Floor plan, 3D images city villa 160m². Please provide feedback :)

  • Erstellt am 2019-06-08 13:44:17

haydee

2019-06-11 19:52:23
  • #1
Open wardrobes like in US movies have the disadvantage that everything collects dust. Especially if you need that much wardrobe space, you have a lot of clothes hanging around for months.

A proper dressing room with closed wardrobes, a window, and access to the hallway makes sense if there is enough space.
 

guckuck2

2019-06-11 20:58:04
  • #2
Is this supposed to be a "proper" dressing room? That’s probably a matter of definition; I would rather call it a wardrobe room. You just put your rows of closets into another room. I don’t even need a window there; the area is for dressing/undressing anyway, so there’d always be something hanging in front of it. I think it’s not thought through completely. You close off the room separately, a door, nothing more. Saves doors on the storage units, saves a lot of space. Yes, that’s "American," it’s called a walk-in closet. The dimensions in the floor plan are more than sufficient for that. No one works shifts here; the argument about waking someone up is theoretical. It might apply, but it doesn’t have to. Therefore, here’s my confession in favor of a “closed” room attached to the bedroom and against the fixation on the entire upper floor being open, because the closets have to be amusingly accessible separately. That’s too dogmatic for me here in the forum regarding dressing rooms and what “must” be.
 

11ant

2019-06-11 21:02:18
  • #3
... for example to make it wider and then rotate the house 90°, then the north living room will be in the west.
 

haydee

2019-06-11 21:39:41
  • #4

What is supposed to be a proper dressing room or none at all? I don't have one
 

guckuck2

2019-06-11 21:52:57
  • #5


I don’t understand your question.
 

ypg

2019-06-11 21:53:03
  • #6
I wrote depth! It is exactly the opposite. Please read everything carefully. You should read everything again from the beginning and also understand it. If necessary, sketch everything that is being advised to you here. Because somehow you are not only at odds with me. You are given so many tips, starting with furnishing: just take a tape measure in your hand, deal with your own furniture, and then draw it to scale into the floor plan. Feel free to cut out templates and move the furniture back and forth. Then you will understand yourself, and everything will go more smoothly. It only works with “engaging with it yourself.” Without that, it will be a matter of chance. When the house is built, it will be too late.
 

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