ᐅ Today was the material and finish selection appointment, smile

Created on: 9 Mar 2017 13:40
N
Nordlys
Some leftover vacation days in March. We just had the selection appointment. This morning at nine. Selection appointment with the mid-sized company. Waiting for us were Mrs. L., the secretary, with a coffee; Mr. K., the master carpenter; and Mr. R., the head of masonry and roofing. Mr. K. starts. In front of him, the building plan of our house, next to him a laundry basket full of various bits and pieces. Let’s get started. With windows. He flips through the building specification. Ah, they’re from Poland. He rummages through the laundry basket and pulls out a profile sample. Veka, triple glazing, Roto fittings, Hoppe handles. The handles can also be lockable, costs extra. But then you just lose the keys, no one needs that, and if burglars want to get in, they will anyway; it just ends up broken... My wife examines the profile. Well, you can easily wipe off the dirt, can’t you? And colored, she asks? Mr. K., dryly: Yeah, it’s possible. But it’s a waste of money; it doesn’t make a difference when looking out either... So, it remains white. It goes on in that style with tiles, interior doors. When it comes to the exterior window sills, he really gets going. Yes, those are aluminum, white or nothing at all. He grins. And on the inside? Laundry basket. Granite slabs are brought to the table. Four pieces. Two disappear right away because they are polished high gloss. That’s nonsense, he says; anyway, you’ll just put flowers on them. My wife picks one from the remaining slabs. Done, moving on. The roofing expert chimes in. Hey, I need to take off some joints first, what’s the plan? He takes us outside. There lies a package from Braas with sample tiles. He picks out three. That one, that one, or that one is allowed in the building plan. We choose the dark red one. Gloss coating against moss? Doesn’t work, there are no trees here. In High German: You don’t need it because there are no trees where you are building. Okay, convinced. The roof is done. He storms off. Inside we go. Front door, Mr. K. says, now that’s a topic. So, here are the panels from Rodenberger; from K1 to K6 are included at no extra cost. The long handle costs 100 extra. The very long one 250. But that one is no good, it’s flimsy. Then take the short one for 100. We flip through. That one is good, he says. Stable, timeless, with K5 included, okay price, has some glass, lets some light into the hallway, but it’s not a department store door. Done... that’s the one. Now the interior staircase, he judges... Yeah, you take beech, it’s a hard, quiet wood. It’s coated with parquet lacquer, so it’s also durable. And as a railing, a handrail with metal rods. He grins, done. Can it be done differently? White? Hmm, he shakes his head. It’s possible. But... that costs more, you have to paint, sand, and fill more. You can see on his face what he thinks about white stairs. I give in. Beech, parquet lacquer. Matte. Then he and my wife decide where the towel radiator should go. Here or there! And how and where tiles will be installed... done. Oh yes, facade... we’ll do it like the garage, right? So, everything smooth and seamless. The plinth a little anthracite accent, everyone does that. He rummages for some color samples for the plinth from the basket. Yes, that will do.
Selection appointment with the mid-sized company. Two hours, one coffee, and not a penny extra paid.
G
Grym
26 Apr 2017 20:57
Maybe it’s better not to set it to 5:45.

Otherwise, you can also take a practical approach: start the engine and quickly clear all four sides (completely, not just peek-holes). Usually, this takes me 1 to 2 minutes at most. Doing this 3 to 4 times a year, I don’t see the point in buying a parking heater. That’s an investment that might save me about 5 minutes total over a year. At some point, it just doesn’t make sense anymore...

I’m not too concerned about the exhaust gases. If 25,000 cars pass by every day on the main road (and you have the same air inside the car; the highway is even worse), that’s a problem. But a single car—mine is a gasoline engine without direct injection—won’t damage your lungs immediately.
Y
ypg
26 Apr 2017 21:16
Grym schrieb:
Maybe it shouldn’t be set to 5:45

Otherwise, you could also take a sporty approach: start the engine and then quickly clear all four sides ....turn around.

The time doesn’t matter: Section 30 of the traffic regulations

Best regards, Yvonne
G
Grym
26 Apr 2017 21:23
First, it is not unnecessary because otherwise, the interior would fog up again immediately due to the cold, which poses a safety risk. Second, traffic regulations would not apply on private property.
A
Alex85
26 Apr 2017 21:30
ypg schrieb:
§ 30 StVO

Replaced by common sense. I’d rather let the engine warm up for 3 minutes than navigate through the streets by peeking, as is often seen on the road.
Y
ypg
26 Apr 2017 22:06
Grym schrieb:
First, it’s not unnecessary, because otherwise the cold interior causes condensation on the inside, which poses a safety risk. Second, traffic regulations don’t apply on private property.

Correct, on private property the OWiG applies.
I don’t care what you do, but your ideas are not minor offenses just because you choose to do them.
I always smile when a week later someone starts a thread discussing plasticizers, saving 5 euros on heating costs, or neighbor noise caused by controlled ventilation systems or some kind of pump.

But everyone likes to make exceptions for themselves and always has counterarguments ready.
G
Grym
26 Apr 2017 22:18
These are not minor offenses because they are not offenses at all. Exactly right.

However, I find it quite strange what people get worked up about. Just recently, I heard again about a neighbor doing a), b), and c), and every time I thought, well, that’s their right and it wouldn’t bother me. It also doesn’t bother me if the neighbors below turn up the music during the day or if the kids above sometimes make noise while running around. There are supposedly people who immediately rush upstairs or downstairs and make a big fuss about it. Or what was it here recently—the “bad” children playing outside and the 30 cars passing by the garden each day... Oh dear.