Finnish one-story house with a bathhouse. Order Finnish house projects, turnkey price

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Project of a small one-story Finnish home with sauna "Jarvi" is a building designed for a family of 4-5 people. Simple Constructive decisions classify this Finnish project as small and inexpensive to build. Simple gable roof, as well as a small area, will ensure low costs for subsequent operation. The author of the project took care of the details and appearance, so despite the simplicity and small dimensions, the house looks elegant.

Modest on the outside, functional on the inside

Yarvi is one-story project rectangular house. Finishing the façade with wood gives a feeling of comfort and safety. The facades look not only elegant, but also modern. A very functional and well-thought-out interior has been developed in a small area. Thanks to minimization, it was possible to obtain spacious and easy-to-arrange rooms.

Finnish house layout

Despite small area, the project takes into account everything that a family of 4-5 people might need. The functional layout is divided into three zones. The common area consists of a spacious living room with a fireplace and open kitchen. The personal area consists of two bedrooms. Household the block is a large storage room-boiler room, a sink with a shower and a real Finnish sauna!

Who is this Finnish project for?

This one-story Finnish house with a sauna is ideal as a home for a young couple or retired elderly people. The project is inexpensive to construct and cheap to operate later. Simpler design- this means less heat loss, which in further operation leads to lower costs.

Practical, interesting appearance, comfortable interior spaces- such a characteristic can be safely given to houses built according to Finnish technology. The buildings are prefabricated and environmentally friendly. They have excellent thermal and sound insulation. They will save quite a lot of material resources during construction.

Advantages of building Finnish houses

Such buildings have many advantages. You can focus on the most important ones:

  • objects using Finnish technology are quickly and easily erected. Light structures are assembled without the use of lifting equipment. To install a house, two or three specialists are quite enough. The foundation is used shallow, strip or screw piles. Preparation methods are developed according to latest technology. The basis of the house is the assembled frame. Properly dried building materials allow the construction of objects all year round. Weather do not interfere with construction. Such a model can be constructed in two months.
  • High technology construction has been developed. In a production facility that produces structures Finnish houses, the project drawn up by the architects is approved. Subsequently, a so-called constructor is assembled based on the finished project. If changes are required in the design, it is easy to do this during the process. Changes do not require a lot of time and material costs.
  • It doesn’t take a lot of time to decorate the interior.
  • Universally prepared structures for house assembly have the appearance of smooth surfaces and joints. Simplicity and ease of assembly significantly reduces time construction work and saves money for the future homeowner.
  • high quality sound and thermal insulation systems. In the construction of such house models, laminated veneer lumber is used. This material has a sound-proof structure. Also during interior decoration soundproofing elements are used. During assembly components At home, material with low thermal conductivity is used to preserve heat in the room.

Peculiarities

Highly environmentally friendly materials are the basis for the construction of Finnish houses. Thanks to the excellent quality of the used wooden beam, the indoor air always remains clean and fresh.
Houses of this type are not one-story. Usually they are built one and a half or two floors.
In the construction of Finnish houses there is required condition- there should be a sauna in the room.

According to historical data, classic wooden Finnish houses began to be built more than five centuries ago. Since then, Suomi has zealously adhered to long-standing traditions. Currently, Finnish house projects occupy more than 70% of the private construction market of this northern country. Moreover, this technology has long gone beyond its borders and is popular in more than thirty countries around the world, including Russia.

Advantages of wooden Finnish houses

  • Energy efficiency. Finnish houses meet the highest standards of thermal insulation. Only natural wood is used for their construction. Most often these are timber or logs made from northern pine or spruce. The high resin content of coniferous wood makes Finnish wooden houses resistant to dampness and increases their ability to retain heat, which makes them relevant even in harsh conditions polar winters.
  • Durability. Thanks to the use of a special “lock” during the construction of a log house, Finnish houses made of logs or timber practically do not shrink and have a service life of more than 100 years. High-quality northern wood is practically not deformable, does not rot, and thanks to special treatment resists fire. Traditionally, Finnish houses are built exclusively using wood felled during the cold season. It is believed to have unique performance properties.
  • Comfort. All Finnish house construction projects fully reflect the practical mentality of Suomi residents. They do not contain any architectural excesses or design delights. The construction of Finnish houses is carried out with one goal - to ensure maximum comfort. This is facilitated by huge windows that flood the interior spaces with sunlight, spacious balconies and terraces, as well as practically required element– sauna. However, Finns do not like to overpay for an indoor garage, so the car is most often parked on the street.
  • Affordable price. Most of these house projects are one and a half stories high. Instead of a full second floor, an attic with a sloping roof without walls is used. Therefore, the construction of Finnish cottages of this type is much cheaper while maintaining the overall usable area. Also, such buildings do not require facing works and can be built on almost any soil.
  • Minimum terms. Finnish wooden houses are built on a turnkey basis in just a few weeks. They do not require heavy equipment, and construction can be carried out at any time of the year.

Finnish houses, turnkey construction in Moscow

North Forest is a leader in the capital's market wood construction. If you are interested in Finnish houses, projects for every taste, developed using this technology, are presented on our website. The use of high-quality northern wood allows us to quickly erect buildings that can last for centuries.

For all houses, the projects provide for the use of two types building material- logs and beams (dry, glued, profiled). Design features projects and prices are discussed privately.

Finnish House: video

For each of us, home is a fortress, a family nest, a place where you are always welcome, where you can return and feel the support of your own eyes and the warmth of familiar walls. But, in addition, a house is also a unique image that bears the imprint of everyone who lives in it. It is a reflection of the owners’ habits, their ideas about comfort and aesthetics, and speaks of the breadth of their views and the scale of their ambitions.

In order to build exactly your own, in all respects perfect home, it is necessary already at the stage of choosing a project (or its individual creation) to imagine what your desires and needs are. They can be very different - from equipping swimming pools and gyms to creative workshops and weapons rooms. But there is one convenience that few can refuse. This is a sauna. Everyone knows about its health benefits for people of all ages. Regular use Finnish sauna- these include healthy blood vessels, normalization of weight, strong nerves, and young skin.

A sauna can be designed:

  • as an independent separate building (in this case, the risk of fire is reduced, but construction costs increase, since walls will have to be erected, a separate water supply and sewerage system will have to be installed);
  • right in a residential building, which will create convenience for visiting households, because they will not have to move from one building to another after visiting the steam room.

When installing a sauna in a house, the living spaces adjacent to it can be heated with air that heats up during its operation.

Collection projects

In the basement

This solution is very convenient due to the isolation of the steam room and accompanying rooms - shower and toilet from residential volumes. As a rule, there is a rest room next door where you can relax between visits to the area high temperature and after finishing the bath procedures. Examples include:

  • in the economical one, despite the dimensions in plan of only 7.5 x 9 m, in the plinth, in addition bath complex two more storerooms were built - a heated and a cold one;
  • where preference is given to placing the sauna and gym under the house, and a carport was built for the car at the zero level;
  • The sauna volume can contain not only a shower, but also a Jacuzzi bath, like in a modern cottage

On the first floor

In this category, most buildings are one-story. The drawings show that a comfortable living environment in them is created by separating the active and relaxation zones. It's convenient in country houses, where owners come to take a break from the city noise and relax in nature. These are the projects:

  • made of logs with a pitched roof;
  • economical aerated concrete with a covered terrace and carport;
  • guest house with a laconic plan geometry.

Upstairs

Of course, this layout option is possible mainly in large mansions, where the size allows not only to create conditions for a comfortable placement of the sauna, but also to ensure that it does not pose a danger to the residents. By ensuring proper ventilation, waterproofing and giving preference in finishing natural wood, (which will reduce the risk of fire), it is quite possible to enjoy all the benefits that this wonderful method of washing and healing provides.
Examples include:

  • two-story cottage with three bedrooms and a carport;
  • — here one of the variations of the second floor design is to install a sauna there along with a shower and toilet.

If for some reason you do not want to place a sauna in your house, it is possible, along with the purchase of the project, to order its project as a separate building. Specialists will advise you and create the necessary drawings.


One of the first questions that arises when you think about building a house is what will it be like? After all, you want the house to be not only beautiful, but also cozy and comfortable to live in.

Most likely, you will first try to draw your “ideal layout” yourself. But I’m more than sure that you will very quickly encounter a number of difficulties - how to “shove in what can’t be squeezed in”, how to arrange windows, doors... to make everything so that it is comfortable and beautiful and nothing superfluous.

It is no coincidence that people study to become architects and designers. Everything is not as simple as it seems. Therefore, in my opinion, the best way is to search for a “donor”, ​​a ready-made house project that best suits your desires and requirements.

You will type in Yandex or Google something like “ready-made projects” or “ standard projects"and you will consider many domestic projects. Perhaps you will find something, or perhaps you will be disappointed.

Why are Scandinavian projects better than Russian ones?

In short - scandinavian houses much more thoughtful, rational and comfortable for living than the vast majority of domestic ones.

Russian projects are very specific. We do not have great experience designing private houses. Village houses were always built “with your own mind,” without “conveniences” and other bourgeois excesses, and professional designers and architects were taught to build large buildings and apartment buildings.

Hence the specificity of domestic projects - the emphasis on a catchy appearance, despite the fact that interior layouts often not thought out and made according to an “apartment” model, not taking into account the specifics country house and living in it.

The space is not used effectively, there are no extremely useful (and often necessary) utility rooms and so on. But there are many useless halls and corridors. Which waste the space you will pay for during construction.

But behind spectacular facades this is often not noticeable. Understanding comes later, when the house is built, the money is spent, and you understand what should have been done differently.

Once I came across a project for a house of 250 square meters, of which, upon closer examination, about 100 square meters were halls and corridors. That is, in fact, wasted space. But if you take a more rational approach to the use of space, then instead of a house on 250 m2, it would be quite possible to build a house on 180 - with the same set and area of ​​premises that carry some useful function. But in order to make the planning rational, you need to really strain your brain. It is much easier to increase the area and insert a couple of corridors. After all, it is not the designer who will pay for these square meters during construction.

Therefore, in my opinion, it would be more correct to turn to foreign experience. And first of all to the experience of northern Europe and Scandinavia.

Why them?

Because in these countries they know how to count money, they love comfort, but at the same time they do not like to spend too much. Finnish, Norwegian, Swedish houses- extremely thought out. And the climate and related features of the houses are closer to ours than, say, Spanish or Polish houses

All space is used very rationally. Appearance, layout - everything is balanced.

Can I make my own changes to the Scandinavian project?

It is possible, but very carefully. I repeat, most Scandinavian projects have already been thought out to the smallest detail. Therefore, an attempt to independently “redevelop” or change one thing to another may lead to you ending up with a completely different house. And it’s not a fact that it will be as comfortable and beautiful as in the original picture.

Therefore, ideally, you need to look for a project that suits you with minimal changes. Or be very aware of what you are doing and how it will look in reality.

I'll bring you small example. Below is a photo of the “donor” and its implementation with some façade changes.

It would seem like nothing at all. Windows without glazing; façade board cladding was replaced with siding; wide white windows were removed decorative elements, they made the porch a little smaller. It seems like a small thing. But in the end it turned out to be a different house. Not bad - but just different. Not the same as in the picture.

Where can I find a project for a Finnish or Scandinavian house?

There are only two options

Option one - find it in Scandinavia

In Finland and Scandinavia, standard construction is very common, which is carried out by both small firms and large concerns. Such companies usually have catalogs of manufactured houses.

Actually, your task is to study the websites of these companies, see what they offer and choose a Scandinavian or Finnish house project for subsequent implementation. Although, to be honest, this cannot be called a project. Rather, it is the appearance and layout from which you can build. So how to buy finished project with all the documentation abroad - quite problematic. But having sketches in hand - the layout and appearance of the house, you can already make a “replica” of this house.

Not all sites have a Russian or English version. Moreover, this version may be “shortened”, so for completeness of information, it is better to look at the original site.

To make it easier to navigate sites, you can use Google's automatic translator (translate.google.com) - just enter the site address in the translation field.

Or use the tips given below in the text.

Option two - search on the Finnish House

We have been working towards this for a long time and have finally made our catalog of Scandinavian and Finnish house designs. Faced with the need to search for a suitable project on several dozen foreign sites, which were also constantly changing, we gradually began to drag projects from Scandinavian sites to ours. And now there are more than 2,500 Finnish, Norwegian and Swedish houses on the Finnish House, with a convenient search according to the main criteria. By the way, when viewing a project in our catalog, pay attention to the “description” tab, there is helpful information and a link to the original project.

  • projects of Finnish houses with a sauna - and what is a Finnish house without a sauna?
  • projects of Finnish houses with a garage - after creating the catalog, I was surprised to find that the Finns have quite a lot of such projects
  • projects of Finnish houses up to 100 m2 - small houses have their own charm, except for one thing, they turn out to be expensive to build
  • projects of Finnish houses made of laminated veneer lumber - by the way, such a house can always be made in a frame version 😉

If you haven’t found your option, try searching in the catalog itself using the search form in the sidebar.

If you like to work with primary sources, below you will find links to Finnish and Scandinavian sites that served as a source of projects for our catalog.

Finnish house designs

Everything related to houses has a root in Finnish talo- which is noticeable even from the names of the companies. For example, Omatalo is one of the largest concerns in Finland and Scandinavia.

Accordingly, on websites, look for sections related to talo in one way or another - usually the directory is hidden under the word talot (houses), talomallistomme, talopaketit, etc. as well as mallistot (collections). Hints: kerros - number of floors, Huoneistoala - living area, Kerrosala - total area.

And it doesn’t matter whether the company builds houses from laminated veneer lumber or frame houses; any project can be adapted to frame technology.

CompanyCatalog
http://www.alvsbytalo.fihttp://www.alvsbytalo.fi/talomallistomme
http://www.jukkatalo.fi
http://www.kannustalo.fihttp://www.kannustalo.fi/mallistot/index.html
http://www.jamera.fihttp://www.jamera.fi/fi/talomallistot/
Also read my
http://www.samitalo.fihttp://www.samitalo.fi/fi/mallistot/sami-talo/
http://www.kastelli.fi/http://www.kastelli.fi/Talot/
http://www.kreivitalo.fihttp://www.kreivitalo.fi/talomallit/nordland
http://www.finnlamelli.fihttp://www.finnlamelli.fi/ rus/models
http://www.omatalo.com/http://www.omatalo.com/talot/
http://www.herrala.fi/http://www.herrala.fi/ talomallisto
http://www.jetta-talo.fihttp://www.jetta-talo.fi/talomallisto.html
http://www.passivitalo.comhttp://www.passiivitalo.com/eliitti/omakotalo.html
http://www.aatelitalo.fihttp://www.aatelitalo.fi/aatelitalon+talomallit/
http://www.designtalo.fi/http://www.designtalo.fi/fi/talopaketit/
http://www.kontio.fi/http://www.kontio.fi/fin/ Hirsitalot.627.html http://www.kontio.fi/fin/ Hirsihuvilat.628.html
http://www.lapponiarus.ru/http://www.lapponiarus.ru/ catalog.html
http://www.lappli.fihttp://www.lappli.fi/fi/talomallistot
http://www.jmturku.comhttp://www.jmturku.com/index_tiedostot/Page668.htm
http://www.sievitalo.fihttp://www.sievitalo.fi/trenditalomallisto/
http://www.hartmankoti.fihttp://hartmankoti.fi/talomallisto/
http://kilpitalot.fihttp://kilpitalot.fi/talomallisto/
http://www.mittavakoti.fihttp://www.mittavakoti.fi/mallisto/talomallisto.html
http://www.planiatalo.fihttp://www.planiatalo.fi/fi/mallistot/
http://www.mammuttihirsi.fihttp://www.mammuttikoti.fi/talomallisto/mallisto.html
http://honkatalot.ruhttp://lumipolar.ru/mallistot
http://www.kuusamohirsitalot.fihttp://www.kuusamohirsitalot.fi/fi/mallisto/mallihaku.html
http://www.kodikas.fihttp://www.kodikas.fi/puutalot#lisatiedot2
http://www.dekotalo.fihttp://www.dekotalo.fi/mallisto/1-kerros/
http://polarhouse.comhttp://polarhouse.com/mokit-huvilat/
http://www.callatalo.fihttp://www.callatalo.fi/talomallisto.html
http://www.simonselement.fihttp://www.simonselement.fi/models.php?type=1&cat=1

Hints - husen (house) planritningar (layout), Vära hus (choose a house)

CompanyCatalog
http://www.a-hus.se/http://www.a-hus.se/vara-hus
http://www.polarhouse.com/http://www.polarhouse.com/fi/mallistot/
http://www.vallsjohus.se/http://www.vallsjohus.se/? page_id=36
http://www. forsgrenstimmerhus.se/http://www. forsgrenstimmerhus.se/sv/hus# start
http://www.lbhus.se/http://www.lbhus.se/vara-hus. php
http://hjaltevadshus.sehttp://hjaltevadshus.se/hus/
http://www.st-annahus.se/http://www.st-annahus.se/V%C3%A5rahus/1plan/tabid/2256/language/sv-SE/Default.aspx
http://www.smalandsvillan.sehttp://www.smalandsvillan.se/vara-hus/sok-hus/
http://anebygruppen.se/http://anebygruppen.se/vara-hus/
http://www.savsjotrahus.se/http://www.savsjotrahus.se/index.php/47-arkitektritade-hus-svartvitt.html
http://www.eksjohus.se/http://www.eksjohus.se/husmodeller
http://www.vimmerbyhus.se/http://www.vimmerbyhus.se/vara-hus/
http://www.myresjohus.se/http://www.myresjohus.se/vara-hus/sok-hus/
http://www.gotenehus.se/http://www.gotenehus.se/hus
http://www.hudikhus.se/http://www.hudikhus.se/vara-hus

Norwegian house projects


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