One-storey option
A one-storey house is simpler to install and convenient day to day: every room sits on one level. It fits plots where the footprint is sufficient and maximising height is not a priority.
Two-storey option
A two-storey house yields more area on the same footprint and lets you separate public and private zones by floor. Structure, foundation and installation are more involved and depend on the model.
The exact scope, materials and conditions are always fixed in the written offer and depend on the selected model and package.
Year-round use
Whether a house is suited to year-round living depends on the specific model, the insulation and engineering inside the package, the foundation and local requirements. We do not give a blanket promise across every model.
- Permanent home for a larger family - often two-storey
- Compact year-round home - often one-storey
- Seasonal or secondary building - depends on package and site
Site condition, access and logistics affect the final process and schedule.
Structure and foundation
A two-storey modular house means a heavier total load on the foundation, a carefully designed intermediate floor and additional joints between levels. A one-storey layout spreads the load across one plane and often allows a lighter foundation logic - but the final call is always made by a project that takes soil and plot geometry into account.
In modular logic, the second storey is not simply placed on top of the first. Each level is a separate factory-prepared unit, and on site they are joined with a crane and finished at the seams.
Layout and day-to-day comfort
Living on a single level keeps the house logic simple: short paths, no stairs, better long-term accessibility. A two-storey layout lets you separate day and night zones and free up more ground-floor area for shared rooms.
- One-storey - shorter routes, simpler heating, more flexible future accessibility
- Two-storey - clear zoning, more area on a smaller footprint
Site requirements and approvals
Storey count is also shaped by local rules: height limits, allowed build area, setbacks from neighbouring plots and required approvals. These differ by country and municipality, so we do not give a blanket promise of “fits any site”.
The exact scope, materials and conditions are always fixed in the written offer and depend on the selected model and package.
What this means for the buyer
Storey count is not a taste question separate from engineering. It is a decision that shapes the foundation, transport, installation, day-to-day comfort and later flexibility. The earlier the client weighs it, the more accurately the written offer can be tied to the real situation.
Next step
Browse the catalog to see which model and storey count fit your plot and lifestyle.

