Alex1211
2014-03-07 01:03:22
- #1
No sight line??? Wow! At which points in the house do you spend most of your time? On the couch? Wonderful, 12 m view to the door and yes, a well-made door looks great. Otherwise, you could also buy front doors for €800.- in general. In bed? Great, you see the spaciousness of the bathroom. In the kitchen? 10 m wide view. You confuse sight line and spatial feeling. You are right about the kitchen but we will never need 4 m. We hardly cook and when we do, no menus. And the coffee machine is of course inside the tall cabinet, that’s a must. There you also theoretically get hot water though we actually never need that. We don’t like devices standing around. Preferably built-in directly. Take a look at a well-made motorhome, then you will notice what spatial feeling is.
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Space! What is space for you? Circulation area is not space. Space is a design element or through such it becomes space. Sight lines also make a room into a space. Show me please one successful sight line in this design that gives you spaciousness! The only view into the shower would be one, if the bed were turned and behind it not a toilet door flapping open, but a nice washbasin is indicated behind it :) If a sofa is just squeezed into a corner, you cannot speak of a space or spaciousness. If my view from the sofa has to look at the front door, the right space is not present. What you want is not given here. Don’t believe that everyone in this forum lives square, practical, good, and all of them would be boring just because they appreciate that not every view in the house must fall on a pile of jackets and shoes. A kitchen squeezed into a corner does not create space either. If your drawn staircase on the ground floor were looked at from above as a kitchen row, one could speak of a space (please do not confuse with a room – I mean SPACE). My coffee machine (fully automatic) about 30 cm wide has space, namely 60 cm surface in width. Yep, it is staged (can afford that without children ;)) My stylish kettle is similar. In addition, the usual countertop of about 4 meters. How should a standard kitchen row become space according to you? I understand "discussing a rough floor plan" as: you show the architect your design, he looks at it (and not through), nods, says yeah yeah and then draws something real that hardly has anything in common with the design... So, now name me one sight line in your plan that makes a room a space. Where is the necessary depth present? The elements that make your construction into spaces? Unfortunately, I don’t see them!