Here are a few of my notes on the sketches. I had these almost entirely written up yesterday and it got deleted.
PabloSerna said:
Here is an Option #1 for the Ground Floor
(1) Entry: Wanted to center the Coat Closet and eliminate the two passages to the Living Room. I'm showing built-in shelving on both sides of the new wall. Closet in Bedroom gets smaller, but I think the Entry gets some symmetry.
I like the built ins here, but would probably leave the bedroom closet alone and just lost the coat closet. Being Houston, and entry coat closet rarely gets used for its designed purpose so I would maybe just do some wrap around built ins on that wall to keep some storage that is visually nice, and leave the bedroom closet the size it is. I really like that all the bedrooms in the house have good size closets and would hate to start losing that.
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(2) Living Room/Dining Access: The idea was to open up this point. Without radically changing the adjacent walls, I thought about angling the wall at the Dining Room. If the Living Room is vaulted, this could be a dramatic point, going from a smaller space to a larger room.
(3) Kitchen: Opened up the Kitchen to the Living Room. Large peninsula island with Range or Cooktop. Moved Refrigerator to access isle between Breakfast and the end of the cabinets. I swapped out a new window at the former Patio door in the Breakfast area.
-My first comment for these two go together. One of the things my wife really wants is for that front counter to be an island to allow 2 paths in and out of the kitchen. We also talked about opening up the wall that the currently drawn peninsula terminates at into a cased opening into the dining room. Done wide enough this would open up similar sight lines from the kitchen to the front entry. My question here is with how it lines up do you think it would be weird having the dining room with such a clear view into the kitchen or nice to have the bar seating lined up with the dining table and able to be somewhat of an extension of that seating when there are large groups over?
-Second, and this is a minor detail, but my wife would like the cooktop to be on the exterior wall so she can have a nice range hood and have nothing coming down from the ceiling obstructing sightlines from kitchen to living.
-Third, with this layout, I don't see a place for our existing double ovens. I know I didn't specify this up front but that is something that we use all the time and would like to keep. For reference it is 53" H x 30" W.
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(4) Pantry/Closet: Moved Pantry to this area and added a Closet to the Home Office. Only downside is that you have to walk through the Dining Room to get to the Home Office. Home Office loses about 24 SF.
-this ties in a little with the comments about the ovens. I like both layout options but am maybe leaning towards preferring the first. With small kids my wife is uncertain about the idea of giving up a breakfast table with real chairs. As I've though about it more I am ok losing the dedicated office space if I need to. What about something like this where the kitchen gets extended towards the front to give space for the ovens out of sight, a large walk in pantry gets made, and then the extra space can be some built in desk/cabinets for an "office" area that would also serve as a school/homework area as the kids get older?
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I would also close the current opening to the dining down to a single doorway size and put a sliding door there.
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(5) Stairs: If the existing plate height is 8 foot, this could be around 16-17 risers. I went with 7.75"R and 11"Treds. This is the one area that I would model a little more. I am showing a couple of winders and two more risers along the horizontal. Stairs have to end at the edge if possible. This would mean a clean framing condition for the second floor joist to sit on the existing top plate at the Hall Bath. I also swapped out the existing window in the Living Room to a 3 panel patio slider or 3 french doors.
-For the stairs, I'm showing if we did 2x8 floor joists and 1-1/8" subfloor upstairs, we would have 105.5" from subfloor to subfloor, which would be fifteen 7-1/32" risers if I'm not mistaken. I drew the stairs as 40" wide and each of the winders as 3 step winders (which gives 11-9/16" tread depths along the center line of each step) and here is what I got. This pulls those bottom few steps out of the living room a bit more. (the weird lines that look like a skinny hand rail shows 80" head clearance along the center of the stairs.)
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- For the windows, I realize they would need to change, but my concern here also got expressed by oldag00. I am trying to figure out how furniture would lay out in the living room. This is our primary congregating spot and pre-pandemic, we would routinely have 6-10 adults in our living room for extended periods. The existing couch is already a bit too cozy to accommodate that. Even with those windows not being doors, the room feels a bit squeezed in. I assumed TV would go on that wall and have a large u-shaped couch something like this
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-the other though tossing around in my head here is with all the framing changes already happening to that rear living room wall, would it make sense to just go ahead and move the whole wall to the slab edge and eat the existing patio?
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(6) Master Suite Nook: I like to create a transition between the Hall and the Master Suite. Instead of just walking in to the room, you would enter a small nook. Add some lighting and change the paint color to create some interest. I have even put a niche on the strike side wall for art or a small sculpture.
(7) Master Bath: Needed a long wall for the Vanity and Linen. Swapped out the Closets for a Toilet Room and created a large 2 person shower along the exterior wall (new window?). This is a very spacious room and flows better in this format.
(8) Master Closet: This was the tricky space, but I had seen a similar design problem before. The existing Master Bedroom was rectangular. I prefer a square. By placing the Master Closet behind the bed wall, I could make the square and furr-out the corners to frame the bedroom wall (I will post a picture of this type of design later). The Closet is long, accessed from the Bath, however, it would not make sense to put the vanity or other type of space behind. I did think about putting a pocket door at the very top so that you could essentially walk around the closet and back into the Master Bedroom.
- we both love this. This is exactly the type of thing we would love our master suite to be. Unfortunately if we do end up proceeding with this remodel, I have the sneaking suspicion the budget wont be large enough to include this. But if it does this looks fantastic. Laos, those square fur out corners could potentially be built in shelving on the reverse side of that wall.
- I would leave the closet without the second door into the master. Will give a bit more storage at that end and also, I feel like the bedroom may start to feel cluttered with too many doors.
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(9) Master Bedroom: More room between a California King and the media wall. The circulation is cleaned up and moved to being against the wall. I would pop up the ceiling at least 1 foot (would have to cut the bottom chords) - would be worth it.
-minor detail but I'd keep a standard king. I'd rather have the extra 4 inches in width. Plus we already have a rather expensive king mattress.
-my wife would love to raise every ceiling in the house so this will be an easy sell.
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(10) French Door: Always good to have access to the outside from the Master Suite if possible. This could be fenced off to create a small reflection garden or just go straight to the Patio.
- I don't love the idea of adding doors from the master to the back yard. My wife absolutely loves it. I can say with confidence I will lose this disagreement. So moving forward with the assumption that the doors stay, my two thoughts are 1) I would keep it on the smaller side so too much wall space isn't taken up where a dresser and TV can't be comfortably centered at the foot of the bed and 2) if we don't go up on the garage, that is the west facing wall and I would be concerned about the direct afternoon sun through that windowed door making that room too hot in the summer so I would want to be cognizant of that in the final design.
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+++
Add some comments. Unless there is something totally wrong, I would start to model this up in 3D. It will make more sense once you model it. HTH
+pablo
My only other generic comment is im struggling to visualize what the elevations look like for things like the roof over the stairs, exactly where the clerestory windows would be, and the vision for the front facing dormer. If you have anything rough or example pictures for that it would help me start doing the 3D
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EDIT to add... I just realized you don't need the Breakfast area. With the kitchen island you can put more kitchen cabinets in that space and move the Pantry into that area also. That will give SF back to the Home Office. I will sketch up and post later on.
I think I covered this above. But for reference, here is the kitchen/living/dining/pantry remodel that is inspiring my wife's vision for our kitchen area. We would likely do a different level of finishes, but this general structure, flow, and feel is what she is targeting.
https://www.har.com/homedetail/10123-briar-rose-dr-houston-tx-77042/8640835