Build a terraced end house with an additional unit (GÜ) on your own

  • Erstellt am 2019-05-27 10:48:59

Pinkiponk

2023-09-09 09:56:58
  • #1
How does the story with the middle house builder "actually" end? I haven't been here for a while and may have missed your account. Does he now live in the middle house with his family or has he sold it again?
 

goalkeeper

2023-09-12 23:28:12
  • #2
Hello everyone,

the family has now been living in the middle house for a few weeks. They have done a lot of work themselves.

Since then, everything has been peaceful and people greet each other.
 

goalkeeper

2024-10-02 17:43:09
  • #3
So then... I am still frequently mentioned in the posts by - so of course I have to slowly but surely complete my thread.

Since after installing our patio roof the question arose how my neighbor plastered their house side, here is the solution: last week the roof builder already took out two glass elements and today the scaffolding was erected - the neighbor apparently knows what they’re doing and is plastering it themselves.

The brick house didn’t give permission for the scaffolding on their side and sent my neighbor and the scaffolding builder away again even though it was announced that they would come today.

Well... a fitting quote from The Dark Knight comes to mind: “Some men just want to watch the world burn.”
 

11ant

2024-10-02 18:24:24
  • #4
Yes, just these days finally as an example of a house of this format, instead of always only as a warning example for the construction of a row or semi-detached house on an hourly basis. I always feel a little ashamed of this "misuse," but at the same time I am grateful that this thread has not been abducted by extraterrestrials like the construction blog of .
 

goalkeeper

2025-01-23 23:09:05
  • #5
To finally put the matter to rest:

The plastering work was completed within about four weeks, everything was properly cleaned up on our side by the neighbor and his people, and our roofing was then reinstalled without any problems.

Thus, peace has settled on our side, and I have finally found peace of mind – because far too much happened back then.

Somehow, I always feared that the plastering would again be some reckless, rushed action, where one is faced with a fait accompli – fortunately, this was unfounded.

Looking back now, in hindsight, one could have approached the whole issue differently, such as building a cellar or laying the foundation deeper, etc. But who can foresee when building their first house what kind of issues will later cause disputes with neighbors?

In the end, at least our municipality and the building authority seem to have learned something: in the subsequent new development area, no individual row house plots could be purchased anymore; instead, they were only directly allotted to companies that build an entire block and have already realized corresponding construction projects in the past.

I hope that with my explanations I was able to give some people a few points to consider during their planning phase for certain things.
 

11ant

2025-01-23 23:27:16
  • #6

Congratulations, I am very happy about that!

Thank you very much, yes, you certainly could!
You are probably number 1 among the thread starters I have quoted.
.

That I still get to experience this is wonderful. Hopefully your community will talk about it at the communities-and-cities day and similar forums, so that others take note as well. This simple measure is an incredibly powerful key to the benefit of all parties involved, and it hardly restricts the choices of interested builders at all.
 

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