388
NUREMBERG.
class leave much to be desired. Just outside the walls is a cluster of old
dwellings, constituting, with modern additions, the suburb of Wohrd. Here,
too, are seen narrow courts and low houses, often of one story, but though the
rents are ver} moderate they are only proportionate to the inferior accom
modation. Basement dwellings are few in number in Nuremberg, and those
that exist are doomed to speedy extinction.
To be fair to the housing conditions of Nuremberg, it is necessary to visit
the outskirts beyond the walls, Steinbühl, Gostenhof, and to a less degree
St. Johannis, for it is there that the working classes chiefly congregate, since
there the large industrial undertakings are found ; and the general verdict
upon the condition of things there must be a very favourable one. As a
rule, the Nuremberg workman lives in a house of tolerable proportions, alike
as to the number and the size of his rooms, though on the other hand he
pays a comparatively high rent. Rents are calculated by the year—though
paid by the week, fortnight, month, or quarter according to agreement—
and a house is described as containing so many " rooms,” with a kitchen
understood. The “ rooms ” are of two kinds, heatable and unbeatable. The
former are generally described in rent contracts as " Zimmer,” the latter as
" Kammern,” yet the distinction is one of minor importance where the size is
equal, and the municipal authorities are more and more disregarding it. Where
the unbeatable room is used for sleeping purposes, as it generally is, it has to
conform to the ordinary sanitary regulations as to cubical and superficial space.
According to these regulations an adult requires 343 cubic feet space and 31*7
square feet of surface, and children under 10 years half these measurements ;
persons over 13 years old and of different sex are also required to sleep in
different rooms. More drastic, however, is the regulation, upon which the entire
modern housing system of Nuremberg depends, stipulating that every dwelling
used by a family shall consist of at least one heatable room, one bedroom (of the
size above stated), a kitchen, and an appurtenance (Nebenraum), which may be
in the attic or the cellar, for the storing of coal, wood, &c., and a w.c. having
independent approach. The far-going character of this regulation explains the
fact that, counting the kitchen as a room, 93"8 per cent, of 45,024 rented
dwelling houses pure and simple (dwellings connected with shops, workrooms,
and inns being disregarded) enumerated and examined in 1901 consisted of
three or more rooms—the kitchen being counted as a room ; 27’6 per cent, con
sisted of three rooms, 43’2 per cent, of four rooms, and 23*0 per cent, of more
than four rooms. Of 1,151 dwellings, the rents of which were examined for the
purpose of this report, 5'0 per cent, were of two rooms (kitchen included) i
28'5 per cent, of three rooms, 44*3 per cent, of four rooms, and 22'2 per cent,
of five rooms.
One distinguishing merit of the Nuremberg working class tenement block
is its moderate size. There are no barrack houses, such as one meets with
in Berlin, for the municipal authorities have rigorously discouraged them,
though the “ front ” house and the " back ” house are found here as in
other large towns. For years the building regulations of the town flavo
consistently aimed at encouraging the erection of small blocks of dwellings.-
The latest revision of these regulations is that of 1903, and types of houses built-
before and since that date will give a fair representation of the housing con
ditions of modern Nuremberg. As to the height of the houses, the regulations
provide that outside the walls buildings adjacent to streets may not exceed'
65 feet ; buildings in streets less than 48 feet 9 inches wide may at the most
consist of ground floor, two " upper ” stories, and an attic story, only half the'
superficial area of which may be used as a dwelling ; but in streets from 48 feet
9 inches to 65 feet wide a third "upper” story is allowed, besides the attic story.
In the inner district a maximum height of 71 feet 6 inches is allowed, but special
provisions apply to old narrow streets.. Back houses must be a story lower than
the front block in new districts, and of the four stories allowed only two may be
used as dwellings ; the others can only be used for industrial, commercial, or
other non-residential purposes. One result of this regulation is that the building
of back houses is falling off, for subject to such a restriction they are found to*
be an unprofitable investment,
The earlier houses provided for three dwellings on each floor in the front
building and two in the back building where such existed. Each dwelling will