The perfect semi-detached house solution?!

  • Erstellt am 2015-09-01 12:02:57

ypg

2015-09-09 23:39:32
  • #1










In holiday countries (mainly mountainous coastal villages) we photograph comparable buildings in their old architectural styles in amazement and breathtakingly ;)
 

nordanney

2015-09-10 07:25:30
  • #2
Style is a good keyword! Unfortunately, it is completely missing in the construction here :(
 

Bauexperte

2015-09-10 09:52:15
  • #3
I think if the OP had not chosen such a terrible location//time of day//lack of sunlight for his shot, the comments on the building style would be more positive ;) Rhineland greetings
 

deSertfiSh

2015-09-11 09:46:10
  • #4


Thx! Most people here lack a sense for unconventional solutions... yes, the lighting in the photo is bad, but it was a chance find, so I can't go back there for a second photo. I was more concerned with the basic idea, not a 1:1 copy! You can also easily shift the whole thing, or replace the continuous roof with a lower intermediate roof, etc.
 

Musketier

2015-09-11 10:01:41
  • #5
If such a shared component should really be sufficient by definition for a semi-detached house in Germany and there is enough space on the plots, then I would rather space the houses further apart and create a kind of connecting corridor between the houses, which has the party wall in the middle. Each entrance area would then be accommodated in the corridor. You can sometimes see this in public buildings when several buildings are connected. However, in that case, the corridor is continuous, of course. Whether something like that works as a semi-detached house in [Dtl.]. No idea.
 

Sebastian79

2015-09-11 10:15:26
  • #6


Aha, then where is the point of the thread here? Do you just want to hear confirmations of how cool the construction method is? Then you should have removed the question mark from the title...
 
Oben