Musketier
2015-06-12 10:50:11
- #1
The room is not a room; that is just the wall for the extended roof over the protruding ground floor.
What doesn’t work at all is the basement stairs. From the living room or the kitchen you "fall" directly into the basement.
The bedroom is really very narrow. That is probably only 40cm between the bed and the wall. With a slightly protruding window sill, you are only at 35 cm.
The bathroom was mentioned. Depending on your size, the entry into the bathtub could also be tight.
The basement can be better solved despite the chimney flue.
I would probably also swap the wardrobe with the toilet and design it semi-open, so without a door but with walls, so that the jackets are primarily concealed at first.
Do you really need that much space for it or should the vacuum cleaner and so on also be stored there? Perhaps a large one is sufficient.
Check the guest room again on how the sofa bed + desk and shelves can be sensibly arranged. It might make sense to move the door 60cm inward so that filing shelves can also be placed behind the door.
What doesn’t work at all is the basement stairs. From the living room or the kitchen you "fall" directly into the basement.
The bedroom is really very narrow. That is probably only 40cm between the bed and the wall. With a slightly protruding window sill, you are only at 35 cm.
The bathroom was mentioned. Depending on your size, the entry into the bathtub could also be tight.
The basement can be better solved despite the chimney flue.
I would probably also swap the wardrobe with the toilet and design it semi-open, so without a door but with walls, so that the jackets are primarily concealed at first.
Do you really need that much space for it or should the vacuum cleaner and so on also be stored there? Perhaps a large one is sufficient.
Check the guest room again on how the sofa bed + desk and shelves can be sensibly arranged. It might make sense to move the door 60cm inward so that filing shelves can also be placed behind the door.