Buy the plot. As it looks, you don’t have any building obligation there anyway. Then go through all options. In the worst case, if all options are too expensive, you have a plot as an investment ;)
Our architect calculated with cubic meters of enclosed space back then and came to €350/m³. That didn’t fit for us at the time :)
Mine calculated €400/m3 in 2018, but since I knew it wouldn’t fit, I added €50k for the slope. It was just a gut feeling and reading into the subject here. €20k have now been paid back as a special repayment since everything (including the outside) is finished. Since savings were made in parallel during the construction phase, I assume that the €50k were actually used up with a few updates and the special repayment does not come from the financing sum. @TE that’s not a hill, that’s a slope!
hm ok, now I am really starting to doubt whether the construction project can still be realized at all. If we need 50k for the earthworks, then there is hardly anything left for the house. So is it "irrelevant" whether with a slab or a usable basement? Is so much money needed for preparation anyway? Would it make a difference if I had a soil survey done beforehand? Could it provide insight that the earthworks might be cheaper after all?
I have now lost track on the 23 pages... you always talk about Nutzkeller... what speaks against the Wohnkeller with technology facing the slope and living space facing the garden? I would always check something like that first with hillside properties and realize it if possible.
I have now lost track over the 23 pages...you always talk about utility basements...what speaks against a living basement with technology towards the slope and living space towards the garden? I would always check and, if possible, realize something like that first in the case of sloping plots.