ypg
2013-01-14 21:48:04
- #1
If I’m not mistaken, you planned windows with muntins at the top. Bauhaus is also a bit more than just floor-to-ceiling windows ;-)
Here you have the confirmation of the semi-detached house :-D
The straight staircase takes up a lot of space, take a 3/4-turn staircase and place it on the middle wall (west?), about in the middle, so that you can plan 2 rooms upstairs in the floor plan (south?) and fully downstairs (north?), whereby the bathroom should be placed northwest (because of wastewater pipes) and the bedroom in the east (with a window to the south) (but with these window sizes it can get uncomfortably hot). Between them, in the width of the staircase, the hallway, which then also has windows on the left side (east?). There you can also put an armchair and/or a desk.
With the garage inside the building envelope, it won’t be more than an end terraced house floor plan. Unfortunately, nothing else works. But there are also variations here that are interesting and work :-)
Yes, many have no window in the guest bathroom, but the "many" mostly live in social housing. A dark hole has little to do with quality of life.
Architects do not necessarily have more ideas, but they have the knowledge and can calculate.
Your full windows, e.g. around the corner, can’t hold up your upper floor at all, but that’s actually logical. That will also make sense to you. Where should the base slab rest? Therefore, feel free to go to the library or get magazines, because sometimes less (windows) is actually more ;-)
Why actually a (double?) garage in the building?
Here you have the confirmation of the semi-detached house :-D
The straight staircase takes up a lot of space, take a 3/4-turn staircase and place it on the middle wall (west?), about in the middle, so that you can plan 2 rooms upstairs in the floor plan (south?) and fully downstairs (north?), whereby the bathroom should be placed northwest (because of wastewater pipes) and the bedroom in the east (with a window to the south) (but with these window sizes it can get uncomfortably hot). Between them, in the width of the staircase, the hallway, which then also has windows on the left side (east?). There you can also put an armchair and/or a desk.
With the garage inside the building envelope, it won’t be more than an end terraced house floor plan. Unfortunately, nothing else works. But there are also variations here that are interesting and work :-)
Yes, many have no window in the guest bathroom, but the "many" mostly live in social housing. A dark hole has little to do with quality of life.
Architects do not necessarily have more ideas, but they have the knowledge and can calculate.
Your full windows, e.g. around the corner, can’t hold up your upper floor at all, but that’s actually logical. That will also make sense to you. Where should the base slab rest? Therefore, feel free to go to the library or get magazines, because sometimes less (windows) is actually more ;-)
Why actually a (double?) garage in the building?