11ant
2018-08-28 01:24:52
- #1
I would be interested in the detailed drawing for the guest WC, showing how the flush tank is supposed to be recessed into the presumably double-shell wall. The living kitchen door should be hung differently, with the door leaf against the tall cabinets - otherwise you really have to fling it open as shown in the drawing. The cheeky kink in the carport roofline is nonsense, which you can already see on the plan. The parents should regularly swap the sides of their beds: the twisting motion when lying down and getting up (because of the contour lines) otherwise chronically affects the cervical spine.
The side view of the bathroom dormer is a bad joke; a clever detail expert would combine bricks with brick slips there.
Overall, the exterior of the house - especially because of the profile - has an intense 1950s "charm." To me, it strongly looks more like a draftsman’s work rather than an architect’s.
That’s not going to be an outpatient procedure; no stone will be left unturned. Swapping it out quickly like that won’t work with these dimensional proportions.
Well, that’s an East Prussian taste, isn’t it?
The side view of the bathroom dormer is a bad joke; a clever detail expert would combine bricks with brick slips there.
Overall, the exterior of the house - especially because of the profile - has an intense 1950s "charm." To me, it strongly looks more like a draftsman’s work rather than an architect’s.
Die aktuell eingezeichnete Treppe werden wir auch durch eine Podesttreppe ersetzen
That’s not going to be an outpatient procedure; no stone will be left unturned. Swapping it out quickly like that won’t work with these dimensional proportions.
Scheinbar lebt ihr im Esszimmer und in der Küche, anders kann ich mir den Grundriss nicht erklären. Das Wohnzimmer hat so überhaupt keine Terrassentür???
Well, that’s an East Prussian taste, isn’t it?