Horizon Design Planning

Based on the floor plan , the design follows a linear modular configuration with balanced zoning, structural efficiency, and optimised circulation.

This is not accidental planning.
It is engineered spatial logic.


Overall Dimensions & Structural Layout

The Horizon plan shows:

  • Approximate length: 10.8m (modular configuration) 

  • Clear separation between private and social zones

  • Panelised modular construction (Panel 1 & Panel 2) The modular segmentation allows:

  • Controlled factory fabrication

  • Efficient transportation

  • Fast on-site installation

  • Structural precision

Each module is pre-engineered before delivery, reducing construction risk.


Zoning Strategy – Public vs Private

One of the strongest planning principles in Horizon is zoning.

Private Zone (Left Section)

  • Bedroom 1

  • WC

  • Laundry

Central Living Core

  • Dining table

  • Kitchen

  • Living room

Secondary Private Zone (Right Section)

  • Bedroom 2

  • WC

This dual-end bedroom placement creates:

✔ Acoustic separation
✔ Privacy for shared living
✔ Ideal rental configuration
✔ Multi-generational flexibility

In compact homes, zoning determines comfort.
Horizon avoids stacking rooms inefficiently.

Open-Plan Living Core

At the centre of the plan, the kitchen, dining and living area form a continuous open space.

Design advantages:

  • No wasted corridor

  • Direct visual connection across the home

  • Natural airflow potential

  • Flexible furniture layout

The kitchen runs linearly along the wall, optimising plumbing alignment and reducing service complexity.

The dining table acts as a transition between kitchen and lounge — reinforcing spatial hierarchy without walls.


Bedroom Planning Efficiency

Each bedroom is positioned against external walls to ensure:

  • Natural light access

  • Cross ventilation opportunities

  • Efficient furniture placement

Wardrobes are integrated within wall lines, maintaining circulation clearance.

By maintaining proportional geometry (approximately 2.8–3.8m spans shown in plan), rooms avoid awkward shapes that often plague small modular homes.


Wet Area Consolidation – Cost & Engineering Efficiency

Bathrooms and laundry are grouped along service lines .

This reduces:

  • Plumbing complexity

  • Pipe runs

  • Structural penetrations

  • Maintenance risk

Consolidated wet zones are a key principle in modular design efficiency.