fullscreen: Cost of living in German towns

KÖNIGSBERG. 
281 
It may be observed that the number of dwellings unoccupied at a given 
time is not an exact measure of the extent to which supply exceeds demand in 
the housing market at that time ; for among such dwellings there will always 
be a certain number which cannot really be said to be on the market. Thus of 
the 1,953 dwellings unoccupied in October, 1904, 49 were awaiting approval bv 
the police as being habitable, 28 had been condemned by the same authorities as 
not habitable, 46 were about to be demolished, and 51 were actually let but not 
yet tenanted, while 44 were combined with business premises and therefore 
available for a limited section only of the house-using public. After all these 
have been deducted from the 1,953 unoccupied dwellings of October, 1904, 
there still remain 1,735, and this figure may be regarded as constituting the 
real excess of supply over demand, and represents 4^ per cent, of all dwellings 
(unconnected with business premises) in Königsberg at that time. It cannot 
therefore be said that the scarcity of dwelling accommodation in Königsberg 
is any longer such as to cause concern, especially when it is observed that 
of the 1,735 dwellings which were untenanted in October, 1904, 1,314 or 
76 per cent, were of the kind usually required by working-class families, 
inasmuch as they consisted of three rooms or less. On the other hand 
the rents charged for dwellings of this class are distinctly dear. As in 
all German cities where practically the whole population lives in flats, so 
in Königsberg, working-class tenements are to be found in the upper storeys of 
houses in almost all parts of this town. There are however, in Königsberg, 
certain quarters in many streets in which every house is occupied by working- 
class families from ground floor to attic. The distinctive working-class 
quarters are situated close to the fortifications on the south, east and west of 
the town, in what are known as the Haberberg, Sackheim and Laak districts. 
Of these the Haber berg district on the south is the largest. For the purpose 
of the present inquiry particulars have been obtained of the rents which were 
being paid at December 1st, 1905, for all dwellings of three rooms or less in this 
working-class district and in the corresponding district of Laak on the west of 
the town. The number of dwellings of this kind in the two districts was 
found to be 6,951, or about 70 per cent, of all. Of these 6,951 dwellings 
4,619 consisted of three rooms, 2,008 of two rooms, and only 324 consisted of 
a single room ; from this it would seem that the usual working-class 
tenement in Königsberg consists of either two or three rooms, and that a three- 
roomed dwelling is by far the most common. This conclusion is supported by 
statements furnished by 213 working-class families of various ranges of weekly 
income, in reply to the question, “ Of how many rooms does your dwelling 
consist ? ” The replies showed the following results 
Number of Rooms in Dwelling-. 
Number of Families. 
One room 
Two rooms 
Three rooms 
Four rooms 
Total 
3 
80 
125 
5 
213 
Of the 2,008 two roomed dwellings covered by the present inquiry, 1,196, or 
60 per cent., were fetching rents lying between the limits of £8 1 os. and £10 10s. 
per annum, which would correspond to a range of 3s. 4d. to 4s. per week. 
Among the two-roomed tenements visited for the purposes of this report a large 
number situated in the Haberberg quarter were being let at a rent of £9 18s. 
per annum or 3s. 10d. per week, thus falling within the limits stated above. 
The characteristic feature of these tenements, which are contained in continuous 
rows of three-storeyed stucco-fronted houses in the Thomasstrasse, is that all of 
them open off a common corridor lying parallel to the line of the street, so that 
the windows of the rooms on one side of it look into the street, and those on the 
other side into a back yard. Both rooms of a tenement are always either at the
	        
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