Benutzer200
2022-04-04 21:55:57
- #1
No, you can't say that. In your example, I see a "real" business.In summary, one can say that there are indeed alternatives. Certainly, it is handled differently from municipality to municipality. A business is a business. You register it and then you are a business operator. Even a small eBay seller is a business operator. With that, you can go shopping at Metro, lease a car on commercial terms, which is also significantly cheaper than private leasing. And you can build a fancy house in the industrial area. That is then also approved by the municipality, or not.
By the way, these are company addresses or a lodging business. No private single-family homes.The four presumed houses to the right of the window manufacturer should also be quite well compensated due to their location directly on the edge of the development area.
Of course it is possible. But only with real business. Why don't you want to understand? It was, is, and will never be possible to just add your single-family house + hobby garage = business. The development plan does not allow that. Even in your example, the development plan does not allow it. That's why these were also built: - meat wholesaler - lodging business and administrative building for holiday home rentals (with opening hours and public traffic) - construction company with operating yard - recreational facility - IT cubicle - construction company - property renovator - printing company - meat wholesaler - window manufacturer - candle dealer - freight transport - machinery rental No matter which house number you look for, you will always find a business — and who wants possible floor space with 130 sqm manager's apartment.If it wouldn't be possible, there wouldn't be so many residential houses in industrial areas. I'm not an architect or lawyer.