kaho674
2020-01-12 19:50:40
- #1
I really wonder why people put up with this just to live in a big city. But oh well.
I took your drafts and varied them a bit:
Basically, almost everywhere there are only minimum dimensions or sometimes even less. The technical room here has the required 5 sqm. Still, cramming everything in there seems absurd to me and above all a lifelong punishment. Who is supposed to handle the laundry mountains of 5 people in this cupboard and then constantly carry it up and down? Madness.
The entrance hallway is of course tiny and a wardrobe for 5 people will never fit there. A closet measuring 1.40m x 0.50m is drawn in. The shower on the ground floor is only 80 cm deep – possibly acceptable, since it is a bit wider.
An alternative with the utilities in the attic:
In this variant, it will be crucial what is possible under the roof. Here is a sketch with a knee wall height of 0 and a 45° slope (stairs have no landing):
Whether the drainage works like this in the attic is unfortunately questionable. Probably the office and shower have to switch and there would only be a desk corner as an office. I mainly want to show that as soon as there is a knee wall of a considerable size, the technical room could go into the attic (currently the sloped area). That would be helpful. Then you would have relaxation space on the ground floor and could still move some walls. So that would be my first question to the builder.
I took your drafts and varied them a bit:
Basically, almost everywhere there are only minimum dimensions or sometimes even less. The technical room here has the required 5 sqm. Still, cramming everything in there seems absurd to me and above all a lifelong punishment. Who is supposed to handle the laundry mountains of 5 people in this cupboard and then constantly carry it up and down? Madness.
The entrance hallway is of course tiny and a wardrobe for 5 people will never fit there. A closet measuring 1.40m x 0.50m is drawn in. The shower on the ground floor is only 80 cm deep – possibly acceptable, since it is a bit wider.
An alternative with the utilities in the attic:
In this variant, it will be crucial what is possible under the roof. Here is a sketch with a knee wall height of 0 and a 45° slope (stairs have no landing):
Whether the drainage works like this in the attic is unfortunately questionable. Probably the office and shower have to switch and there would only be a desk corner as an office. I mainly want to show that as soon as there is a knee wall of a considerable size, the technical room could go into the attic (currently the sloped area). That would be helpful. Then you would have relaxation space on the ground floor and could still move some walls. So that would be my first question to the builder.