Children's room on the upper floor open up to the roof

  • Erstellt am 2016-06-13 11:42:58

Pommes01

2017-04-26 10:36:38
  • #1
In the show house Bad Vilbel by Frammelsberger (360 degree tour on the homepage) this also applies, right?
 

bon1980

2017-04-26 21:12:17
  • #2


We are not finished yet, but maybe these photos help with the visualization (2x shell construction, 1x rough plaster...)?
Under the insulation, drywall panels will be installed as a ceiling... Most of the beams will remain visible. We don't have any skylights.


 

unstepe

2019-11-20 19:57:23
  • #3
Hi bon1980,

just came across the pictures. We planned our upper floor similarly with an open ceiling up to the ridge.
Do you have more pictures? There is very little information about the construction method on the internet.
How satisfied are you?
 

flooene

2020-03-04 22:17:35
  • #4
Hello, we had a similar idea.
One floor plan idea has the hallway relatively central under the ridge of the roof. We are building with a basement and do not need storage space in the attic. So the idea was to extend the children's rooms to the hallway.
So to pull the rooms up to the ridge and go over the hallway in the process.
What is your general experience with this?
Regards
Flo
 

bon1980

2020-03-04 22:53:14
  • #5
: For what purpose? Sleeping berth? I personally find it (but without experience) great, but one should be aware that this probably only works when the children are a bit older. In our case, it probably wouldn't have worked because the wall to the hallway is directly under the ridge beam and is therefore load-bearing along the entire length of the house.
 

flooene

2020-03-04 23:40:35
  • #6
Yes, effectively a sleeping cubicle. Or rather a fixed loft bed. We currently already have a solid loft bed in our apartment, so that gave us the idea. And during the preliminary planning, the thought came up to design the roof open up to the ridge. Currently, we have a ceiling height of 3.5m, which we would really miss in our own home. It is still quite early in the planning, so the roof can also be supported differently than with a post. The only question is always whether the effort is worth it. That’s why my question to Form with the experience. Regards flo
 

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