Comments on floor plan design welcome

  • Erstellt am 2020-05-24 10:24:25

Alessandro

2020-07-28 09:14:28
  • #1
For ironing, I would look for a nicer place than the utility room...
 

Curly

2020-07-28 09:19:07
  • #2
I do not understand the use of the upper floor in the planning. It looks like the children will move out soon, maybe one child will stay a little longer. In the long run, no child will definitely live upstairs, as there is no separate apartment and even then most do not want to live with their parents or parents-in-law. How is the upper floor supposed to be used in a few years when all the rooms are on the ground floor?

Best regards Sabine
 

Alessandro

2020-07-28 09:49:10
  • #3
that would really be interesting to know. Depending on budget, needs, and preferences, you can definitely make something useful out of it. e.g. sauna and large terrace, office and hobby room, etc.
 

pagoni2020

2020-07-28 09:49:43
  • #4

You have no idea………she’s probably still sitting there and can’t get out, thanks for the reminder! I should have better followed your advice and planned a third door as an escape door, just as you "with flair" designed.
No, no, first of all I have trained my family and guests in proper bathroom behavior, and I was clever enough to install two toilets in the second bathroom so that two people can sit there at the same time. "Finally, not a cookie-cutter floor plan."

Of course, everyone has their habits and should live them as they please. In Mexico, for example, there are public toilets where people sit next to each other with red faces and chat, elsehwere the son still sleeps with his mother until he is married. Almost everything is possible.
Nevertheless, as a self-declared Central European, I perceive some things as "extremely unusual," which is why I mention (as I am asked to do as a user) that a bathroom/toilet, prohibition of locking, with two doors and an enclosed bedroom feels to me extremely uncomfortable and pointless, even if everyone wants to do it that way for themselves. I don’t want to have to explain bathroom rules to my growing family plus unknown visitors etc. (as described differently again and again by ) and create an unpleasant problem of a person locked in the bedroom if the rules are not followed.
And… himself mentioned (please reread) that precisely for this reason of being locked in, an escape door was planned in the dressing room; the "fear of house fire" came later.

Nobody disagrees . Only, and I think you have followed the entire thread, various opinions, floor plans, house construction companies, special solutions, etc. have been suggested here by just as many users, but all of them have been rated by as "unobjective," "without flair," or "boring." He himself does not mince words (no need to) so he should also take the comments he himself requested in good spirit, which he largely does.
But it can be read that constantly changes the basic requirements crucial for proper planning and fluctuates between "bungalow for two, children moving out, soon-moving-in family members, two-story, age-appropriate" (to name just a few); in addition to the observation that architects have no clue and "have been building the same thing for 20 years," whereupon he immediately presents his "with flair" planned toilet solution with an escape door, practically as a counterbalance to his incompetent architects and the boring or all inappropriate suggestions (quotes) from forum users.

....just between us–. We’re all doing this voluntarily like you and it’s also fun, otherwise any of us could just quit. As long as you can take it sportingly, I will say something, but I have zero problem keeping quiet on your thread; please just let me know.
But I maintain that no one here is "unobjective" nor should you (as has happened) accuse someone of lacking the intention to act constructively.
 

Climbee

2020-07-28 09:52:49
  • #5
I see it exactly the opposite: when I get up, I need the bathroom and the dressing room, and the person who can still sleep wants quiet in the bedroom. So a door between the bedroom and the dressing room, between the dressing room and the bathroom can be there, but doesn't have to.
 

Alessandro

2020-07-28 10:00:19
  • #6
: Some people just need a bit more time to know what is sensible, practical, and cost-efficient. Of course, everyone wants to build the jack of all trades, but for that, things for the future like "how long will children stay in the house" must be certain. However, since it was stated from the beginning that guest rooms for children and grandchildren should definitely be planned, the use of the upper floor is actually clear to me.
 

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