ᐅ House Photos Discussion Corner – Share Your Home Pictures!

Created on: 25 Nov 2015 10:27
K
Koempy
Hello,

It would be really great if everyone here could just post one or a few pictures showing the current state of their house.

I'll start right away.

For renovations, it’s best to provide a comparison of before and after the remodeling.

Before March 2014:



After May 2015:

H
haydee
26 Mar 2018 21:44
blackm88 schrieb:
Contract signed in April. Building permit / planning permission application submitted on June 2nd, after a lot of pressure the approval was received in September. Detailed planning followed, then winter came (snow of many 10cm (several inches)) until February. Then excavation, foundation, basement, and the house by the end of March. So everything was “delayed” but only due to factors outside the home builder (authorities, weather, etc.)

12 weeks after the building permit / planning permission. However, these are only the rough walls; after that, construction progressed like stone on stone.
H
haydee
26 Mar 2018 21:52
Höki
Similar to what we had. We used a fast-drying screed. Otherwise, it wouldn’t have worked.
H
hemali2003
26 Mar 2018 22:15
For us (solid construction), it took 6.5 months from the first groundbreaking to moving in. Without fast-drying screed. Without any incidents and without significant breaks – at most, there were a few days when no workers were on site. We already found that extremely fast.
N
Nordlys
26 Mar 2018 22:28
We also used fast-drying screed with a promised curing time of 14 days. That was wishful thinking; it actually took four weeks. The wall plaster just wouldn’t dry, so the tiler couldn’t start, causing a 14-day delay. Then the carpenter’s assistant got so drunk at the May Day celebration that he ended up falling into the fire and had to be hospitalized, which stalled the interior work.

Also, a roofer was assigned to install drywall, which neither went quickly nor was enjoyable for him, leading to complaints from me. The utility providers only showed up on August 20th instead of four weeks earlier. The kitchen delivery was delayed by four weeks, thanks to two-man handling by Hermes. So, there’s always something, and what was supposed to be the start of August as per the contract turned into September 1st. That’s still manageable; others have faced much worse. Karsten
O
ONeill
27 Mar 2018 06:42
Prefab house completed in 13 months. Contract signed in February, installation scheduled for November, move-in in March. February would have been possible as well, but we did the electrical work with an electrician and therefore extended the plan in advance to avoid pressure.
andimann27 Mar 2018 11:02
Hello,
for our solid brick house with a basement, it took 8 months from the first groundbreaking to moving in. I found that rather slow. Without the unnecessary downtime, it could easily have been completed a month faster.
We used standard cement screed, and the drying time was about 6 weeks, heavily supported by 3 construction dehumidifiers.
For a solid brick house with a basement, I would estimate a construction time of 7–8 months; without a basement, about one month less.
In my opinion, any longer than that is too slow!

Best regards,

Andreas