You won’t fit a stand-alone freezer cabinet through the pantry door. The wall inside is just under 130 cm. The door opening is supposed to be 60 cm, which also needs some clearance from the bottom wall. A 60 cm door opening will have a passage of about 56 cm with the frame. If the door opening is wider, then your freezer won’t fit along the bottom wall anymore.
This awkwardly shaped pantry should therefore be seriously reconsidered.
Likewise in the bedroom, dressing area with 145 cm ... the door won’t be that big there. The upper floor is probably a full storey - right?
How are the garage, parking space, etc. supposed to be?
Regarding the floor plan: the dressing room will be too narrow for a wardrobe... that’s a very simple calculation: RBM width 145 means a real 140 cm, with a 60 cm deep wardrobe you have 80 cm left to overview the clothes in the wardrobe. With a normal viewing angle of 55 degrees, that’s very restricting. Apart from that, with a door of a general 90 cm, only 50 cm remains for the wardrobe depth.
The bedroom width of 300 cm leaves 50 cm on each side of the bed....
For the ground floor I would rather suggest this entrance zoning and propose turning the useless corridor into an open plan area
Great, thanks for the hints (also to ). I would suggest that under these circumstances it would probably be best to simply omit the dressing room wall and not artificially restrict ourselves by it? Then the whole thing is just open and we don’t have problems with "only" 3 m bed side.
The inspiration for the pantry was a thread here where the pantry or the entrance is integrated into the kitchen front. After looking at the pictures again, I believe that the partition walls are not necessary at all and we just need floor-to-ceiling tall cabinets. So my mistake, I didn’t depict that clearly:
[ATTACH alt="1682414592621.png"]79642[/ATTACH][ATTACH alt="grundstueck-einfamilienhaus-neubaugebiet-627219-1.png"]79648[/ATTACH]
Otherwise, the pantry can of course be removed and the kitchen itself enlarged. I suspect that it would be more cost-effective if we didn’t need separate kitchen fronts/tall cabinets.
I’d like to ask the group: How is the bathroom drainage supposed to run on the upper floor?
Bathroom placement is exactly as in the original planner’s plan, I would say that is feasible, the walls are the same as in the office.
I just don’t understand why the program can’t draw 16 steps? 13 is simply too few. As already said, the staircase can work. It just needs a bit more width. It’s quite tight down there anyway.
I was glad to find at least a halfway proper "staircase," which only exist as finished components and are not configurable. I just scaled it based on the stair examples in the sticky thread.
Thanks for your participation