rainario1
2020-05-14 01:10:15
- #1
By the way, I am increasingly convinced that you were talking past your main provider. The described wall structure seems to me to be the usual construction of the exterior wall, on the common side of course (each assuming that both halves are standing next to each other along the full length) less U-value sensitive and without facade plaster. You speak of a "party wall," which, as far as I believe, has not existed in row or semi-detached house construction since about 1980. On the other hand, you also do not seem to mean a fire wall – from which I conclude that you actually did not intend a legal semi-detached house, but a two-family house in the form of a semi-detached house with two residential units on a common, not legally divided plot. Then a "prefabricated house" builder will plan a multi-family house with apartment separation walls – here merely "patterned up" for their double execution in order to separate the ceiling sections on the one hand and the 5 cm separating joint between the two on the other. I see it as pre-programmed that you will later receive something different than you think you ordered.
Bullseye! Sunk!
It must be a "two-family house," legally nothing else is permitted.
Arranged like two semi-detached halves and also labeled as "semi-detached house" in the catalog.
However, I still do not quite understand:
Is the standard of the general contractor for a "real semi-detached house" with separate plots somewhat different than if I want to build a "multi-family house"? ops: Especially regarding the "separating wall"?!