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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

SOLINGEN. 
435 
Housing and Rents. 
The appearance of the houses in Solingen has already been described. 
There is no distinct working-class district : in the old houses in the centre of 
the town the population is very mixed, whilst in the new streets, and houses 
workmen and their families often occupy the upper floors, and even carry on 
their work there in many cases, whilst the lower floors may be occupied by 
professional or business men, or by shops. On the outskirts of the town the 
houses are occupied more entirely by the working class, and largely by home 
workers, but here in many instances the houses are owned by the occupiers. 
The old houses, of the characteristic Berg Country type, are rarely large enough 
for more than one or two tamiles, especially when a room (generally on the 
ground floor) has to be used as a workshop ; while the maximum number of 
families in the new houses, of the kind usually found in modern German towns, 
is six. 
The normal working-class dwelling consists of three rooms, including the 
kitchen, which here is seldom reckoned separately, since it serves also as a living- 
room. Many families, however, inhabit dwellings of only two rooms, but if 
more than three are taken, one at least is let to lodgers. It was found that of 
578 or 64’2 per cent, out of 900 working-class dwellings, the rents of which 
were collected for the purpose of this report, consisted of three rooms, and 248 
or 27'3 per cent, of two rooms. The tenants have to supply their own stoves, 
and the number of rooms in which they use them depends upon their inclination 
and means ; usually stoves can be placed in all rooms except the attics. In the 
old houses, alike in the centre of the town and on the outskirts, the sanitary 
conditions are not very satisfactory ; the rooms are often low and small, and the 
sanitary equipment generally inadequate ; and it is doubtful if in the centre any 
real improvement is possible without extensive re-building, which, indeed, is 
gradually taking place. In the new streets the conditions are naturally much 
better ; the rooms are larger and loftier, and the sanitary arrangements as a 
rule more satisfactory. Basement dwellings are virtually non-existent. 
Except in the case of the very poor and in some of the worst of the old 
houses, there appears to be a general effort at cleanliness, which is helped by the 
customary absence of carpets. The furniture is commonly very simple ; only 
in the case of the most prosperous workmen is the attempt made to set apart 
one of the rooms as a “ parlour.” The main defect seems to be the insufficient 
sleeping accommodation ; and while this may be due in some instances to high 
rents, the cause in other cases would appear to be actual indifference on the 
subject. 
The ground plan of the old half-timber houses is very simple. One- 
family houses may be entered direct from the street or through a corridor or 
fore-place, and the two rooms on the ground floor are intercommunicable. 
Two-family houses are of two types. In one case a wide corridor gives entrance 
to a combined kitchen and living-room at the front, and another at the 
back, and a common staircase on the opposite side of the corridor leads to the 
bedrooms, one for each family. A variant on this arrangement is for the corridor 
to run through the house from front to back, with an apartment of two rooms 
on each side, bedrooms being reached as before by a common staircase. 
The best type of entirely working-class houses within the town are those 
built by the Savings and Building Society. The society does not aim at lower 
rents than those customary in the town, but seeks to provide better accommo 
dation. The houses which it builds are of three stories (including the ground 
floor) with a large cellar in which each tenant has a separate part, and an 
extensive attic used as a drying room. 
On the outskirts of the town the scattered positions of the houses and the 
possession of gardens make the conditions much better than in the centre, 
though inferior houses are not lacking. Two-family houses are common. With 
a view to the improvement of housing conditions the town has introduced a 
system of inspection, and in the year 1906, 2,313 of the 11,199 dwellings in the 
town were Visited. 
Rents are as a rule paid monthly, and only in few cases quarterly, the 
customary calculation being per room and year. 
2i>0S8 • 3 12
	        

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