ᐅ Question about the development plan – knee wall height, setback distances, and related issues

Created on: 7 Aug 2018 11:36
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Der-w
Hello,

how high can the knee wall be built if nothing is specified?
It is a semi-detached house. The other side is already built.
The roof pitch should be 40°.
I know that the existing house is 12 m (39 feet) deep.

It concerns the area marked in yellow.

Detailed floor plan / building plan with colored markings and technical symbols


Can you see how wide / long the building envelope is? Honestly, I don’t see any dimensions.

Thanks for your help.

Best regards
Der-w
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ypg
8 Aug 2018 08:44
I assume that the "haha" refers to the fact that the OP finds it amusing, possibly outdated, to use a set square by hand 😉
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Der-w
8 Aug 2018 09:07
Exactly
ypg schrieb:
I assume the haha refers to TE finding it funny, maybe outdated, to take a set square in hand 😉

That’s exactly what I meant.
I received the PDF from the authority, but it seems to have been scanned.
However, 10 x 12 or 9.5 x 12 was confirmed to me.
11ant8 Aug 2018 16:56
Der-w schrieb:
I received the PDF from the authority, but it seems to have been scanned.

Yes, a PDF of the plot, not from CAD: this is common—mainly because of the signatures and stamp notes that accumulate on the document over time. However, there are usually enough indicated measurements (such as road widths) to verify the scale.
https://www.instagram.com/11antgmxde/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/bauen-jetzt/
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ypg
10 Sep 2018 23:02
If you are genuinely interested, get the site plan for 200€+. You can then accurately measure with a protractor 🙂
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Egon12
11 Sep 2018 00:21
If one half of the house is already built, you can skip measuring. Just ring the doorbell of your future neighbor, as your house will look exactly the same 🙂
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Der-w
11 Sep 2018 09:08
Egon12 schrieb:
If one of the two halves is already built, you can skip measuring. Just ring your future neighbor’s door, because your house will look exactly the same 🙂

That’s exactly not the case as far as I understood correctly from the other thread.
The main thing is 40° (40°), but it doesn’t have to be exactly identical.