AACHEN.
45
of one room only, 41 ■ 7 per cent, of two rooms, a'nd 14*6 per cent, of three
rooms ; the corresponding percentages for 1904, in respect of 1,107 tenements
visited, were 27*3, 43*7, and 17 5.
To say that the housing system assumes the dimensions and the
importance of a social problem at Aachen is a statement which the
foregoing figures alone would appear to justify, and a nearer acquaintance
with the facts will confirm such a statement. Several circumstances have
united to place Aachen at a disadvantage in the matter of its housing
conditions. In the first place, it i§ a town of great age, and, like all old
towns, it has developed slum districts so extensive as to be beyond the
summary process of extinction. In the inner circle of the town, the district
within the “ Gräben ” already alluded to, the houses are, for the most part,
several centuries old, and the worst of these houses are behind the street front,
down narrow passages and around ill-lighted and sometimes evil-smelling courts,
one leading into another through a second corridor gloomier than the first.
The buildings themselves are often dilapidated, and, from the hygienic
standpoint, are dear, even at the low rents charged for them. The people who
live in these houses, which are to be found by whole streets together, are people
of small earnings, and to a large extent they include that residuum which
in every large town gravitates naturally to the cheapest and lowest class of
dwelling.
Amongst the dwellings of even the poorer class of wage earners the most
perfect order and neatness may often be observed ; yet, on the whole, Aachen
does not represent the German home at its best. The people who have poor
dwellings appear to be contented with them, and there is a certain absence of
ambition to live as well as means might allow. They were born there, so they
elect to live and die there, though roomier homes, healthier surroundings, and
a more cheerful outlook are to be had in the newer parts of the town at little, if
any, more cost.
The prevailing type of house at Aachen is that known as the “ three-
window house.” In the ground floor front are the entrance and two windows,
lighting one or two rooms according to the width of the house, and on each
of the stories above are three windows, two lighting a large room and the
other serving for a small one. This is the traditional Aachen house, and
the type is still followed to-day with such modifications as the modern building
regulations prescribe. According to these regulations a house may not be built
higher than the width of the street plus 9 feet 9 inches in the inner districts
(i.e., within the old “Gräben,” denoting the boundaries of the old town), or
the width of the streets in the outer districts, with a maximum of 65 feet in
either case. Side-houses may not be higher than the width of the adjacent
court plus 19 feet 6 inches. It is also ordered in the case of new houses that
where more than three stories are built above the ground floor and where there
are more than ten rooms on a floor the landings and stairs must be of stone or
■cement. The general rule is three or four stories, with an attic in addition.
Not uncommonly the roof of the building at the rear or side is flat and is
used as a drying ground. I he average width of a single house, ¿.e., a
house with passage and one adjacent suite of rooms on the ground floor, is
22 feet 9 inches. As a rule the façades of the older working-class houses are
very plain. On the other hand monotony is broken owing to the fact that the
houses do not appear to have been built a street at a time but singly or several
together, and each builder has followed his own ideas as to height, width, and
other details. All houses are painted, and not always in the same shades or
even the same colours, so that there is no trace of sameness.
The structure of a typical “ three-window ” house may here be described.
The house is entered right or left of the partition wall as the case may be.
In the middle of the corridor is a door leading into the front room, and
at the end are the stairs, with a second corridor leading to the courtyard.
At the foot of the stairs a second door opens into the back room, which,
with the front room, forms the parterre dwelling. The smallest room in
a suite is invariably chosen as the kitchen, and the stove is portable and belongs
to the tenant. Adjacent to the courtyard behind is the “ side house ’ ’ (Seitenbau ),
which is a lower building whose downstairs rooms open into the courtyard,
while the rooms upstairs are reached from the landings which serve for the