How to design your own home
How to design your own home...
Developing the design
The design process is a consuming task. The nine steps
below will teach you the basics of the process
that is followed by design professionals
in the building industry. Follow this process and you
will have a better chance of designing a home that
functions well and works aesthetically.
- Client Brief
- Performance specification
- Schedule of areas
- Table of areas
- Bubble diagram
- Site data
- Site analysis
- Design diagram
- Sketch Design
Tools you will need
-
Sketch paper: you can purchase purpose made sketch paper from an art supply shop, but grease proof baking paper works
just as well and can be purchased from your local supermarket for around $1.50 a roll. -
A3 Drafting board: these boards are portable and come with a ruler that attaches horizontally to the board.
It can be purchased from an art or drafting supply shop for about $90.00. -
Adjustable set square: this item is an adjustable clear plastic triangle that is essential in producing straight, angled,
and vertical lines. This can also be purchased at an art supply outlet of drafting supply shop. -
Pencil: you can purchase a specialised drafting pencil (clutch pencil) but a standard lead (graphite) pencil will do fine.
If you do purchase a clutch pencil bye one with a very thin lead otherwise
you will then need to buy a clutch pencil sharpener which is different from a regular pencil sharpener. -
Eraser: white Stanley erasers are the easiest to use and you can purchase these from the supermarket. -
Ruler: you can use a regular rule for drafting in 1:100 scale but if you want to draw the building at a
smaller or larger scale you will need a scale rule from a drafting shop. These typically cost $10.00.
Nine basic steps
1. The brief
The brief is a document that is used as a starting point in designing a
home, and is formed first by the client and
then refined with the help of a building designer or, in this case,
you. The brief will act as a guide throughout
the design process and will help form the "foundation" of your home
design.
The brief should contain all your most fundamental requirements such
as: "our home must be open plan and be an extension of the backyard",
"the house must be clean and airy", or "our holiday home will be a
haven from city life". You should collect any pictures, samples
(paints, fabrics etc), and any other items that will
act as a visual prompt during the design process and give everyone
involved a general feel for what you want. It is essential that your
wishes and essential requirements are understood as clearly as possible
right from the very beginning.
Note that a brief does not have to be a lengthy document, often one
page will be enough, but your brief should be
seriously discussed with the other people in your life who will have a
vested interest in the home before design work begins.
2. The performance specification
The Performance Specification is an expanded brief that describes what the various spaces of the building
will be expected to provide. The Performance Specification of the building may start off very general in its requirements
and may become more detailed as the project develop. For example:
-
Bathroom: should be warm and sunny with good views – a place to retreat to and revive – with 2 basins, separate WC.
and shower that opens onto a private outside planted area. -
Later on the electrical equipment to be accommodated might be identified, as will the number of
power points required and other detail items.
3. Schedule of areas
The spaces described in the Performance Specification can be explained
and quantified in a Schedule of Areas.
This document is simply a table of the named spaces in the Performance
Specification and estimates their likely size.
To confirm a likely size use a tape measure to gauge the dimensions of
spaces within the house you are living presently. What size are these
spaces, are they too big or too small? How many square metres is it?
Also see this site's construction
cost estimator for suggested space sizes. You will also need to
calculate the estimated circulation space required.
This item is often forgotten when estimating the size of a home and
keeping it to a minimum will reduce the cost of
your new home. Circulation space covers all the areas not individually
identified in the Performance Specification such as
halls, stairs, store rooms/cupboards, plant rooms and lifts etc. In
single dwellings for example these areas may
range between 10% to 50% of the total floor area. Using 10% for a home
is standard but this will need to increase
if your wish your home to be truly spacious. See this web site's "How
to read plans" page as a guide.
Usually a client will have not only a building in mind but also a
budget for realising it. The Schedule of Areas
is a necessary first step for reconciling the two since approximate
budget rates can be applied to different types
of floor space to give a first (but very approximate) cost estimate for
your new home.
4. Table of areas
You may find it useful to present the Schedule of Areas in a visual format.
This gives an immediate confirmation of the balance of spaces in your new home and helps to keep any exploration
by the designer (i.e., you) on track and in proportion to their desired uses. A simple site plan with boundary lines
and obstacles should also be drawn alongside the table of areas so that the building areas can be seen in
relation to the space available on the site and how this may challenge the clients desires and local council
requirements. The shape of the rectangles representing the space areas is irrelevant - they are only indicating
their comparative size and these spatial areas may contain a few rooms.
For example: "a lounge area maybe open with an enclosed bay window area".
5. Bubble diagram
The Performance Specification will tell you what each space must
provide, and the Schedule and Table of Areas will state the size of
these areas but you will also need to establish the relationships of
these spaces to one another. The relationship diagram or "Bubble
Diagram" is a very simple drawing that consists of roughly drawn
bubbles (representing spaces) connected by solid lines, broken lines or
wavy lines to specify what kind of relationship is wanted. For example:
A lounge area may need a direct physical connection to the dining room
but only a visual connection to the view of the ocean and an acoustic
connection to the baby's room down the hall.
6. Site data
So far we have concentrated on the internal requirement but the design will also be shaped greatly by its "siting".
To aid you analysis you will need to gain all information you can about the site, its neighbouring properties and its locality.
A site plan in A2 size, and drawn to scale is ideal and it will need to show such things as:
- Any tree over three metres in height and its exact location
- Sewer, storm water, drinking water, electrical, and gas main locations and access points
- Various "Australian Height Datum" levels of adjoining properties (floor levels, ridge levels, gutter levels and deck levels.
- Neighbouring house "set backs"
- Boundary lengths, locations and junctions
- Contours at 5 metre intervals are necessary for sloping blocks
This list can be given to a surveyor for quotation. This will cost
about $700 for a standard size block (as at Oct-2006).
Photograph houses in the locality and research the local history - as
patterns in earlier developments may lend itself to
influencing your design which may help formulate a design that is
sympathetic to the existing architecture in the neighbourhood.
Planning controls (local councils and others) will impact on your
design. Restrictions such as height limitations,
preferred building forms and existing scale of architecture in the
locality are all examples of planning controls that will impact your
design. Have a look at your local council's web site. They are usually
called Local Environmental Plans (LEP) or
Development Control Plans (DCP).
It should be noted that if your site looks like it may have issues (e.g. unstable rocks, a very steep gradient, etc.)
a geotechnical engineer should be engaged to advise you on the best location for your new home that will reduce building costs.
Your site may also have restrictions that will be noted in your Section 149 Certificate, which is a document that forms
part of your sales contract when you purchase the property. If you have owned the property for some time it is suggested
that you apply to council for an updated certificate - as development requirements change over time. The Section 149
Certificate application form and many others can be found on your council's web sites but you will need to go to council
chambers to lodge the application and pay the fee (approx. $120 as of the Oct-2006).
Call your local council and speak with the "on duty" building inspector and planner. Tell them
you are designing a new home and ask them if there is anything that will affect the design of our new home.
This may sound like a great deal of work but if you do your research there won't be any surprises later,
and your building will work the best it can on your particular site.
7. Site analysis
The Site Analysis diagram displays all the useful information gained
during the site data collection phase and is best
presented and used as a designing tool in a plan format.
Use photographs taken of the site from various angles including distant
shots if the site is in a prominent location.
A study of the wider context of the locality such as built-up areas and
open spaces will be essential and can
be added onto the site plan.
Where do the summer and winter breezes come from? Think how this may
influence the design of your building.
Are their views? If so, what is their direction? Use arrows from the
site to the views. The building will need to provide a visual
connection from living spaces and the main bedroom to this view.
Record personal observations at the site. Where is the shading from
trees or other buildings falling? How could this
benefit or negatively affect the design. Talk to neighbours about sun,
wind and temperatures at different times of the year.
Think about how you can use these winds to cool your house in summer
and how you may need to protect outside living spaces in winter.
Note on your plan the magnetic north point as well as true north (or
solar north) which is approximately 13% East of
North in most of Australia (you will need a compass).
Finding true north on your property will allow you to design living
spaces facing north and the quality of living to this
orientation is unbelievably better than any other. It will provide warm
living spaces in winter and cool bright living
ares in summer, as long as you have adequate window shading and ample
roof and wall insulation.
You need to spend a lot of time on your site, and your site visits
should be longer rather than shorter if you want to properly see how
your site works and how
it is affected by various factors. Note all these factors down as they
will influence the design of your home.
Some people even go to the lengths of actually camping on their
property before they start designing.
8. Design diagram
This stage of design is creative and brings together all the
internal and external requirements and information that has been
collected,
evolving into a design strategy, which satisfies your requirements. The
discovery of an effective Design Diagram that is clear,
simple, strong and capable of responding to the peculiarities of your
program - without becoming confused and compromised is a
crucial moment in the design of a building. You will need to be good at
conceptualising in three dimensions as you work
simultaneously on sketch plans, elevations and the general form of the
building. This phase does not involve any drafting,
only rough sketches/drawings, but lots of them. Don't be afraid to
throw away an idea if you can't get the form and workings you desire.
9. Sketch design
Now you have finally reached the point where you can start drafting the initial design drawings of your home.
Drawing at a scale of 1:100 is the usual practice because it is big enough to understand, and you can use a
regular rule (1cm = 1000mm or 1 metre).
The initial design will be a combination of plans, elevations and
form drawings or what ever best explains the design and how it works.
The plans should be easy to understand and will be the starting point
from where the initial design drawings may change before they become
the "developed design drawings". Remember to ask for feedback from
family and friends, another point of view is often helpful.
In turning the Design Diagram into a Sketch Design, one of the main
tasks is to think about is the functions of each area and providing
spaces which can accommodate them. This may involve doing separate
studies.
For example: Furniture or equipment layouts for individual spaces in order to discover room shapes, door and window positions,
and other features which will make spaces have a 'good fit' to the purposes for which they are intended.
Conclusion
This is essentially the design process that is taught to
architecture students. If it seems a
little "full-on" don't be discouraged, it just takes practice.
At the very least we hope we have provided you with enough knowledge of
the home design process that your enhanced
ability to communicate with a professional building designer or
architect will speed up the entire process of constructing your new
home.