ᐅ Building an End-Terrace House as a Self-Managed Project with a General Contractor

Created on: 27 May 2019 10:48
G
goalkeeper
Hello everyone,

some of you might have already followed one of my threads about us having to or being allowed to build our end-terrace house on our own responsibility – depending on how you look at it. This means that we are buying an end-terrace plot (215 sqm (2315 sq ft)) in a new development area in the Rhein-Neckar district and will be building on it ourselves – but in coordination with our two terrace neighbors.

The municipality, which sold the plots through a local resident model, ideally wanted applicants to apply as a complete housing group with several families and then build accordingly with a general contractor, construction manager, or architect. Of course, that didn’t really work out, so now there are only individual applicants and also homeowners.

After we were awarded the plot, the addresses of the other terrace neighbors were shared to discuss certain matters, such as roof style, whether or not to have a basement, etc. It was immediately clear that everyone preferred to do their own thing. However, we were still able to agree that the housing group will have a gable roof with a pitch of 35 to 40 degrees (within this 5-degree range).

As the end house, we will build without a basement, while the middle house and the other end house will have basements. This obviously presents a challenge as we would have to make a deep foundation or simply skip it, and the middle house would have to support us, as we will start construction first. The current agreement with the middle house is that we will build a deeper foundation at his expense, as supporting our house later on would be considerably more expensive for him.

We are currently close to signing with the construction manager, the notarization appointment for the plot is at the end of June, and we hope to start construction in the fall of this year. Meanwhile, several other freely planned housing groups are being built around us, which might get in the way with their cranes.

I will document the progress here from time to time – such a self-planned terraced house doesn’t come along very often.
G
goalkeeper
10 Mar 2020 14:18
11ant schrieb:

... and it can’t be temporarily ramped with any kind of excavated material?

We are currently checking with the civil engineer whether this can be done on the side of our plot. Then the filling wouldn't be wasted, as we could pave over it later.

Mittelhäuser will probably start soon as well. That’s another reason why it isn’t feasible.
G
goalkeeper
11 Mar 2020 12:25
Fortunately, the screed work was able to start today.

Construction crane over a residential building under construction, scaffolding, building materials and construction waste on the site.
M
MayrCh
11 Mar 2020 13:24
goalkeeper schrieb:

Fortunately, the screed work was able to start today.
The road paving gets damaged anyway once all the construction companies have driven over it. Just look at how the subbase layer in the construction areas here looks after two years of building activity...
kaho67411 Mar 2020 14:01
Do the new neighbors on the left and right also visit the construction sites sometimes?
G
goalkeeper
11 Mar 2020 14:28
kaho674 schrieb:

Do the new neighbors on the left and right also visit the construction sites?

Of course—they are there all the time.
lastdrop11 Mar 2020 15:09
Can we join there?