Room Layout - Condominium - 180 m²

  • Erstellt am 2018-03-12 21:48:05

kbt09

2018-03-17 13:09:15
  • #1
Hmm ... if you detach yourself from the initially given water positions, I would always see the children's rooms rather coming to the south and the parent area to the east.

And, with a parent area having the bathroom as a captive room and always having to go through the sleeping area, I don't find that so good either. You could also do without the dressing area if wardrobes remain in the sleeping area anyway.

The living area loses the southern sun due to the partition with the office at the lower end of the plan, and then the sun only comes into the room in the afternoon. .. And, for the children's rooms 275 cm room depth ... I already found my 289 cm in V1 quite tight ;).
 

kaho674

2018-03-17 13:41:29
  • #2

In an apartment, I find everything a bit different, strangely enough.
In this case, as a child, I would find it great that my friends only have to sneak around the corner at the entrance and are in my room. The parents don't even notice – very exciting when you're 16. :eek:


Of course you could also assign the wardrobe to the bathroom. The question is whether that’s necessary. I find an enclosed bathroom just for the parents okay, though, as long as there's a second one.
That leaves space in the bedroom and a 4m wardrobe, so there's room for stuff. :)


The missing sun bothers me too. I first considered moving the offices to the top of the plan. Difficult to do. I have to puzzle over it again.
I actually found the children's room width okay. You could still push it up to 2.90m. The problem is, it's pointless to quibble over centimeters here since I don't know the exact dimensions anyway.

 

kaho674

2018-03-17 14:53:46
  • #3
Sun into the kitchen:
 

11ant

2018-03-17 15:08:52
  • #4
I mainly hold back with suggestions here because I don't like speculation into the unnecessary blue. I lack a presentation in which the walls and wall openings do not look "equal," but it is recognizable to what extent changes are possible there. It seems to me that the OP has too naive a belief in the supposed flexibility: as a purchaser of an upper apartment, I don't wait until the ground floor owner kindly finishes deciding where the shafts go in the house. Those things are brutally pulled vertically through the house. And no one will be interested in "loosening" the facade with windows that one shifts and the other drills open. That would be the normal case anyway. Or is the OP buying the majority of the residential units here and therefore allowed to play princess?
 

kbt09

2018-03-17 15:12:07
  • #5
Exactly ... that's why I’m quoting here ;).

Basically, at least on the ground floor, there might be one or two more possibilities for water pipes etc. that are initially independent of the shafts. Because you can also drain downwards into the possibly existing basement. But it should fit somewhere reasonably.

 

11ant

2018-03-17 15:29:11
  • #6
Technically yes, but a residential complex also has to be managed. The shafts are also there to simplify maintenance. If then one deviates from the line and in an emergency everything has to be unlocked for that one, it is not appreciated at all. Planners of such complexes know this and adopt this attitude.
 

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