ypg
2016-10-07 19:31:20
- #1
Most of the time, you yourself know best where you want what
...but usually have no idea if it makes structural sense.
Or is the architect now supposed to implement the measurements from the drawing by the OP at all costs? What use do they have?
Example 1: Without explanation, the architect builds a house with these measurements and the OP later gets annoyed that his 0.88 wide fridge just looks like a squished sausage on this 0.88 wall. Is that supposed to be the case? Should the architect have thought along?
Example 2: I would file for divorce if my husband wakes me up three times within a short period at half past four in the morning at his getting-up time, just because bedroom, dressing room and bathroom are senselessly arranged one after the other.
-> You can’t read out what the OP wants from the drawing!
Instead, it is better if the OP or the person wanting to build writes down for the architect: Bedroom plus dressing room with master bathroom, preferably interconnected. Children should get a separate bathroom
instead of unknowingly explaining on a drawing: Bedroom absolutely in the middle of bathroom and dressing room and doors everywhere at the head end (so that sleepers no longer get any peace), parents’ area please the icing on the cake on the upper floor, and children’s rooms different sizes, so that there is some bustle and quarrel in the good room.
You can also write down the mentioned balcony, and you should also note what it is supposed to be used for: either for the laundry during the day, for the parents’ sundowner in the evening, the teenagers’ secret cigarette or simply “nice.” The architect has learned to implement these wishes!