at our place the topic of building a house might come up sometime,
That means in 2, 5, or 10 years and even then only maybe?
Please be a bit more specific. As already mentioned here, plot yes/no/maybe, questionnaire etc.
Looking at floor plans for months is (otherwise) not productive.
Floor plan "as small as possible" and at the same time presenting an open space… :rolleyes:
That means in 2, 5, or 10 years, and even then only maybe?
Please be a bit more specific. As already mentioned here, land yes/no/maybe, questionnaire etc.
Looking at floor plans for months is (otherwise) not productive.
Floor plan "as small as possible" and at the same time presenting an air space… :rolleyes:
Good morning,
we are currently in an application process for the allocation of plots in a local resident model. This ends this week, so one should find out soon whether planning can continue.
As soon as that is clear, I can fill out the questionnaire or have the thread closed here :)
160 sqm is at least smaller than 180 sqm. The air spaces seem to occur more often in combination with straight staircases.
Normally, one can generally say about catalog floor plans that they work as long as they are adopted unchanged. Specifically regarding technical rooms, this applies correspondingly subject to the heating technology also being unchanged. And with this very technology, there are significant differences: where the space for the "boiler" fits with one heating technology, it can collide with the restricted area for the electrician working with the fuse in another. Even seemingly "free" areas on the plan can serve such a purpose and therefore cannot be used as spaces for equipment.
Thank you for the hint. So at least with standard products, one doesn't have to worry about this.
160 sqm is at least smaller than 180 sqm. The air spaces seem to occur more often in combination with straight staircases.
A straight staircase tends to create a narrow hallway. With the air space, it makes it appear larger.
However, that doesn't necessarily make it more practical. If the goal is "as small as possible," you could easily fit a study there instead of air spaces.