Floor plan planning shortly before submitting the building application

  • Erstellt am 2017-10-02 23:25:16

R.Hotzenplotz

2018-06-16 18:28:21
  • #1


I can still switch. I probably have to, because due to the faux pas with the escape route that I had already suspected, he has knocked himself out. As a result, he has lost all professional respect from the client and also from the contracting partner (the opposing party). That is not a basis to achieve something together that is well-founded. Did you look at his page that I emailed you? Or would you rather have a publicly appointed and sworn expert for building damages from the IHK? There are several in the region who offer construction supervision.

I at least already know the other one, but back then it bothered me that after the actual discussion, he dragged me into a conversation about my work and that time ended up on the invoice. I absolutely cannot stand that.

Will another expert still be able to get well acquainted with this?

From the existing report, the only thing that concerns me is the issue with the roof ventilation and insulation (hand-drawn sketch). Everything else is a minor matter.

Particularly bad that you now also have to spend hundreds of euros for such poor performance. I guess you can't avoid it despite the content deficiencies.
 

Otus11

2018-06-17 00:13:55
  • #2


FDRL, point 4.6
Is at least a target regulation.

Google "parapet slope"
That delivers good results.
You should also skim through the entire FDRL, especially the part about used roofs. But that is only marginally relevant here.
 

11ant

2018-06-17 00:27:22
  • #3
WtfiA (who the f... is Alice) - in full words it probably means the flat roof guideline
 

R.Hotzenplotz

2018-06-17 00:28:17
  • #4


Even I could have figured that out as a layman.
But it took 10 seconds.
 

11ant

2018-06-17 00:42:33
  • #5
The visible discussants in forums are usually just the tip of the iceberg, which is why I have a heart for lurkers and search function users. Whole word terms often help them better than abbreviations (unless they are very common like WDVS, which hardly anyone pronounces in full either).
 

R.Hotzenplotz

2018-06-17 12:49:29
  • #6
Is it actually common to route water connections around the corner? In the utility room, our washing machine and dryer are planned to be on the right side exterior wall. But today I was puzzled to see that the connections are hanging on the bottom side wall of the plan. So on the one hand, the hose would have to be routed around the corner, and on the other hand, when you enter, you would always be looking straight at the corner with the connections. That can't be the solution.





Regarding the unfortunate situation with the terrace doors and the window, we noticed today that despite having the same dimension specifications in the construction plans, the glass width of the fixed element is 10 cm wider than that of the door elements (86 cm vs. 76 cm). My wife saw this for the first time today and is also totally disappointed to see the puny things upstairs.
 
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