ᐅ Installation of a Gas Heating System in New Construction 2023/2024
Created on: 11 Apr 2023 14:47
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robert0815
Hello fellow home builders,
we have started constructing a single-family house. The approved building permit / planning permission includes a gas heating system, which we still want to install.
There are two possible scenarios:
1. What happens if the heating system is installed in October 2023, but the house is only inspected and approved in February 2024?
2. What happens if the heating system is installed in January 2024, and the house is inspected and approved in May 2024?
Both options are difficult to plan for. So far, we do not know whether the construction schedule might be delayed.
I haven't found any information on this. Do you have any further details?
Regards,
robert0815
we have started constructing a single-family house. The approved building permit / planning permission includes a gas heating system, which we still want to install.
There are two possible scenarios:
1. What happens if the heating system is installed in October 2023, but the house is only inspected and approved in February 2024?
2. What happens if the heating system is installed in January 2024, and the house is inspected and approved in May 2024?
Both options are difficult to plan for. So far, we do not know whether the construction schedule might be delayed.
I haven't found any information on this. Do you have any further details?
Regards,
robert0815
Snowy36 schrieb:
You probably work in the automotive industry (-:Do you actually read the texts you quote, or do you just copy & paste randomly?MayrCh schrieb:
Do you actually read the texts you quote, or do you just copy & paste randomly? Charming as always. Do you talk to your colleagues like that too?
I’ll atone for three days because I missed the word ÖD. I hope that makes you happy.
C
chand19862 May 2023 19:29Snowy36 schrieb:
Are they happier there? Probably yes. But you don’t achieve prosperity in the capitalist sense that way. And you don’t have to.
But I just don’t know if that’s clear to the current generation. Sounds somewhat offended that their own lifestyle is no longer a role model for the next generation, but is even being strongly questioned. How dare you?
(I personally believe that Gen Z is actually much more materialistic than people think, if you consider what they might be thinking.)
Volunteering honors the officeholder, who performs work without pay that our society apparently does not value financially.
In terms of priority within a household, it is therefore often ranked below paid employment. However, I would tend to blame our society more than the person who cannot afford to reduce paid work in order to serve the former.
In terms of priority within a household, it is therefore often ranked below paid employment. However, I would tend to blame our society more than the person who cannot afford to reduce paid work in order to serve the former.
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Bausparfuchs2 May 2023 20:05Sixty percent of teachers in Germany work part-time! This is a simple observation during a time of severe teacher shortages and the decline of the German education system.
What private business could afford or allow something like this? The civil servant status of teachers is taking on strange characteristics.
Germany’s decline didn’t just start in the last two years, but began much earlier. Many high performers have become resigned and given up. In 2006, I also switched to a 15-year, four-day workweek. It was truly a great time. Why work yourself to exhaustion just for taxes and social contributions? Due to tax progression, the net income was almost the same.
Germany has had record revenues for the last 20 years. Where has the money gone? Certainly not into infrastructure. Nor into pension funds. And not into military spending either, as the armed forces have been underfunded.
Looking back, I’m glad I made my exit in time. Surely, I turned down some great job offers. But for whom?
What private business could afford or allow something like this? The civil servant status of teachers is taking on strange characteristics.
Germany’s decline didn’t just start in the last two years, but began much earlier. Many high performers have become resigned and given up. In 2006, I also switched to a 15-year, four-day workweek. It was truly a great time. Why work yourself to exhaustion just for taxes and social contributions? Due to tax progression, the net income was almost the same.
Germany has had record revenues for the last 20 years. Where has the money gone? Certainly not into infrastructure. Nor into pension funds. And not into military spending either, as the armed forces have been underfunded.
Looking back, I’m glad I made my exit in time. Surely, I turned down some great job offers. But for whom?
C
chand19862 May 2023 20:29[QUOTE="Bausparfuchs, post: 628129, member: 59936"]
60 percent of teachers in Germany work part-time!
Because only by doing so can they reach a normal full-time workload. Those teaching two main corrective subjects practically cannot fill a full position. The problem lies within the system.
Or because they have children at home. That is definitely not a problem, after all, we don’t want to become extinct.
If I had taught German/English instead of Physics/Chemistry/Math, I would also have moved to part-time long ago—or wouldn’t have become a teacher at all.
60 percent of teachers in Germany work part-time!
Because only by doing so can they reach a normal full-time workload. Those teaching two main corrective subjects practically cannot fill a full position. The problem lies within the system.
Or because they have children at home. That is definitely not a problem, after all, we don’t want to become extinct.
If I had taught German/English instead of Physics/Chemistry/Math, I would also have moved to part-time long ago—or wouldn’t have become a teacher at all.