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Cost of living in German towns

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fullscreen: Cost of living in German towns

Monograph

Identifikator:
866449027
URN:
urn:nbn:de:zbw-retromon-93831
Document type:
Monograph
Title:
Cost of living in German towns
Place of publication:
London
Publisher:
Stat. Off.
Year of publication:
1908
Scope:
1 Online-Ressource (LXI, 548 Seiten)
Collection:
Economics Books
Usage license:
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Contents

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  • Cost of living in German towns
  • Title page
  • Contents

Full text

374 
MUNICH. 
Two methods of building are permitted—the “closed” and the "open.” 
" Closed ” buildings are constructed round a spacious courtyard and the 
entrance is in the centre of the street front. The “ open ” house is- 
detached, with space on both sides and again between the front and back 
buildings should the house be a double one. Where the closed system is 
adopted a house may be five stories high, where the open system is followed 
only four stories. For the latter method of building, which is very common, 
many merits may be claimed : in particular it ensures plenty of open space, air, 
and light. For the rest the houses may be large or small, accommodating in 
their four or five stories any number of families from twelve to thirty. Where 
possible the living and bedrooms are placed to the front and the kitchens behind, 
but it is a common arrangement for an entire suite of rooms to open one into 
the other ; should such a dwelling be divided the door between the two 
tenements is simply locked. A corridor or vestibule goes with every tenement 
(or combination of divided tenements) ; each household should have, though it 
has not always, its own water-closet (as a rule within the dwelling, though water- 
closets on the landing are often found still), and the water supply is very 
frequently carried into each dwelling. Every house is cellared and has a large 
attic, and tenants of two rooms or more have a right to a portion of storage 
space either above or below according to arrangement. 
In point of size the rooms are very diverse, though it is seldom that two 
small rooms go together in the newer houses. From 12 to 14 feet is a common 
length for a living and bedroom, with a width of 9 or 10 feet, and a 
height of 9 feet. A second bedroom is generally much smaller, probably 
10 feet long by 9 feet vide. Where a family rents a single room it is 
usually one of the larger kind, though—to take an actual illustration—even a 
room 15 by 15 feet offers no superfluous space for a household consisting of 
father, mother, and four children, who have to live in it by day and sleep in its 
three beds by night. Three beds to a room are not rare in Munich working- 
class dwellings, and four beds, placed so close to each other that there is barelv 
passing space, are more frequent than is desirable. The kitchen is the smallest 
apartment in the dwelling. Often it is a mere cooking corner, yet where it 
attains the proportions of a room it is seldom suited for sleeping purposes,, 
though the double function more frequently than not falls to it. Occasionally 
one comes across a bedroom devoid of window and dependent for light as for 
ventilation upon the open door of an adjacent room ; in other cases lighted very 
inadequately by a grating opening into the outside landing or staircase. Such 
rooms or “ alcoves ” should not be used for sleeping if municipal regulations 
were strictly obeyed, yet as a fact they are, and so long as the dwellings of 
Munich continue as small as at present it will be impossible to place these dark 
corners under effectual prohibition. The corridor is generally fairly spacious, 
as it needs to be when serving for two tenements. It is used at times for 
sleeping, and is even let to lodgers, though without the knowledge of the 
sanitary authorities. 
It is impossible to speak of slums in the ordinary sense in connexion with 
the housing arrangements of Munich. The houses themselves are for the most 
part in good order, though too congested, and where the aspect of things is 
depressing it is generally the fault of the tenants. In the newer houses 
considerable taste is shown by the builders, and ornamentation, both outside 
and inside, is not uncommon—outside in the form of elaborate façades, and 
inside by coloured stencil work upon the walls of the staircase and landings, 
and here and there by decorative cornices in the rooms. Balconies, both 
front and back, have become a prominent feature of working-class houses^ 
and they are highly appreciated for utilitarian reasons amongst others, for 
in the upper stories the balcony is the recognised drying ground. Where 
the “ closed ” system of building is followed the courtyard is spacious, and not 
uncommonly it exceeds the requirements of the building regulations, according 
to which a back building must be separated from a front building by a space 
equal to the height of the latter as measured from the apex of the roof in the 
case of five-story buildings, and equal to one-third of the entire surface of the 
building plot in other cases. 
The only houses which can be regarded as unequivocally bad from the 
hygienic standpoint are a large group of what are called " Herbergen.” These 
houses, some 1,500 in number, are for the most part single-family or at the
	        

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