@11ant but the plan says north.
I meant the house plan.
Not that I know of. I integrated the garage into the house because I need the basement anyway to compensate for the slope so that I can step out onto the terrace level.
Theoretically, I could put a flat roof with a terrace on the garage. But I’m a bit wary of the flat roof.
I wouldn’t know what would bother the garage about a flat roof. If I understand correctly, you primarily fell in love with the fact that in the Hartl show house the TV seating area is “around the corner” from the cooking area. However, a horseshoe-shaped half-atrium bungalow is not suitable for budget builders even on a flat plot. You are now indulging in two more luxuries / luxuries (help me out here, what is the correct plural of Luxus, you are usually more proficient in German than us marmalade people) by combining both elevating the house on an inserted basement to adapt the dream house for a hillside property and inflating the living area by about forty percent.
Therefore I join the expected outcome of your price inquiries and suggest you kindly consider how the priority list of your dream house details can be fulfilled as much as possible in a plot-appropriate outer house design. Maybe will come up with something nice, because the plot should welcome a split-level house. The extension of the show house floor plan is already a mortgage even without scaling up the dimensions, although the width of the plot – if it weren’t for the slope – invites living spread out on one level.
I like the idea of having only 2 levels so that in old age I could possibly drive behind the house and enter it on ground level.
By leaving out the mountain-side entrance?