Villa Capri House BuildSo, the first step in building from an actual house plan is to study it carefully, and if you can, print it out so you can make notes on it.
Studying my house plan (
http://www.archivaldesigns.com/home-plans/villa-capri-house-plan), the first thing I note (and that will be a challenge to build) is the fact that is has a minimum of two floors that are fully above ground and two floors that are partially underground. Not an easy thing to build in Sims. So I had to think of some ways to do it.
I don’t like trying to build a walkout basement with the basement tool. It’s too complicated. So I’m going to do it the ‘old school’ way.
I’ve decided that I’m going to raise the front elevation on the property by one floor height. This will be the base of the first floor - the garages will also be on this elevation. That way, the ‘basement’ will be at the original ground elevation and then I’ll lower that by one floor level for the ‘sub-basement’. This will make more sense when you see the screenshots after I have the floors in.
Now comes some calculations. I’m going to build this on a 64 x 64 lot and I’ll probably need all of that space. I need to calculate, roughly, the depth of the build (including the garages) so I know how far back into the lot I’ll start so I have a nice gradual incline up to the first floor level.
So, now I’m looking at the stairs and figuring out how I’m going to make it work. Sims doesn’t allow you to place a staircase right above another one (only exception is the spiral stairs). So I can’t stack them like it shows in the plan. Instead, I’m going to go with one up the center and then the next level, there will be one on either side, and the next floor will go up the center again, etc. I’ll end up with something like this:
If I allow two floor tiles on either side (as pictured) then the central stairwell is a minimum of 14 tiles wide and 8 tiles deep. Now I need to figure the rest of the width of the house. I use a rough measurement of one tile equals about three feet in the real world.
Laundry room = 11 x 11 (close enough to 12 x 12 so 4 x 4 tiles in the Sim world)
Dining room = 18 x 15 (6 x 5 tiles)
Foyer = Doesn’t show a measurement so I’ll use the double door and the wall bits on either side to equal a 4 tile width Foyer.
Now, I don’t need to measure the other side as this house will be perfectly symetrical from the center. Taking half of the Foyer (2 tiles) and adding the Laundry room and Dining room together (10 tiles), I get 12 tiles as half the width of the house. Which means 24 tiles wide for the whole house. But I need to consider those garages.
They are 21 x 21 on the plans. This would come out to 7 x 7 tiles, HOWEVER, the Sims Parking Space is 3 x 7 tiles. So 7 x 7 wouldn’t strictly work. Plus the Sims garage doors are 4 tiles wide and there’s two of them per building. This calls for some alterations. I’m going to go with a depth of 12 tiles (2 garage doors plus three wall pieces) and since the buildings show as square, they will be 12 x 12 tiles each. The garages are inset in relation to the house by about 2 tiles on each side. If I add the two garages together, I get 24 tiles, minus the tiles inset by the house (4 tiles) I get an additional width to the build of 20 tiles. So now the house is a total of 44 tiles wide (I’m glad I don’t have to clean it in real life! lol).
Now for the depth.
Garage = 12 tiles
Distance between Garages and house = I’m allowing 4 tiles for safety
Dining room = 5 tiles
Stair well = 8 tiles (this includes the Gallery on the plans)
Grand Room = 6 tiles (20 x 18 = 7 x 6 tiles)
Total depth = 35 tiles
My house will require a space of 44 x 35 tiles leaving 20 tiles to split for the sides and 29 tiles to split for the back and front. I’ll split the sides evenly and save 16 tiles for the front leaving 13 tiles for the back.
Now I have a plan.
And you guys can check my math.