House planning 135m2 in Austria

  • Erstellt am 2019-03-20 11:15:13

Gugelhupf

2019-03-24 20:38:13
  • #1

We have a sleeping option right nearby
There is also a bed in the "garden shed," but with our little one it’s still a bit too cold for that.

The house could be set back to the rear, but not up to the property line.
Here a 10m distance would have to be maintained, so the house would basically be in the middle of the property and two garden areas of, in my opinion, not really useful size would be created.
10m in the back, then the house, then 14m in the front. Neither big enough to really do anything with.
Better to have one large, contiguous, though shadier, area in the back and place the house towards the front....
 

Nordlys

2019-03-24 20:40:35
  • #2
Too bad. About four or five meters in the back, the rest in the front would be great. But it is not allowed. Ok. You can't do anything about it.
 

Gugelhupf

2019-03-27 21:32:41
  • #3
I played around with a possible development and the position of the sun / shadows. An image is attached.

In doing so, I moved the house completely 3m to the north - this way more evening sun can shine past the house into the garden.
In the south, 4.5m to the property boundary is currently marked, in the west the distance on the drawing is about 6m to the street.

The yellow lines represent the sunlight with full west sun (sunset). The red dots indicate the shadow at a sun angle of 10°, reference is Vienna.
10° sun angle corresponds approximately to 7:30 p.m. on July 1st, 4:30 p.m. on March 1st, 3:30 p.m. on November 1st, etc.

The brown rectangle in the south would be a carport about 3m high.
The gray rectangle would be a possible position for the terrace (possibly wrapped around the corner), so at least half of the terrace still has the sunset.
The blue rectangle would be a possible position for a future pool - also in the evening sun.
 

Nordlys

2019-03-27 22:41:42
  • #4
I think the simulation shows, this is how it can go. It won’t be a full sun object, but it won’t be in shade forever either. This amount of sun exposure would be enough for me, especially since it can get very warm and stuffy in the summer at your place and a bit of shade is then welcome. Karsten
 

kaho674

2019-03-28 06:38:31
  • #5
Sorry, I wouldn't like it at all if the carport is on the south side. After all, it's primarily about the sun inside the house and not in the garden. 50% of the year is winter and you don't sit on the terrace or swim in the pool. You still want it bright and friendly inside the house, don't you?
 

haydee

2019-03-28 07:20:37
  • #6
The carport also fits in the north, then the house shifts 2 m to the south
 

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