Should the land be filled up or not?

  • Erstellt am 2020-06-27 17:25:56

Yaso2.0

2021-03-22 12:44:52
  • #1


I think I have understood why the construction manager came up with the idea of the 5 m boundary distance.

According to the employee from the GU, the construction manager said during the meeting about the position of the house that it would make sense to make the driveway as level (street level) as possible and to set the house's finished floor upper edge at 23.xx, because the house is also at that height on the west side. Accordingly, we would have to compensate for about 1.5 m height difference.

I told the employee that this is not desired. I informed him that the finished floor upper edge at 22.50 makes the most sense.

So the problem is the lack of communication regarding where the finished floor upper edge is supposed to be. Although we were never asked about this, and when I mentioned it myself during the construction meeting, I was told that it would be discussed on site once the planning is finalized :rolleyes:

It is apparently not possible to speak directly to the architect at the GU... Communication always goes through the house seller. He said again now that he will forward this to the architect and get back to me o_O

Let’s see how much delay this will cause now...
 

icandoit

2021-03-22 12:53:55
  • #2
I suppose your [GU] doesn't have an architect at all but only a draftsperson.
 

Yaso2.0

2021-03-22 13:13:58
  • #3
I also suspect something like that, but who then prepares the construction documents for the building authority? Those must be signed by an architect, right?
 

11ant

2021-03-22 13:57:19
  • #4
Draftsman and stamp holder may ideally *LOL* have never even met each other ;-)
 

Yaso2.0

2021-03-22 14:40:41
  • #5


seems to actually be the case..

Is that common practice at GU?

I always thought they have an architect whom they just hide so well from their client.. :rolleyes:
 

11ant

2021-03-22 14:56:20
  • #6
Draftswoman part-time in the home office, architect retired comes as needed for signing. There are also those with a permanent contract architect, and indeed two types: if they themselves are the client of the architect, then he works covertly, for complex legal reasons. Others prefer that the customer goes directly to this architect and becomes his client himself. The latter of course will not be perceived as reasonable by the customer if he only wants to have the dressing room wall moved in the otherwise unchanged Schantalle 138ZD.
 

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