ypg
2018-11-02 13:22:23
- #1
The second car will have space, after all, the garage is as long as the house.
And the wardrobe fits 5 people in the [HAR] as well.
Whether the latter is nice without a window is another question.
It would annoy me if you constantly have to rely on artificial light in the wardrobe area.
But to start:
through the garage into a storage room, then through the kitchen, then into the dining room, then through the living room, hallway as well... then you arrive at the wardrobe.
You plan your sightseeing through the entire ground floor just to get into the house. Meanwhile, you leave street dirt from your shoes in every room.
Sorry, but that's a planning error. The soufflé would also collapse
The problem is added to this: how do you want to secure it?
That's right: there is a lack of storage space everywhere for cleaning, decorations, etc., what is needed inside the house. Ironing board, etc... then go upstairs for that, that's nothing. And sacrificing a children's room for it, then you might as well plan accordingly. After all, a lounge room needs a different layout than a storage room.
Nothing fits there at all. I give the kitchen studio a grade of 5!
Water destroys fire: something must be between stove and sink, no kitchen planner should plan it otherwise. Of course, he tries to get the best out of a room, so to make gold out of sh*t, but hello: the kitchen is at its best time, namely during planning and now has to make do with a kitchen row and a distant row of cupboards where ergonomic working is not possible.
Separated... the living room might look separated on the plan, but think about how it really feels: the TV area is totally restless on the left and right because there are no room corners. I already mentioned the through-traffic problem.
With 3 kids, one or another shelf will probably find its place, so these walkways will also be blocked.
A cozy feeling is not established for me in the entire ground floor. Nor any other... there is somehow a lot of discomfort. Nothing that offers protection, peace, or space. And stylish would be something else if that were the reason for its design...
Upstairs it also just happened... a trapped dressing room, child 3, a mega-narrow corridor, where will the double bed stand?... Where will the children find towels, new toilet rolls, etc?
Three meters are not enough in front of a garage. Especially with a passage into the house, you should close the gate; do you always want to stand in the street? And if a child has a car too? Where can it park?
The dimensions: what kind of dimensions were drawn there?
My tip: start over, and not with a program where you have to focus more on the program than on the house itself, but with pencil and graph paper regarding living with three children.
If the spatial feeling still does not pick up, then go directly to an architect - with a room program and without drawings.
And the wardrobe fits 5 people in the [HAR] as well.
Whether the latter is nice without a window is another question.
It would annoy me if you constantly have to rely on artificial light in the wardrobe area.
But to start:
through the garage into a storage room, then through the kitchen, then into the dining room, then through the living room, hallway as well... then you arrive at the wardrobe.
You plan your sightseeing through the entire ground floor just to get into the house. Meanwhile, you leave street dirt from your shoes in every room.
Sorry, but that's a planning error. The soufflé would also collapse
getting into the house via the garage would be too unsafe for me.
The problem is added to this: how do you want to secure it?
the utility room is too small, you lack storage space.
That's right: there is a lack of storage space everywhere for cleaning, decorations, etc., what is needed inside the house. Ironing board, etc... then go upstairs for that, that's nothing. And sacrificing a children's room for it, then you might as well plan accordingly. After all, a lounge room needs a different layout than a storage room.
We have already pre-planned the kitchen in a kitchen studio and actually everything fits quite well.
Nothing fits there at all. I give the kitchen studio a grade of 5!
Water destroys fire: something must be between stove and sink, no kitchen planner should plan it otherwise. Of course, he tries to get the best out of a room, so to make gold out of sh*t, but hello: the kitchen is at its best time, namely during planning and now has to make do with a kitchen row and a distant row of cupboards where ergonomic working is not possible.
The partition wall between dining and living room is just an idea.
We wanted to separate the living room a little.
Separated... the living room might look separated on the plan, but think about how it really feels: the TV area is totally restless on the left and right because there are no room corners. I already mentioned the through-traffic problem.
With 3 kids, one or another shelf will probably find its place, so these walkways will also be blocked.
A cozy feeling is not established for me in the entire ground floor. Nor any other... there is somehow a lot of discomfort. Nothing that offers protection, peace, or space. And stylish would be something else if that were the reason for its design...
Upstairs it also just happened... a trapped dressing room, child 3, a mega-narrow corridor, where will the double bed stand?... Where will the children find towels, new toilet rolls, etc?
Three meters are not enough in front of a garage. Especially with a passage into the house, you should close the gate; do you always want to stand in the street? And if a child has a car too? Where can it park?
The dimensions: what kind of dimensions were drawn there?
My tip: start over, and not with a program where you have to focus more on the program than on the house itself, but with pencil and graph paper regarding living with three children.
If the spatial feeling still does not pick up, then go directly to an architect - with a room program and without drawings.