Floor Plan (Planlösning)
What does it mean?
The floor plan describes how a home's rooms are organized and relate to each other. A well-designed plan maximizes function, natural light, and sense of space. Important aspects include through-apartment or single-sided layout (light from one or multiple directions), separate or open-plan spaces, and how the kitchen relates to the living room.
When choosing a home, consider the floor plan's practical implications: where bedrooms are located relative to the street (noise exposure), whether the bathroom is accessed from the hallway or bedroom, and whether the kitchen has room for a dining table. Traditional Swedish apartments often have separate kitchens and through-layouts, while new construction tends toward open plans with combined kitchen and living room.
Key Points
- Through-apartments get light from at least two directions and better ventilation
- Separate kitchen vs. open plan affects both function and atmosphere
- Bedrooms facing the courtyard are quieter than street-facing ones
- A hallway as a passage room reduces usable living space
- New construction often has more open layouts while older buildings have more separate rooms
Practical Tip
Study the floor plan carefully before viewing — it reveals more about the home than photos. Check compass directions (south-facing living room gets evening sun), where load-bearing walls are (limits ability to modify the layout), and whether there's sufficient storage.
Based on content from Bofrid's Knowledge Bank