Bungalow with open ceilings - looking for inspirations

  • Erstellt am 2018-02-03 23:46:57

Baumfachmann

2018-02-04 01:27:28
  • #1
Hi, I’m taking pictures of my house tomorrow. I have open ceilings in my upstairs; such rooms are amazing. What would be stored in the attic is never needed anymore. I’ll upload the pictures tomorrow.
 

blaupuma

2018-02-04 08:23:03
  • #2
11ant
Do you know the Haus Hauscompangie?
Often asked for reviews here in the forum, hardly any response.
 

11ant

2018-02-04 19:14:22
  • #3
That does not surprise me, the house company is largely unknown south of the NDR broadcasting area. However, it is hardly worth adapting their designs to German regulations in the long run; accordingly, I mostly read doubts in forums about how permanent their market presence in Germany can really be. I also do not see any real "advantage" with them: the main difference is probably that they are taste-wise more "Scandinavian" than the German mainstream. As the flip side of this coin, they apparently do not gain any significant market share south of the Main River.
 

Nordlys

2018-02-04 20:40:14
  • #4
Those who want to build Scandinavian need land. 800 sqm and more. Because they build on one level and wide. That is already a no-go in southern Germany. Land is expensive, too expensive for something like that. Then Scandinavians love very large living spaces, from which small bedrooms branch off, while here a 20 sqm children’s room is gladly built. In addition, many southern B plans do not allow the Scandinavian style at all, sometimes require two-story buildings, etc. And these are visual habits. Those who have never been to Oksböl or Lundeborg and have only ever seen high knee walls, shallow gable roofs, and shutters find such a northern house simply exotic. Karsten
 

blaupuma

2018-02-04 23:21:41
  • #5
No one else has anything on offer? Isn’t that trendy? I thought bungalows are stylish again I was at friends’ today who, in addition to the open roof truss in the living/dining room of the bungalow, raised the ceiling everywhere to 265 including the doors. That was an incredible feeling of space. That’s what I’m doing now too [emoji4] ( happy )
 

11ant

2018-02-05 00:34:15
  • #6

Not exactly: modern is for house providers to offer models for people who build once again as they approach retirement, or for well-earning singles. So bungalows yes, but for couples without children or even singles.

For classic young-family home builders, something else is "modern," namely (except in rural states) plots of land that are rather too small for bungalows.
 
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