I also believe that many current plans with "into the bedroom and from there into the bathroom and dressing room" are wrong, but in the worst case you have to pass by your partner on the toilet in the morning when you want to leave. YOU really have to want that.
Should the ironing board in the dressing room justify the door to the garden to be able to collect the dried laundry? You have 4 exterior doors but probably not much light in the house through the windows anyway.
Door to the air space to continue onto the terrace upstairs?
Why the terrace up there?
The TV? room upstairs offers a relaxed seating distance of 6-8m to the TV and the desk in the corner would probably be the perfect place for the bad kids from some RTL shows, because the seating distance to the walls at the desk does not necessarily look comfortable. The orientation is such that the sun shines directly onto the TV in the evening.
The kitchen in that form does not offer much space. If the cabinets on the wall to the hallway are tall, you only have the estimated 80cm between sink and stove as work surface; if they are not tall, it will probably be tight with storage and fridge.
The stairs opposite the front door can become a tripping hazard.
Children’s rooms? Both in the north?
These are all just initial thoughts; in the end, everyone has to judge for themselves.
Hi,
first of all, thank you very much for the suggestions.
I hadn’t noticed the little light yet. Thanks for that. Do you have any idea how I can change that?
We have reworked the kitchen. See the current attachment. Now there is more hallway, but visitors no longer have to go through the kitchen.
The terrace upstairs and the door into the hallway (by the way, a glass door):
- great seating area with sunset a little higher than the neighbor’s garage
- wine drinking and reading corner
- the door, so that conversations from the dining room don’t rise upstairs unhindered. Also for warmth in winter.
If "smells" occur in the bathroom, then we use the small toilet.
The door in the dressing room is intended to create an escape route since the bedroom is a "trapped room".
The TV room upstairs and at the same time office is not finally furnished.
What speaks against the children’s rooms in the north? Especially since the children are young adults who only go to the rooms to sleep.
Again, thanks for your comments. That is valuable to me.
Cheers, Andre