Floor plan spacious house, barrier-free

  • Erstellt am 2024-06-30 19:29:46

Schorsch_baut

2024-06-30 23:05:50
  • #1
At what age is the builder? Late 40s? Then one can dream of their generous, not seriously accessible house that way. By the late 50s, one should have experienced enough of life to know what reality will look like in old age. And plan accordingly, more wisely. As a widower or widow, such a generous house can only be a block of many lifeless rooms. As a person with mobility impairments, one will wish to have taken generosity less seriously and accessibility more seriously. My parents are in their late 60s/late 70s, and we are currently remodeling the house for the second time and planning a retirement home with us for the time when only one is left and needs help.
 

ypg

2024-06-30 23:32:23
  • #2
There is almost nothing barrier-free. If the elevator is where planned, one cannot even get from the hallway to the living area with walking aids, a walker, or a wheelchair. Pantry behind a kitchen cabinet: not barrier-free. T-partition in the bathroom: not barrier-free. And so on. Unfortunately, I cannot identify the property. But if the garage covers over 80 sqm, then the property is somehow already spoiled by it. Space is basically great. And if you can afford it, it makes sense even in old age. We built more floor space over 50 than others. We love it. This way, no chair needs to be moved when cleaning. But a large living room alone does not make spaciousness. What is missing are sightlines. Sightlines here are counterproductive, only towards walls without a view of the garden. Living as a passageway can be done without children. Nobody is disturbed there. But the distance between sofa and TV is too far away (then age comes into play. Nobody needs larger distances like those at the eye doctor.) The kitchen would be too far from the entrance for me (despite the "barrier-free" 75 cm step door). Building services make noise; therefore, they avoid placing the technical room and, in addition, a door to the freezer room next to the seating area. From the outside, it looks quite petty bourgeois and resembles a two-family house. You can clearly see the DIY. But inside as well, it is somehow not planned with foresight, but from a limited focus. My opinion.
 

hanghaus2023

2024-07-03 15:37:58
  • #3
Has the planner ever heard of setback areas? It seems to me that something is a bit tight in the west. Why does one build a 12.5 m x 14 m house and then have hardly 1 m of space at the boundary.

I can only advise consulting the architect here.
 

hanghaus2023

2024-07-03 15:46:49
  • #4
Where is the access? There is already an existing structure.

Did I overlook the budget information?

A stairlift does not require extra space. It is also not that expensive.
 

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