We want to tear down a wall between two bedrooms on the upper floor. The house was built in 1980 and we have different drawings that don't seem to be specific to our house since some are mirrored. I'll show the pictures and try to explain so maybe someone can try to answer, or perhaps we need to get a carpenter here. There are no electrical outlets in the wall in any case.
Facades. It's the rooms with a wider space between the windows, but the ground floor is mirrored - the windows are on the right and the brick facade is on the left.
The ground floor is mirrored. The kitchen is downward in the picture but to the right. The living room is upward but to the right, and the bedroom to the left has its wall so that it becomes the smaller option, 8.4 sqm. The upper floor is also mirrored. It's the option with two equally sized bedrooms (the ones to the right in the picture) located to the left. And it is the wall between the two right bedrooms (to the left in the picture) that we want to take down.
Here everything is correctly oriented.
Anyone who has the time, inclination, and knowledge to help me? The last picture is very mirrored and I can't remove it from the post.
With that truss solution, no interior walls on the upper floor are load-bearing. This is evident from the section drawing on the first drawing. The only thing that can change that assessment is if the unheated attic is used as storage for a lot of heavy things, which is unlikely considering the small hatch up there.