What is "unkonzentriert" .... or the whole term "unkonzentriert gebaute Kegelbahn-Doppelhaushälfte"? Since I know some of your posts, I know there is something clever behind it, I just didn’t understand what.
Sometimes his posts are just cleverly packaged nonsense - sorry @11ant. But sometimes it’s too much pub talk and not differentiated enough for me.
That there is something clever behind my posts is viewed differently – also that it is nonsense. What surprises me extremely, however, is that here joins this faction of non-understanders – suffering himself in a textbook-like manner the evaluation of my views on unconcentrated built semi-detached house (in his case however ~terraced houses). Terraced houses – and semi-detached houses are basically terraced end houses built together without a middle house – are characterized by being built together on the sides (offset or not). To avoid complicated component connections it is helpful not to build apples and pears together. For this one uses the instruments "joint planning" (which fundamental individualists like to reject with the "argument" of not wanting to build cloned houses – which is not necessary at all) and "joint construction management" (which also has no disadvantages in practice). If one builds unconcentrated – i.e. not only does everyone have (unproblematically) their own architect, but (unfortunately problematic) these also do not talk to each other, then problems arise: in sealing the buildings at the border sides, if one builds with and the other without basement, et cetera. Terraced houses as a building type are basically best suited for developers, and clearly worse for individual builders. And nobody currently experiences this more brutally than . "Kegelbahn" means floor plans that are disproportionately narrow : long, like "towel" (only even more extreme). Every floor plan concept has somewhere a pain point, from which you can’t just squeeze it into another format without loss of quality. In my opinion a terraced house also screams quite loudly "ouch" below seven meters "width" (or better: "unwidth" or "narrowness"). Wood and stone, different roof shapes, without basement and with basement: all that can also be placed directly next to each other – if necessary even with different architects, but these should at least talk to each other. In the case of , in my opinion, the cynical community drives the game one level further: every builder decides dollishly "individually" whether and how to pile up. The result is already in the Bible, only that Schilda is called Babylon there. So that malicious tongues prophesy: "the first will be the only ones."