ᐅ Solid House / Prefabricated House – Which Type Should We Build?
Created on: 20 Aug 2016 17:14
A
adrijan
Hello everyone, we need your help, experience, recommendations, and tips. We are trying to decide which type of house to build: a prefab house or a conventional solid construction house. More importantly, we want to know which company can be trusted so that we don’t regret it later. From our research, the following companies stand out: Schwörerhaus, Have Sie Haus, Weberhaus, and Heinz von Heiden, our favorite solid construction house. We hope you can help us and especially warn us against any mistakes.
Thank you in advance.
Best regards, Ramadan
Thank you in advance.
Best regards, Ramadan
All right, Evolith doesn’t matter anymore because I don’t want to argue about it. What I’m really looking for is if you could maybe give me some tips on which companies are good or bad (based on experience). And if it fails because of comma placement, then I’m just in the wrong place here.
You definitely don’t have to worry too much about comma placement (although personally, I’m very picky about spelling, but that’s just a side note). However, having well-structured sentences makes things much easier. With long, complex sentences without commas, it can sometimes be hard to keep track of the meaning.
The solution is simply shorter sentences. That way, you can elegantly avoid commas.
I believe this is the same in any language; at least, that’s how it is in the languages I know.
So, no matter the language or the level of spelling skills: always write in a way that makes it easy for the reader to read and understand. That can be done with commas, shorter sentences (using full stops), or sometimes I even add a line break, which also helps.
Putting yourself in the reader’s shoes is also useful. So before you send something, read it again and ask yourself: would I understand this if I were reading it for the first time?
Adrijan, long speech, but I admit I’ve had to read some of your texts several times to grasp the meaning. And not everyone always has the time or patience for that. So consider your readers and make it easy for them. You want something from them, after all.
The solution is simply shorter sentences. That way, you can elegantly avoid commas.
I believe this is the same in any language; at least, that’s how it is in the languages I know.
So, no matter the language or the level of spelling skills: always write in a way that makes it easy for the reader to read and understand. That can be done with commas, shorter sentences (using full stops), or sometimes I even add a line break, which also helps.
Putting yourself in the reader’s shoes is also useful. So before you send something, read it again and ask yourself: would I understand this if I were reading it for the first time?
Adrijan, long speech, but I admit I’ve had to read some of your texts several times to grasp the meaning. And not everyone always has the time or patience for that. So consider your readers and make it easy for them. You want something from them, after all.
And the last post, before mine (which I hadn’t read yet), is just perfect: nothing more is needed! Just like that.
Now, to the main topic:
No one can really give you a final recommendation, because some people have good experiences with a construction company, while others have bad ones. For nationwide companies, it also depends a lot on the local staff. So, if you have a good site manager, you will usually rate the company much better than someone else building with the same company elsewhere but having to put up with a poor site manager.
Therefore: look around to see which companies could be an option for you, make a long list, review it, create a short list, and then go through those.
It has also been pointed out here before: don’t necessarily fixate on a national company. There are surely local providers in your area who build regionally and can offer you a customized solution (very often the better one!) and are not more expensive or only slightly so. Personally, I prefer individual solutions (and our budget is roughly within what is generally discussed here, so not more expensive).
Now, to the main topic:
No one can really give you a final recommendation, because some people have good experiences with a construction company, while others have bad ones. For nationwide companies, it also depends a lot on the local staff. So, if you have a good site manager, you will usually rate the company much better than someone else building with the same company elsewhere but having to put up with a poor site manager.
Therefore: look around to see which companies could be an option for you, make a long list, review it, create a short list, and then go through those.
It has also been pointed out here before: don’t necessarily fixate on a national company. There are surely local providers in your area who build regionally and can offer you a customized solution (very often the better one!) and are not more expensive or only slightly so. Personally, I prefer individual solutions (and our budget is roughly within what is generally discussed here, so not more expensive).
Similar topics