Floor plan design of a single-family house with approximately 130 sqm living area

  • Erstellt am 2024-06-16 19:36:33

jan_christlieb

2024-06-29 19:11:30
  • #1
The space under the stairs is part of the HAR in your sketch, right? On the one hand, I find that really practical; on the other hand, I fear we then have a soundproofing problem. The stairs transmit sound from, among other things, a washing machine significantly better than a wall.
 

K a t j a

2024-06-29 20:00:24
  • #2
That depends on the stairs, I would say.
 

ypg

2024-06-29 21:41:12
  • #3

I'll answer differently: now it's time for the architect!
 

kbt09

2024-06-30 01:05:30
  • #4
60 cm from the edge of the table to the wall partition in the living area is not a realistic value. Recreate that with your current table and a chair. You should plan at least 90, preferably 100 cm, and then the other distance to the island will be relatively tight, especially if people are actually sitting at the table.
 

K a t j a

2024-06-30 07:14:24
  • #5
The bedroom would then be directly on the street. I would reconsider that if I were you.
 

ypg

2024-06-30 09:36:01
  • #6
Yes, sigh, cobblestones can be exhausting But 11cm wall is rather 11.5. With plaster, its thickness is 13-15, tiled it can be up to 18cm thick. This also applies to the 90 niches in the toilet and shower. And a bathtub also isn’t pressed tight against the wall. Then it can happen that the mason takes advantage of his tolerance and the stairwell shifts by 3 cm. I wouldn’t plan everything (this applies to the whole design) down to the cm tightly, so that there is hardly any room left for anything. You may have hardly any options left to place light switches, see e.g. the wardrobe. Regarding the bathroom, I would think about what use the shower stub has. [ATTACH alt="IMG_9120.jpeg"]86506[/ATTACH] Furthermore, the stairs are planned with dimensions that are not comfortable. 19/26 should already be it. Half a cm can already be very exhausting. The stairwell is drawn with 210. Here, too, both sides will be plastered. The door is too narrow for the technology or for practical use: devices and ladders should already fit through there.
 
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