The floor plan of a house generally includes the overall floor plan of the community, the floor plan of each building, and the detailed floor plan of the room types and rooms. When looking at the floor plan, we should analyze it from the following aspects:
1. Orientation
In the floor plan of the community, the main orientation of the building is generally indicated. If the direction (north-south) is not indicated on the floor plan, buyers can ask the on-site salesperson. After figuring out the direction, you can choose and determine it based on the geographical characteristics of the area and personal preferences. Generally speaking, rooms facing south are warmer in winter and cooler in summer, and have the best orientation. Houses facing east and west receive less uniform sunlight. East-facing rooms have brighter mornings and poorer afternoon sunshine, while the opposite is true for west-facing rooms. Moreover, in summer, the western exposure time is longer, and the use of air conditioners is more expensive. There is no electricity; houses facing north are cooler.
2. Landscape
Through the community plan, you can also understand the way and effect of building grouping in the community, traffic organization, greening layout, landscape layout around each building, etc. You should pay attention to whether the house you want to choose can see good views in the distance and in the community, whether the view is blocked, whether there are traffic arteries that generate noise around it, whether there are power distribution stations, gas pressure regulating rooms, garbage rooms, etc. Landscape and environmental structures, and understand the technical measures developers are prepared to take for them.
3. Spacing between buildings
The spacing between buildings is the main factor affecting the ventilation and lighting of houses. There are clear regulations on the spacing between buildings in various places. Generally speaking, for properties that have obtained pre-sale permits, the spacing between buildings complies with relevant regulations. Some developers often use large spacing as a selling point in their building documents. Home buyers can ask the salesperson to confirm the building spacing in writing.
4. Lighting and ventilation
5. Rationality of spatial layout
The detailed plan layout of each room can analyze the rationality of indoor space layout. The indoor layout must be able to completely distinguish public areas (such as living rooms, dining rooms) and private areas (bedrooms). The allocation of each functional space must be reasonable, the area must be appropriate, and the proportion of the total building area must be appropriate. The indoor transportation organization must be reasonable and economical. .