Floor plan design for a city villa with garage

  • Erstellt am 2021-03-09 21:01:17

ypg

2021-03-11 08:55:10
  • #1
It's probably more about the generalized statement ;)
 

Schimi1791

2021-03-11 09:11:34
  • #2
Oooch ... large rooms and a corresponding number of rooms are really something nice. But every square meter more "beyond reason" first has to be constructed/renovated and later maintained and heated ... The same applies to a plot of land.
 

Myrna_Loy

2021-03-11 09:46:44
  • #3
or goes,... ;)
 

11ant

2021-03-11 12:28:57
  • #4
That the eyes are bigger than the stomach (or here: the wallet, or the desire to clean a palace) probably comes shortly after the defiant phase. Here, however, I still suspect an alleged factual reason: we all know these semifinal self-plans that waste dozens of square meters on dirty corners in overly wide hallways and unfurnishable spaces under air spaces, while the TV sweats right next to the fireplace. Anyone invited to such friends’ houses and experiencing their bottlenecks naturally develops a distorted sense of space requirements. All the more shocking is it then when the bank advisor mentions a number that leads straight (or, if at all, only with difficulty) into a Flair 113.
 

haydee

2021-03-11 12:40:29
  • #5
The client comes from a rural area, where the houses are often larger. It is only in the last 10-15 years that there have been more smaller houses again. We have also built more delicately compared to our parents.

Most builders are not aware at the beginning of how much money is really needed. That is a process. It also includes deciding what is a must, what would be nice, and what is well, then not. I think most builders have a cut list.
 

11ant

2021-03-11 12:44:03
  • #6
However, as one gets older, the red pencil is probably wielded a little more loosely, while in younger years "friends have it after all" is more easily mistaken for "must have."
 
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