Finally building and still have a few questions

  • Erstellt am 2017-03-29 17:21:14

11ant

2017-03-30 23:09:42
  • #1


The imaginary child will behave irregularly multiple times as soon as it becomes real :-0

Assuming it’s only a local access road, I wouldn’t underestimate the south side. Maybe a breakfast terrace or something?

Do I understand correctly: Celebration 125 is not just inspiration here, but that’s going to be the house? – then the meaning of the comment about the shaft is dawning on me: You have something else planned for the HAR from the original floor plan and now you’re supposed to figure out what that means for the pipes and cables when it moves down to the basement (?)

With that name, I find several models V1 to V9 right away, whereby V6 nicely shows how to elegantly avoid the protruding corner. But the entrance is always on the eaves side there (?)
 

Schnuckline

2017-03-31 10:26:54
  • #2
Kids! unpredictable sitting there? Where there is no privacy? You know how I tick now unthinkable. I was thinking more of something nice to look at as a front garden but where you don’t stay. I think the west terrace will get enough sun from the south when the sun is high. That is basically also the south side, just further to the left. I think I will create a new thread when the time comes and get your tips. At the moment the front garden should be my least problem.

The Celebration 125 is exactly the house. Just as a shell. So external dimensions. The depicted windows are included but can be moved. Just like the door. And that’s what we did. We completely messed up the interior floor plan, moved the windows, and set the entrance door to the right.

The shaft issue is now settled. It would be good if the system is close to the shaft but it’s not a must. It may sound strange to others, but I’m a bit particular about that. I do my floor plans completely myself and then have the architect just check feasibility and do the official drawings. She is the expert, but no one who will never live in the house can plan it as thoughtfully, detailed, and lovingly as I can. I used furniture in the original dimensions from our current home as help to make the dimensions easier for me, etc. So I needed some background knowledge to plan the basement. Not because I have to, but because I want to.

The versions of the houses always show the same house (I find it easily recognizable by the double door and the two floor-to-ceiling windows) only in different variants. So different knee wall heights and each version with a different extra. Our knee wall will look like in versions 6, 7, 8, and 9. So 1.60 m. We have not planned any extras yet (so none of those corner windows or balconies or bay windows). So far it is as bare as in version 1. But we are currently considering putting such a dormer (I think it’s called differently) like in version 2 on the south side. Both kids’ rooms would benefit from it. I also think it looks pretty, but this thing alone costs around 15-20k. We still have to negotiate a bit and see if there is money left somewhere.
 

11ant

2017-03-31 14:09:05
  • #3
Hehe, THAT



I have to frame that first now
 

11ant

2017-03-31 14:40:30
  • #4
And now to the actual answer:



What belongs together should also be planned together.



But what was adopted is already more than just the eighty-eight square – so it will be this model, just with rearranged windows?

Then I assume the entrance is where in the "original" the WC is, the WC then in place of the heater, the stairs have their start "in the flush tank" and the exit almost where it usually is, just "from the right"?

Try it again, at least with the views (jpg/png works best).



But that thing alone significantly contributes to the full utilization of the space, even with a high knee wall. Under a roof window on the south side, you’d have a greenhouse climate.

That thing is called (with a flat roof, as shown in V4) a "Zwerchhaus," or (with a pointed roof, as shown in V2) a "Zwerchgiebel." In any case, it is a front that continues the facade rising straight up. Set back in the roof – usually in line with the interior knee wall – it would be called a dormer (compare V3).

Good girl, you’ve given uncle 11ant a nice template for terminology training and also correctly named the knee wall (that deserves a merit card). By the way, it would be called "Drempel" if it were on the inside – watch out, now comes the warning: don’t throw me the keyword "pantry," or the horror would begin!
 

Schnuckline

2017-03-31 16:23:19
  • #5
HAHA that actually sounds a bit strange in retrospect

No idea, I don’t have any ideas for the front yard yet. I need to get some inspiration.

So the house remains 8.79 by 8.79. The entrance is located roughly where the original wall between the WC and the heating is. Directly to the right of the entrance is a small storage niche and next to it the WC. Then, instead of the staircase shown, there is a half-spiral staircase. The original study then becomes a bit wider, extends to the horizontal center, and transforms into a kitchen. The entire lower half of the house then consists of dining (left) and living areas (right). Going up the stairs, in the east is the bathroom, in the west the bedroom, and in the south two children's rooms. I would like to show my floor plans once I have them completely finished. Hopefully I’ll be ready by tonight. The views (like the view of the house, right?) haven’t been done yet.

You’re making me want this damn dormer even more. Do you happen to have 20,000 Euros? We didn’t intend to have roof windows either. Each room only gets a floor-to-ceiling window on the west or east side. Thanks, thanks. That’s the word I was looking for. Zwerchgiebel. I won’t dare to use nasty words like pantry. If in doubt, I’ll continue to use “thing.”
 

11ant

2017-03-31 17:14:43
  • #6


So croquettes instead of fries, peas instead of beans, and Béarnaise instead of Hollandaise. The schnitzel and plate size stay the same. Changing the stairs beyond turning them is quite a major operation. The suspense about the floor plans increases. I also want a study that turns into a kitchen



Yes, just looked at every side of the house.



That’s good. I can then explain when it should more precisely be called a Dong.
 

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