ᐅ Current Building Practices and New Residential Developments Compliant with Energy Efficiency Regulations

Created on: 24 Mar 2018 14:36
F
Fuchur
New development areas and how they look nowadays due to energy saving regulations, etc.

It used to be a huge site in an old district of East Berlin (former military area and restricted zone).

In 2006, things still started off quite reasonably. In the end, there are now around 500 houses. What’s interesting is that each year the plots got smaller, but the houses built on them became larger.

This was the beginning in 2006, as mentioned, still quite moderate:


Aerial view of a residential area with colorful roofs, streets, cars, and construction work along the waterfront.



Aerial view of a construction site with a crane, new houses, and adjacent row houses in autumn.



Aerial view of a construction area with new buildings, streets, trees, and red roofs.



Now, around 2017 and after about four construction phases, this is what it looks like:


Aerial photo of a new residential neighborhood: many modern houses with dark roofs, streets, and vehicles.


There was no real zoning plan there. Practically anything could be built that was available in the portfolio.
Fuchur schrieb:
OT: I would feel claustrophobic with these plots. The best ones are almost always in the shade...


Combining and rearranging didn’t go perfectly smoothly but it’s alright...
Regards, Mycraft
H
Haus²
31 Mar 2018 00:24
I find the different approaches to fulfilling the desire for personal space and privacy on minimal plots quite interesting. Detached single-family homes inherently have limitations due to setback requirements, along with all the side effects described above. The outcome can still vary—sometimes better, sometimes worse. For example, I find it rather odd when increased proximity is compensated by taller fences (such as gabions, welded wire fences, etc.).

Other house types tend to work better in this regard, possibly even better than rows of terraced houses. For example, look up “Das Hofhausprojekt.”

Good luck, Haus²
Mycraft31 Mar 2018 11:37
Haus² schrieb:
. “The courtyard house project”.

Brr, creepy...

No, better a towel then...
A
Alex85
31 Mar 2018 13:13
The issue I see with this style is not living in it itself, but the external appearance. Everyone is sitting behind a high wall, so the public space probably looks that way as well.
M
Müllerin
31 Mar 2018 13:46
Courtyard house... great, I really like it! Especially the one on Leipzig Pfefingerstr.
If the courtyard is large enough so it doesn’t just become a light well. I find nothing more boring than a lawn, so that would actually suit me... maybe in my next life.
11ant31 Mar 2018 15:12
ypg schrieb:
I am a fan of terraced houses: if you add 2 meters (6.5 feet) more in width, you get a higher quality of living than if everyone has a 16-meter (52.5 feet) wide plot.

If only that word “if” didn’t exist...
Unfortunately, in reality, rows of terraced houses are usually designed so that two plots can be combined within fifteen meters (49 feet) of width. The terraced house concept doesn’t get a fair chance to prove itself because it can’t “breathe” deeply enough. The problem is not the concept itself, but the typically chosen high density in practice.
Haus² schrieb:
Other house types tend to work better then, possibly even better than terraced blocks.

The problem is the demand for single-family home plots: whenever there’s a chance for a contiguous development based on a project-specific zoning plan (building permit/planning permission), land developers usually still end up dividing the land into single-family house plots. And/or local authorities fear "alternative communities."
https://www.instagram.com/11antgmxde/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/bauen-jetzt/
N
Nordlys
31 Mar 2018 15:29
This seems to be how the market works. Those who want to build are looking for a single-family house, at most a semi-detached house. Plots for these sell very quickly. Buyers typically want a condominium, around 80–90cm (31–35 inches) in size. These also sell well. Terraced houses are harder to sell for developers. They prefer to build condominiums.