Floor plan design city villa 145

  • Erstellt am 2023-03-08 13:04:46

motorradsilke

2023-03-11 20:47:49
  • #1


On the latter point, I agree with you. But everyone has to decide for themselves WHERE they optimize and make compromises. Therefore, I would always give the advice regarding a small hallway, because I know it from my own experience and found it unpleasant. Because I would rather save space elsewhere. Just as a suggestion to consider for yourself WHERE you save the missing square meters. That’s what the forum is for, to give tips, advice, and suggestions.

PS: By the way, we didn’t really have a disagreement; we just had different opinions from our own experiences.
 

kbt09

2023-03-11 20:57:23
  • #2
... and, the note is not aimed at making the hallway as large as possible, but at designing it in such a way that the necessary and reasonable seasonal storage space for coats, jackets, shoes, etc. for 4 people is accommodated.
 

K a t j a

2023-03-11 21:32:24
  • #3
Do you have concrete examples? It wasn’t such a big deal in my time. With today’s technology, theoretically there should hardly be any difference. But by now everything costs twice as much.
 

11ant

2023-03-11 21:45:01
  • #4
I can basically understand the efforts involved and know that nothing is free. A hip roof is fundamentally more complex than a gable roof; this applies both to purlin/rafter constructions and to trusses. Every additional ridge increases the complexity even further. Of course, I don't have roof truss price databases that statistically back this up and could simulate the price in advance.
 

motorradsilke

2023-03-11 21:50:59
  • #5
Surprisingly, it is also not a given that a hip roof is more expensive than a gable roof. When requesting quotes, we had both variants, gable roof more expensive than hip roof and vice versa.
 

11ant

2023-03-11 23:46:10
  • #6

Due to the concept, it is basically the case that the hip roof is more complex than the gable roof, except with different designs; a hip roof with trusses can be produced more cheaply than a gable roof as a purlin/rafter construction. With the same "construction method" (and the same provider), I have never heard of a hip roof being cheaper than a gable roof – would you like to send me the quotes?
A hip roof with an angle is more expensive in all "construction methods" than a "pure" hip roof.
Although, of course, this is not a rule, and every carpenter is free in their calculations.
 

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