Object: Cost of living in German towns

CHEMNITZ. 
143 
The following Table shows the distribution of the population on December 1st, 
1905, according to the number of rooms which constituted the dwelling :— 
Number of Rooms. 
Number of 
Dwellings. 
Number of Persons housed in such 
dwellings. 
Total. 
Per cent, of 
Population. 
One room 
Two rooms 
Three „ 
Four 
Five 
and over 
Total 
3,024 
23,472 
17,281 
8,849 
8,671 
61,297 
4,224 
83,123 
71,349 
38,291 
42,160 
17 
34 8 
29 9 
160 
17 6 
239,147 
1000 
From the above it would appear that 66‘4 per cent, of the population are 
housed in dwellings of three rooms or less. The actual situation is, however, 
somewhat more favourable than this. A noteworthy and special feature in the 
housing conditions of Chemnitz is that every tenement is required to include, as 
part of its accommodation, a garret-room capable of being used as a bedroom, 
and on the occasion of the housing census which yielded the returns on which 
the above Table is based, it was found that 12,426 such rooms were being used 
as bedrooms. Notwithstanding this, it is the custom in Chemnitz, when 
speaking of the number of rooms of which a tenement consists, to ignore the 
garret as a thing which is taken for granted. This custom has been followed 
by the compilers of the table, with the result that what are there described as 
tenements of two, three, and four rooms really represent tenements of three, four, 
and live rooms respectively. The salient facts in the distribution of the 
population of Chemnitz according to the size of the dwelling are therefore more 
correctly stated by saying that 66'4 per cent, of the population are housed in 
tenements of lour rooms or less, and that among these the greater proportion 
are housed in three-roomed tenements. 
Statistics of the rents and accommodation of every occupied tenement in 
certain typical streets in a number of the principal working-class districts have 
been furnished for the purposes of this enquiry by the Director of the Municipal 
Statistical Office of Chemnitz, the total number of tenements covered being 
3,954. Of these 866 had to be eliminated, either because they were untenanted, 
or were combined with business premises, or because they were obviously not 
working-class dwellings. The remaining 3,088 dwellings, occupied exclusively 
by working-class families, consisted wholly of three-roomed and four-roomed 
tenements—2,433 of the former and only 655 of the latter. From this it 
appears safe to conclude that the great bulk of the working classes of Chemnitz 
are housed in dwellings consisting of three rooms. And this, it may be added, 
is also the minimum house-room permissible for a family undei the latest 
municipal housing regulations (issued in 1906). As a rule the typical 
working-class tenement of three rooms consists of two rooms below and 
one room in the attics ; the exception being where all three rooms aie in the 
attics. In addition each tenant has a railed-off portion of the cellar space allotted 
to him, and has a right to the use of the loft (situated above the attics) for the 
drying of washing on certain days. For laundry washing each tenement house 
bas a washhouse, usually situated in die yard, but sometimes in the cellar space. 
The rent charged for the accommodation just described \aries within wide 
limits Of the 2,433 working-class tenements of three rooms for which rents 
have been ascertained, 16 were let at as low a figure as &4 10s. or less per 
annum (Is. 9d. or less per week), while 59 were fetching A9 _s. or more, «.e., 
3s. 6d. or more per week. The range within which the majority ol three- 
roomed tenements fell ivas from &6 to &8 8s. per annum, or expressed in 
weekly rents, from 2s. 4d. to 3s. 3d. Neither the very best nor the very worst 
tenements fall within this range. The nature of the accommodation obtainable 
at rents falling well within the two limits named may tie inferred from the 
following examples of three-roomed tenements.
	        
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