Floor Plan City Villa - Catalog Floor Plan Inspiration

  • Erstellt am 2021-09-22 10:45:17

haydee

2021-09-24 09:39:17
  • #1
I think the wardrobe belongs near the entrance, but not the pile of shoes that sometimes forms there. There are ways to design the wardrobe close to the entrance without the postman seeing the new shoes and jacket. Is your utility room similar to Hermione's handbag? The room isn't that big at all. Laundry, house connections, wardrobe, storage room. Wisteria will look great. You really got lucky with the property. You can swallow the toad with the monument authority if you like the style.
 

ypg

2021-09-24 10:16:59
  • #2
I would see this sentence as an exaggeration. Not everyone sets up their drying rack in the living room or lounge just because they don’t have a utility room-dance hall. Every person is different anyway and chooses their ironing spot themselves. An open kitchen is planned, but then ironing should be done behind the door? And that is then sugarcoated? There are households where ironing takes longer than cooking. And if the ironer is alone during the day, then they should be allowed to do that in their preferred area without any problem. And exactly for this reason many want a planned wardrobe… … before you constantly have to visit the technical room. The typical and standard houses work for the masses and don’t have to be spoken badly of! There are construction companies that place more value on equipment, others again on a more playful floor plan. Most floor plans can be modified to fit different plots of land. Furthermore, a family can alter the house so that it fits their family: enlarge the utility room or hallway so that a wardrobe can be there, reduce the hallway to get a pantry. Smaller children’s rooms so a third child fits in, a longer living room to make it more spacious. Remove a partition wall because home office is not needed, or leave an extra room for creative ideas.
 

Georgian2019

2021-09-24 10:20:23
  • #3
If you look at old (stately) houses and apartments, jackets were never hung in the hallway. They were always discreetly taken by the servant or stored separately. As I said, the entrance gives the first impression and was always designed to be pompous or inviting. Among the proletariat or due to lack of space, jackets were stored in the hallway (I don’t mean that disparagingly, but culturally historically). Our utility room is actually considered modest at 7.5 sqm. Washer/dryer stacked in one corner, next to it under the window a large old Jugendstil dresser/half cabinet full of shoes. Narrow shoe cabinet on the wall behind the door. Door with coat hooks and coat hooks next to the door. Beverage crates under the jackets. Next to that a small narrow shelf with canned goods, glasses etc., next to that a large heavy-duty corner shelf. And the exterior wall houses the large heating system and house connections/multi-utility entry. In front of that, next to the heating system, there is also a large freezer. A Foxydry drying pulley hangs from the ceiling (I can only recommend it). If necessary, a drying rack can also be set up under the Foxydry in winter. It’s tight/cramped then, but the utility room is meant for storage after all.
 

Myrna_Loy

2021-09-24 10:20:24
  • #4

I hate it too, but my two boys and their friends are absolutely resistant to advice. Based on experience, I plan the storage space in the house entrance area around the usage behavior of the children. I admittedly also briefly considered having the children use only the servant’s, pardon, back entrance. :D The Empire chest of drawers will therefore stay in storage until the brats move out.
 

Andre77

2021-09-24 10:32:05
  • #5
You don't have to make a science out of a wardrobe now. Here is my pragmatic solution:

There is nothing in the (running) way and still neatly tidied up.
 

ypg

2021-09-24 10:42:04
  • #6
But we live in the here and now. Those times are over! 2021.. 2022 is coming. The Rococo lady also did not take the Middle Ages as a model. That may all work individually for you, but others may want it a bit tidier or more structured. I don’t want to step on your toes now. Your house looks nice, works for you, and many find it great because it’s different. But most would build differently and more practically inside. It’s good as it is, that you like it and it works. But one doesn’t have to speak of it as sacred. It can always be better. Even on a small area.
 

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