Bungalow on fire wall

  • Erstellt am 2014-10-06 13:30:47

Manu1976

2014-10-11 09:06:44
  • #1
@Frosch. Your plans don't work. 8 meters exterior width - exterior wall - 2 interior walls, then you roughly have 7 meters inside for 3 rooms. Let's assume a minimum of 3.50 meters for a bedroom (if it should be age-appropriate, rather 4 m), then 3.5 meters remain for bathroom and dressing room. Do you really need a dressing room? If it's not absolutely necessary, I would do without it. It unnecessarily restricts you.
 

Manu1976

2014-10-11 09:08:23
  • #2
If I have time and feel like it, I'll present my idea to you this afternoon. I would definitely not make the entrance in the east. Make it in the north and zone properly. A living room as a passage room is not exactly what one wishes for.
 

kbt09

2014-10-11 09:29:35
  • #3
No, I don’t think this will work:


The living/dining area etc. will then only get some sun in the morning through the kitchen and will be located only facing north.

And, you should also describe what you absolutely need. For example:

    [*]how many meters of cabinets you imagine,

    [*]what should roughly be in the living area (sofa, armchair, TV yes or no, dining table which size or for how many people),

    [*]cooking – some preferences,

    [*]bathroom… shower or shower and tub, etc.)
    [*]What else is storage needed for? Christmas decorations, ski clothes, or similar


----------
Where north is in principle is clear. Only your location images don’t show whether they present the cardinal directions exactly straight
VARIANT 1


Or whether the firewall really lies EXACTLY to the south
VARIANT 2


EDIT:
Which roof type? Flat roof?
 

ypg

2014-10-11 10:34:09
  • #4


The approach is wrong. Don’t plan the floor plan before the house, but take the plot with all possibilities and conditions and plan the house. For this, however, you need to know what leeway the conditions allow and how to bypass regulations -> architect!!!

If I take existing keywords, I might build an L-shape, at least I would make the roof open for light (staggered gable roof with gable facing south). Atrium house!

With a bungalow, every room has the possibility for a window, namely a skylight.

And why is the terrace planned on the north here? Even for fixed terraces, a distance of x meters to the neighbor applies. A west terrace on the south wall would be appropriate.

That’s all for now in terms of ideas, as long as I have my pencil in hand...

The same applies to you: take graph paper and a pencil, but you have to draw walls and not just leave lines.
 

frosch006

2014-10-11 13:35:29
  • #5
Hello,
we would like a simple cubus form of the house with a flat roof. According to the building authority, only a shed roof with a 15-degree roof pitch is allowed, sloping from south to north, so away from the party wall. At a trade fair, we once had contact with a prefabricated house company, where the planner said he would make a hidden shed roof, so from the outside it would look like a flat roof. That means he wanted to simply raise the two gable walls so that they are horizontal and a small wall would form at the front. The gutter was also supposed to be recessed and hidden in it. He quickly sketched this for us back then, unfortunately I do not know exactly how to describe it. I hope I was able to explain it somewhat understandably.
I also attached a photo, from the garden side (west side) looking in the direction of (east). The steeply sloping shed roof to the left is marked on the plan as building C. The small house behind the willow tree, to the left of the clotheslines, is marked on the plan as building A; between the two buildings only a carport marked with B is drawn. To the right of house A is the yellow neighboring building, which defines the building boundary to the garden, no further construction is allowed.

ma




 

kbt09

2014-10-11 14:25:06
  • #6
Slope from south to west? .. You mean south to north - right?
 

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