covered terrace.

Bebauungsplan/Einschränkungen
899 sqm
slight slope
bungalow

Anforderungen der Bauherren
Rather Mediterranean
No basement, bungalow
3 people, 36 / 29 / 3
150 sqm
No office
Guest room/ironing room
conservative or modern style: We like to combine old and new
open kitchen, cooking island: closed
Number of dining seats: kitchen 3, dining area preferably 8-10
Fireplace: Yes
Balcony
Garage: double garage with space

Hausentwurf
Who is the planner: Floor plan from us implemented by a planner
What do you particularly like? Why?
What do you not like? Why? We are not quite satisfied with the children's room because the bed is in the wrong place, and we think that later a 1.40 x 2.00 meter bed should fit in.
The biggest problem at the moment is the kitchen/living room/dining area because we are not happy with the position of the dining table. Somehow the table bothers us no matter how I turn it. However, if I swap living and dining rooms, I have problems with the couch and living room wall.

Price estimate according to architect/planner: 300,000
Personal price limit for the house, including equipment: 350,000
Preferred heating technology: gas heating with collectors on the roof for hot water

Plot number 18 is ours.

Feel free to also point out other mistakes etc. that we may have made/installed. Regards Alex








 

haydee

2019-06-30 08:06:38
  • #2
Draw your furniture to scale once For example, bedroom 2.88 m in raw construction measurement 2.88 minus baseboard, bed frame (2 m + x for headboard and frame) leaves about 60 to 70 cm for TV and passage. It's like in a caravan Pantry very narrow could be difficult with a freezer Children's room I would remove the wall stub near the wardrobes Utility room is full with HT and washer/dryer will be stacked. Access to garage if planned should be omitted for a bit more space
 

illvisionz

2019-06-30 08:18:52
  • #3

Yes, in the parents’ bedroom a few more cm will be added
Pantry is cancelled.
The short wall in the children’s room will still be removed.
With the utility room we are still in conflict, one says it’s enough, the other says it’s not enough.
 

hampshire

2019-06-30 08:50:38
  • #4
The house looks like a shrunken version of a more spacious bungalow. The proportions of most rooms are oddly narrow or short. The dressing room, for example, is far too tight – logically, you can turn it into a walk-in closet and find space for the sleeping area.

A room with a diagonal pathway needs space so that nothing is in the way. It is not the positioning of the dining table, but the implementation of a principle in a space that is too small.

Dividing a house into three living wings is a good idea, but it doesn’t really work in the compact size. Two wings in an L-shape would be better, but it would be a completely different house.

The greatest distance you can cover in the house is from parents to child. Living on the sidelines is only suitable in the teenage years.

I understand the charm of the basic idea. However, it requires more floor space.
 

kaho674

2019-06-30 09:21:04
  • #5
I think the bed in the children's room is already placed quite well; the problem is more the wardrobes. I switched the doors of the WC and the children's room, which I find more pleasing. Whether the child will be happy about the double door leading outside, I dare to doubt. A single door would also do. What really bothers me, however, is the backlight from the window against the screen. So I rearranged everything thoroughly and glazed one door permanently. The floor-to-ceiling shelf becomes a sideboard:

[ATTACH alt="Bungalow.jpg" type="full"]35901[/ATTACH]
In the end, there is not much more than 12 / 13m² of usable space in the children's room. You can’t expect miracles. In my opinion, it will never be a small apartment.

I don't find the dining table dramatic now. What is much worse are the missing windows in the living room. What is that supposed to be? A cave? So I would immediately glaze the whole corner.

The dressing room is also not my thing. Being squeezed into this tunnel every morning - that’s not for me. Well, maybe only one side of the wardrobe is floor-to-ceiling, then it might still work.
I also really don’t like it when the bathroom is directly connected to the bedroom. Then the partner hears every little noise, so to speak.

You could also reconsider the roof shape. A gable roof somehow doesn’t quite work. Otherwise, I find the whole thing quite nice.
 

haydee

2019-06-30 09:54:09
  • #6


Where do they come in?

I would consider an extra children's wing. It creates a corset that makes the rest seem small.
Right now it is impractical and who knows how long the children will be there. They are gone at 18.

Take a look at bungalows with stairs that have a studio under the roof. Then something can be done when the children are older.
And storage space is also conveniently accessible.

HT what needs to go in
WA/dryer, drying rack, dirty laundry, hand wash basin,
house connections, fuse box, heating and ventilation technology,
tools, beverage crates, sports equipment

Yes, it works with little space. Then dirty laundry piles up in the bathroom, ironing laundry in the dressing room, stained laundry in the bathroom sink, drying rack in the living room,
tools, suitcases, etc. in the garage.
 

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