Bungalow - floor plan - barrier-free

  • Erstellt am 2017-09-15 22:47:54

zizzi

2017-09-16 11:53:47
  • #1
The matter is clear so far ;)
 

11ant

2017-09-16 13:10:53
  • #2
Depending on how old the tub was, it might not have been insulated yet. Water itself has not changed in its physical properties since long before the Roman Empire, and likewise, a bath is actually luxurious in terms of water consumption because not all seven siblings go through it. Strictly speaking, like schnitzel not only on Sundays.

As a former severely disabled civilian service worker, I would like to say that you rarely see such a successful floor plan. The planner cannot be blamed for not every property having the ideal orientation of north street - south garden.

Around the bed in children's room 1, I believe I can recognize pallet truck clearances and conclude from this that the disabled child in the folding wheelchair would not be a self-driver. With an assistant or electric wheelchair, however, I don’t see the movement spaces here as being too large.

If you calibrate when looking at floor plans for houses for purely pedestrian households, a wheelchair-accessible house must necessarily appear somewhat clumsily proportioned, and you might feel concerned that the relatively smaller appearing rooms would also be absolutely too small. But no, here everything is flawlessly sized for practical use. And if there were something to complain about, I would surely have found it ;-)
 

Nordlys

2017-09-16 15:36:35
  • #3
I also like the floor plan. and with a wheelchair, the hallway etc. just needs to be more spacious, otherwise you always end up damaging walls. only. if you mirror it, the terrace would be facing south. Why is that not an option? Karsten
 
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