

Some details and arrangements are easy to draw, some are not. Lots of times, what we want isn't as concrete as we think is it, and sketching is a really quick way to lay down ideas and options that you won't feel bad discarding. If its a simple sketch, it's easier to not get attached to the shape and layout, but once it's a 3D model, not only is it harder, but it becomes an inconvenience to do so. You want to be able to change this or that depending on other changes. Design should be fluid until the very end. Someone mentioned the reason you shouldn't design in program's wasn't clear, I understand why, so I'm putting it simple. Houses should be shaped on needs, not the other way aroundĮ. Or, if you said: I want a place for me and my partner to relax, store out clothes and enjoy nature. Or, if you said: I want to live alone, but I'll have people over a lot, so I want some space for them and some decking for partying.

Like, if you said to me: I want a house for me and my partner, we want to have 2 children, a large internal courtyard and a deck to relax on. There's so much more, but I'd need to know more about what you're trying to achieve before offering any advice. So, most likely, that's going to be the widest your rooms can go. Research wood in your area and you'll see some beams can only go 4 to 5 meters. What are you going to build the house out of? Wood? Cool. You also have to consider structure when building the house. Circulation should not take half the house like it does here unless it brings something amazing to the house, like, a walkway around the garden core, like traditional japanese houses have.īathrooms and kitchens should always be close if possible, so you don't give your plumbers a hard time. Sometimes that means no doors, large passageways, or simple room shapes. Make sure the transition between the rooms you go through a lot is seamless and easy. Put the rooms you're going to use more closer together. What transitions happen? What rooms are you going to use more, what rooms are going to be used less. Get a pencil, or a pen, and write what rooms you're going to spend your time in every day. Here, it seems, most things are inconvenient. Making it easy to move around, creating the least amount of inconvenience. You need to think of your house in the way of living there. As lovely as gardens are, save them for when you're awake. How are you sleeping with people over? They can see! Also, bedrooms are supposed to be dark, not having much light so they can create a good environment for sleep.
Sketchup house design full#
The master bedroom has 4 doors!! Why?Īlso, why does the bedroom have a full glass wall, that makes 5 doors, as they open. Why do you have a door to the outside in the bedroom? Why are there 3 doors in that tiny room? So much space rendered unusable. Too many doors!! Each room needs a maximum of 1 door. The person in the extra room stumbles upon me? Why is there an extra door in the ensuite? I'm having some people over, I wake up and decide to go to the bathroom, take a relaxing bath. So all the clothes must pass through there? What if someone is cooking? The only way to access the laundry is through the kitchen, where cooking is done. Think about the people who will mistake that door as a passage and decide to enter your master bedroom. where? I have guests, where do I tell them to put their coats and shoes? If I want to greet people, the space is so narrow, I can't do it comfortably. If it's raining outside and I'm wet or muddy, I must carry myself. I enter the house, and I can't sit down to undress myself. There's some good reasons, I'll write them below.
