Good morning :)
that I also believe you are wishing for the square circle.
The expression fits quite well: if you demand certain dimensions, they have to fit somewhere and match the counterpart of the other floor as well as the opposite wall.
I will explain my answer from yesterday again.
- So if the building envelope is only 8.50 meters wide, I cannot use a wall inside the house as extra long (bedroom), with the rest of the house width intended for a long staircase. You would then have to arrange the bed, for example, across the room, because only 3 meters are needed lengthwise.
- At 130/135 sqm some rooms cannot be realized well or only with compromises if the other rooms are to remain approximately standard size. This applies to the office (with two children), sauna, dressing room, bedroom on the ground floor, utility room on the upper floor, pantry and all those extra rooms for which you need 160 sqm plus. Often you can just squeeze in the pantry or a small sauna or a small storage room, but then there are deficits in other rooms.
- 130/135 sqm is also not enough for a large freezer room with the mentioned standard rooms (3 bedrooms on the upper floor, common room, guest toilet).
- a simple narrow fireplace needs about 1 meter of space around it, so about 2.40 meters in width, one meter in front. Everything that stands in this semicircle might get scorched. This space is also hard to claim in a house; with a footprint of 65/70 sqm, it is practically not available.
I still do not understand the panoramic window in the dressing room:
the nicest corner of the house should be reserved for a living room and not for a utility room where you undress.
The experienced reader knows that I usually draw alternatives. But I do this only if the site plan is meaningful and the builder/questioner provides specific information.
Therefore here is an example from Danwood to show what fits into a 130 sqm house.
Danwood because they often plan with open corridors.
[ATTACH alt="C54F4DC1-AD78-4073-9BF5-8305D97569CA.jpeg" type="full"]76046[/ATTACH]
Here you can see it gets quite tight but everything is still there. If you shift the bedroom door, you can fit another closet element behind the wall; if you reduce the children’s room on the right side, you can get either a sauna or a storage room as an attic replacement.
The fireplace as a tunnel fireplace obviously has no place because it would dominate everything, and I also do not see a chimney flue in this clearly structured floor plan.
And another tip: just no concrete staircase in a small house as drawn there. A wooden staircase is airier because of the material and with risers you can generate storage underneath.