Correct, the street is as shown in the north, unless you mean the path on the left, which is and remains a dirt road. The 77 is a property of the municipality, which is being designed as a green area. Garages may be built on the boundary within the building area.
the street is as shown in the north, unless you mean the path on the left, that is and remains probably a dirt road.
Then plot 71 is great after all. I would want a 5m distance towards the west anyway given the size of the plot. That's where the nicest evening sun is, and maybe you want a second terrace there someday (we have one in the northwest, it’s really nice in summer). You can also place 90% of all standard house designs (which often work well) from the GUs on plot 71, since there's northern access with the garage in the northeast. That’s the ideal plot layout for the GUs and most designs simply work well like that or are very refined. We ourselves have southern access, a long driveway, and from the terrace you always look at the driveway area, house entrance via the driveway on the east side. Northern access would have both simplified our floor plan (or with fewer compromises) and created a nicer “nature/quiet area” on the terrace. But in an established neighborhood you just can’t pick and choose the plots.
We don't actually think the 71 is so bad; what has always bothered us so far is the limited width, as we would like to have a large double garage and then build without a basement. We still have some time before we have to make a decision. But I must also admit that I focused too much on plot 76 during the planning. I will take another look at the 71 in the next few days. I am grateful for any suggestions that allow for a double garage and an 11m wide house.
I will deal with the 71 again in the next few days. I am grateful for any suggestion that allows a double garage and an 11m wide house.
Unfortunately, the northern dimension of the 71 cannot be read, but roughly it should be about 22m, after deducting 5m you are left with 17m. That fits for an 11m (standard prefabricated) house and a 6m (standard prefabricated) garage. If it should not be standard, with architect planning the garage on the ground floor may possibly be partially integrated into the house (meaning the upper floor extends over the garage), but then you are no longer in the standard and everything becomes more complicated and certainly more expensive. A house with entrance in the north and living rooms in the south has the great advantage that the spaces for entrance hall or corridor can be used much more efficiently. In your case, it would no longer be 11.9m2 + 6.5m2 but significantly less. Perhaps then a 10m house width would be enough.