Rembrandt's Girl wrote:Sam wrote:RG... can you post my masterpiece my sketch
Maybe that can help with the visual
Your wish is my command, Sam. Here's your upstairs floorplan "masterpiece"...
And the pic you requested...

I needed a few minutes to get over the dizziness... but I'm back.
I did see your sketch. It's pretty close, but missing a few things we are certain about from photos.
On the left of the lanai you show a door to the middle bedroom. That's correct, but there's another door farther down on that wall, which I believe to be the linen closet, and a window still further down, which is the dressing room to the ocean-view suite. Your sketch has it labeled as a bath, but it's shown in the real estate photos with wardrobes and a dressing table, and the window onto the lanai. The bath you show behind it connects to that dressing room, has a window facing the rear, and is all part of that suite.
The middle bedroom has it's dressing room on a common wall with the ocean-view suites dressing room, but a bit smaller because the linen closet is shared in that space. This dressing room connects to a bathroom on the same common wall and has a window facing the rear also.
The stair hall is correct, and then there's the third suite.

The easiest way to visualize my floor plan is to swap the stairs and bathroom in your sketch. The sitting room and bedroom would be lined up across the back of the house with a bathroom and short hall between them, and behind the elevator stretching to the back would be the dressing room and closet. The sitting room in your sketch is the sewing room with access to the stairs down to the space just right of the
zagaun which is the entry to the service wing. It doesn't connect to the bedroom with the driveway balcony in your sketch. It also has the dumbwaiter.
Here's why I think this is so:
In the sketch the bathroom has no window which would be like no other bathroom in the house and highly unusual in a house of this era and size. In fact, three of the five dressing rooms have windows as do both powder rooms as well. The two that don't have there own windows connect directly with bathrooms that do.
The sitting room in the sketch is not actually very large, has no balconies only windows. Being on he service side of the house, it arguably has a poorer view than the back of the house which has an angled view of the ocean and to which all the other suites face.
The space with the word elevator in it on your sketch is much larger and has a rear facing balcony with a view. You don't label that space in the sketch, but I think you have been referring to it as the sewing room/linen closet. I'm uncertain the architect would place a balcony with a view in such a service space, while placing a sitting room viewing mostly the driveway.
Finally, I don't know how to explain it in less than a very long paragraph so I'll keep it short. (I'm starting to feel dizzy again)

The sketch doesn't show any windows or doors at the back between the two lanais, but the way they all line up is actually symmetrical. It's quite amazing really and I didn't see it for a very long time. Long story short, it doesn't fit having the service stair in the back with a sewing room/linen closet located there.
I don't mean to sound too critical. I truly enjoy discussing this topic with you guys.
I think you'll really enjoy seeing the SketchUp floor plan.