No, of course not, no one is supposed to go in there. At least no one the average German citizen has in mind when the word [Wäscheständer] is mentioned.
Gladly. For more details, I would have to guess where you are headed: are you still collecting floor plan ideas, and on September 31st ;-) do you make the editorial deadline and pull one out of the hat with your eyes closed? (then be careful not to accidentally say "Simsalabim" instead of "Abrakadabra," and have a rabbit in your hand).
Yes, that's how it should go. And only so that the architects who communicate so helpfully here are confirmed in it. ;)
Thanks again for the ideas, we find this basic arrangement from hanghaus much more suitable for us. This is roughly how it is now coordinated with the architect. On the upper floor, we are thinking about placing the children's rooms completely to the south. Your suggestions helped us a lot to imagine that it can also work that way. The landing staircase makes many more options for room arrangements on the upper floor possible, with a consistently moderate circulation area. On the ground floor, some variations are still conceivable without strongly changing the basic idea. The compromise on the ground floor is that we forego a "full-fledged" pantry and get only some storage space under the stairs, but we can easily live with that. The rest gains significantly.
Please. Slightly revised. We are now very satisfied with it.
I also had such a useless wall put in my bedroom. I regret it today. It is solid and if I wanted to remove it, I would have to deal with the entire structural stuff again... Your wall only confines the room and what is it supposed to achieve? Leave it alone and if anything, only do it in drywall - then it can be removed quickly... GD