11ant
2019-04-30 01:12:07
- #1
If we stick to the location of the kitchen, dining, and living room, there isn’t much room left for the other rooms.
Precisely because of this causal connection, I recommended this paradigm shift.
We discussed the floor plan with planners/architects from different companies and didn’t find a good idea yet.
How should there be one? – I already said that both designs are not fertile as a substrate for optimization.
We really like a bay window visually.
Nevertheless, it poisons the potential of the floor plan.
We didn’t like a straight living room entrance because we didn’t want the entrance directly next to the TV.
That doesn’t change significantly by angling it.
Do you see the problem here that there is no daylight in the stairwell?
The eyes are above the feet; the light should preferably be above them at least partially as well, not only at the seventh reflection.
Architecture is more than just seasoning a construction drawing with design aspects. There is obviously a fundamental lack of feeling for functional spatial arrangements here. Those who don’t have that as a client need an architect instead of a construction company planner. Or – which is not a bad solution either – one takes a functioning standard design from the general contractor and sticks to it as faithfully as possible. Or even better: one tries out the trick from this weird 11ante for fun, smoothing out the bay window, and lo and behold: by domino effect, all the folds disappear from the design, and the tangle of walls develops into a proper floor plan.