Hello Forum,
I am new here and not entirely sure if this is the right section of the forum for my question. I apologize in advance if I have posted in the wrong place.
We are currently deeply involved in planning the construction of a single-family house. After some online research, however, I came across some rather negative points.
The house design is being handled by a planning company. The managing director of this company had an insolvency with his former construction business in 2010 (the reason for the insolvency was, in summary, the financial crisis—at least according to the managing director’s statement).
The construction phase will then be managed by a developer. This developer company was newly registered in the commercial register in early February and is owned by the brother of the managing director mentioned above. The brother is a master bricklayer and business economist and runs another construction company, which, however, does not have much information available online.
All in all, this gives a rather negative impression. Since our family will be growing in the next few weeks and our current apartment will soon be too small, we are willing to consider every possible option (unfortunately, the real estate market here offers very little flexibility).
How would you assess the entire project? Does it make sense to seriously pursue the construction, or would it be better to stay away? A credit check on the developer seems rather pointless, as the company was only registered about a month ago.
I hope for some opinions, rough assessments, and perhaps suggestions on how to proceed.
Best regards
I am new here and not entirely sure if this is the right section of the forum for my question. I apologize in advance if I have posted in the wrong place.
We are currently deeply involved in planning the construction of a single-family house. After some online research, however, I came across some rather negative points.
The house design is being handled by a planning company. The managing director of this company had an insolvency with his former construction business in 2010 (the reason for the insolvency was, in summary, the financial crisis—at least according to the managing director’s statement).
The construction phase will then be managed by a developer. This developer company was newly registered in the commercial register in early February and is owned by the brother of the managing director mentioned above. The brother is a master bricklayer and business economist and runs another construction company, which, however, does not have much information available online.
All in all, this gives a rather negative impression. Since our family will be growing in the next few weeks and our current apartment will soon be too small, we are willing to consider every possible option (unfortunately, the real estate market here offers very little flexibility).
How would you assess the entire project? Does it make sense to seriously pursue the construction, or would it be better to stay away? A credit check on the developer seems rather pointless, as the company was only registered about a month ago.
I hope for some opinions, rough assessments, and perhaps suggestions on how to proceed.
Best regards
Well, the concept was probably to have something tangible to "touch," but still allow a lot of flexibility in designing the floor plan. Apparently, they searched for a long time for someone who could envision it... The plot is small and didn’t offer much opportunity to vary the external dimensions significantly.
I bought the walls, intermediate ceiling, and roof ;-)
Yes, pipes and wiring are now installed on the raw subfloor.
I bought the walls, intermediate ceiling, and roof ;-)
Yes, pipes and wiring are now installed on the raw subfloor.
Altai schrieb:
Well, the idea was probably to have something tangible to start with, while still allowing a lot of flexibility to design the floor plan yourself. Designing the floor plan also means: non-load-bearing walls in lightweight construction that can still be positioned (?)
https://www.instagram.com/11antgmxde/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/bauen-jetzt/
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