Low ridge height results in a low knee wall

  • Erstellt am 2019-12-22 10:34:34

ypg

2019-12-27 20:46:45
  • #1
Actually, I drew a conclusion from your last posts, but I will still answer the in-between quoted posts.


What is beautiful to you? Area? Euros? Size?

Sorry, do you know what you’re writing? You only relate values to numbers. Why? For what?

Where people live? And surely there’s another corner for wine. Don’t act as if you own or will own a castle estate.



I am not doing that at all... I’m not talking about costs or value. Only you do that all the time.

Well then...

So you let your grandchildren sleep in a floor that wouldn’t count as a living floor?

I don’t think so.
You also won’t have built your own detached house in 5 years.


I wonder what you have been busy with in the last 5 years. You apparently haven’t looked much into a home magazine, a house building catalog, or a building forum. That naturally makes a conversation about what is possible and what one must do very difficult.
, for example, is currently building a house here and writing about it.
Then there are many others, and probably in the end me as well, who call a ceiling height up to the gable their own. On Pinterest, Houzz, or Schöner Wohnen, you hardly see anything else anymore.
I am curious if you will open another house building thread here. But I don’t think so. Your ideas probably don’t match what’s possible. I also find your thoughts somewhat cumbersome. A bit stuck... have you ever been a teacher?
No offense, I am curious.
 

Tassimat

2019-12-27 21:31:00
  • #2


If construction time and planning costs don't matter, your approach is okay. An exceptional case.

Actually, everyone has a budget limit, in doubt the maximum amount the bank gives. With this sum, it quickly becomes clear whether, for example, a basement costing an extra €50,000 is possible or not. Other luxuries are then quickly and simply cut. How high is your budget excluding the land, so just for the house and everything around it?
 
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