HARD Lessons from Building a House in Germany

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Type Ashton

Type Ashton

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 766
@iedzjee
@iedzjee 2 жыл бұрын
I am from the Netherlands and I don’t know how things work exactly in Germany, but I have the feeling you were building without an architect and were coordinating the buildingprocess your self. If an architect is doing his work right he should take care of most of the communication problems and processissues you encountered and you have only one person to communicate with. He should inform you about the deadlines for decisions to take. Offcourse you will have to choose the couch yourselves!
@Traumglanz
@Traumglanz 2 жыл бұрын
Sometimes, when the artilect is a mess, you end up with having to deal with all this kind of issues yourself. Happens these days more often than it really should.
@ChargedPulsar
@ChargedPulsar 2 жыл бұрын
That's right, without an Architect(Building contractor), you will have to coordinate everything without any connections or experience. Well, what result would you expect.
@IronFreee
@IronFreee 2 жыл бұрын
A friend of mine hired an architect who was never there and a lot of things went very wrong. I didn't hired an architect and went there every evening and things still went wrong (one bad employee destroyed a wall that wasn't supposed to be destroyed and made holes in my insulated double glass windows in one day) :D
@guenterserwotka8669
@guenterserwotka8669 2 жыл бұрын
Now you know why for most Germans building a house is a once in a lifetime event. Complete different than in the US, where people move every few years, it seems.
@Nigolasy
@Nigolasy 2 жыл бұрын
Often even a once in 3 lifetimes. I know so many people that live in the houses build by their grannies
@Xzibitfreek
@Xzibitfreek 2 жыл бұрын
Most Germans never build a house though. Most either rent or straight up buy a house/apartment since space is limited here. It's just really expensive and your average German cannot afford a house. You'd need a couple in which both are working above average paying jobs in order to be able to afford it.
@rudelverni
@rudelverni 2 жыл бұрын
Naaa, wir alle wissen doch, dass man exakt drei Häuser im Leben baut! Feind, Freund, für sich.
@moni7649
@moni7649 2 жыл бұрын
@@rudelverni Meahendra meinte, dass man alle 3 Generationen 1 Haus baut. Deshalb leben viele in den Häusern ihrer Eltern bzw Großeltern.
@rudelverni
@rudelverni 2 жыл бұрын
@@moni7649 Das ist klar, was ich sagte ist nur ein allgemeiner Ausspruch, dass man das erste Haus für den Feind baut, denn wenn es fertig ist merkt man erst wie viele Fehler man damit gemacht hat, dann das zweite für den Freund, da sind dann nicht mehr so ganz viele Fehler, erst das dritte Haus ist für einen selbst, da stimmt dann alles - vom Lichtschalter bis zur Positionierung der Fenster. Wie oft hört man doch den Spruch "Na das Haus haste aber auch für nen Feind gebaut!". Bei uns zumindest :D
@frankfeistel5401
@frankfeistel5401 2 жыл бұрын
Technic room: the white thing is the "Druckausgleichsbehälter". I am not a plumber but as far as I know it contains a bladder with Co2 / N and is needed whner the water in the system expands an retracts depending on temperature
@TypeAshton
@TypeAshton 2 жыл бұрын
A few others have shared some links and this is EXTREMELY interesting how it pressurizes itself.
@ThePixel1983
@ThePixel1983 2 жыл бұрын
Best to get all of the manuals in digital form and save them on Google Drive or something. My parents took photos (analog ones at the time) of all the walls before the cable runs were hidden. They're in a small binder and were very helpful this week. I also created a diagram of the phone cable runs (Leerrohre) so we know once and for all where each Lehrrohr leads.
@strange3916
@strange3916 2 жыл бұрын
If you don't have this "Ausdehnungsgefäß", the water inside your circuit will expand when heated up and will leave the safety value, which you also have. When the water cools down, you will not have enough water in the circuit anymore and you will loose efficiency and you will have higher energy costs.
@lcopetti
@lcopetti 2 жыл бұрын
The white thing is also use the reduce the water hammer in the pipes and avoid a "pipe explosion". Really important..
@rhalleballe
@rhalleballe 2 жыл бұрын
The white thing is called 'Ausdehnungsgefäß' and is used for your heating. It is used for heatings that are working with different water temperatures (the so called " Vorlauftemperatur" ) to avoid damage to the system (its a so called closed system) as water expands and shrinks when getting warmer or colder. It also gives the pressure to press the water into the upper flloors.
@martinstock
@martinstock 2 жыл бұрын
24:51 CONEL CLEAR 2.0 RD Hauswasserstation This has several purposes - Druckminderer - keeps the internal water pressure on a constant value (normally 4 bar) if the external water pressure is higher - Rückflussverhinderer - prevents in case of a pressure loss (leak) in the external water supply that water from your internal system flows back into the external system - a mechanical filter preventing any particles reach your internal water system and may cause problems there (clog/damage valves, dishwasher, etc.) - Rückspüler - to clean the filter. That's why this device is also connected to the wastewater. A function you have to start manually. How often depends on the quality of the external network. Maybe every several years. Albeit a yearly routine won't harm. 24:54 left: to refill or empty your heating water system. The black thing with the green wheel on top is another "Druckminderer" as the heating water system has a lower max. water pressure (e.g. 2 bar). right: this silver thing on top is the emergency valve of your heating system. The white cylinder below is most likely a special water filter for heating systems. Something which you might have to replace after some time. It looks like they have fixed a manual about this system there.
@buildmox
@buildmox 2 жыл бұрын
24:54 its only for filling/topping up the heating-circuit the let thing is a Systemtrenner BA it prevents the back flow of Water in your heating-circuit to reenter the drinking water pipes in it are 2 "normal" check valve´s and a pressure differential valve in a middle chamber that opens if the main water pressure is less then 200mbar above your pressure of your heating-circuit. and since we are German we dont want water dripping on our floor a drain pipe has to be connected :) The white cylinder is indeed a water filter and a special one at minimum a Demineralisation one most likely a desalination one to prevent incrustation in the heating-unit 24:19 the big white round thingi is a MAG Membran-Ausdehn-Gefäß in it is a Rubber Membrane witch is pressurized with Nitrogen on the one side and on the other side is the Water of your heating-circuit. when the water in your heating-circuit gets warmer it wants to expand since water is inkompressibel the pressure would rise to prevent this a appropriated sized MAG is added to take up the expansion. a membrane expansion vessel :) at 24:25 at the 2 Valve´s there are clear plastic tubes connected to the drain ports of the valve´s they have to be shorted to prevent any chance of drinking water contamination basically every pipe that is connected to drinking water has to end 3cm 1"3/8 above anything that is connected to a drain pipe.
@larso.3899
@larso.3899 2 жыл бұрын
@@buildmox 24:20 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Expansion_tank
@johannesheinsohn6956
@johannesheinsohn6956 2 жыл бұрын
Martin and badmox nailed it. They seem to be professionals or have recently built a house themselves.
@beyondEV
@beyondEV 2 жыл бұрын
Would recommend to activate the clean filter function every 3 month. Will prolong lifetime of the filter. If your heating system suddenly losses more water than usual (should almost 0 losses for such a small system), have it checked for leaks. especially if you have floor heating. the water often ends up underneath the top floor. By the time you spot the mold, you looking at 30k in damage (replace most of the floor) and more than a week where your home is near uninhabitable. And you should normally get the full documentation (every manual, but also every revision-plan) when they're finished.
@Al69BfR
@Al69BfR 2 жыл бұрын
A lesson I learned from renovations is, keep an extra spare package of the tiles and floor wood you‘ve used in your basement for the case you have to do some repair. Because in five years you probably won‘t get your tiles nor your floor wood anymore. On the other hand there are people who like to do a whole renovation from time to time. 🙂
@TypeAshton
@TypeAshton 2 жыл бұрын
YES aboslutely! This is such a good piece of advice. Thankfully they have left us boxes of both the wood floor and the tiles in our technic room already for just those moments.
@martinohnenamen6147
@martinohnenamen6147 2 жыл бұрын
@@TypeAshton I would recommend also to try to keep some spare roof tiles (if you have tiled roof) as spares because you only can purchase them in larger quantities later on.
@b.quentin7097
@b.quentin7097 2 жыл бұрын
From my experience it´s pretty normal that the workers will leave you with extra tiles, floor pieces, roof tiles and even paving stones for your garage drive- or footways. If not you can always ask the contractors during or short after they did their work. Never failed me. As for the rest, we build our house some ten years ago and we had a lot of issues similar to yours. On one side of the house the realy forgot the cavities for the external blinds (I hope that is the right word for "Außenrollo" :-) ) and the holes for the strapes to operate them. We had a lot of dicussions. The other realy bad thing was that we had ordered underfloor heat for the bathroom. It was installed but after we moved in we had a lot of banging noises from the valve/thermostat unit whenever it was heating up for more than half an hour. We called for the contractor but he hand gone insolvent very short after he finished our bathroom. So we reached out for the company how coordinated the whole house building project because the warranty was on their side. The tried to fix it serveral times, told fancy story about the water flow was not planned or installed correctly so that now they had to use something they called dabblervalve (?) (pfuscherventil in german) to compensate. Long story short, it never realy worked out and so we rarely use our underfloor heating. Currently I am thinking a lot about smart home technology. It might work if I only switch the valve on for short periods of time or change the thermostate temperature slowly up and down. So be prepared for the time after you move in. Probably your will have to communicate with the contractors again. Ideally you exactly know how has done what and when. The builder's diary, that the did for us was sometimes a bit - uhm - unscpecific at times.
@cinnamoon1455
@cinnamoon1455 2 жыл бұрын
@@martinohnenamen6147 though with roof tiles the problem is less getting matching ones and more the fact that the spare ones haven't aged the same. So new tiles will always stand out unless you get lucky and someone sells matching used ones from a roof that gets redone.
@beyondEV
@beyondEV 2 жыл бұрын
@@b.quentin7097 underfloor heating is nice in many aspects, but it's main drawback it's really slow to react. slow as: 24-72h until you get the full effect of changing the settings. and thermostats are not meant to be switched down and up all the time in this setup, but rather to be set to the correct temperature (bathroom, recommended, something slightly above the rest of the house, ensuring that you never run into a mold problem). except
@f.k.3762
@f.k.3762 2 жыл бұрын
I was going through the process of building a house in 2019 myself (with contractors ofc) and if these are the worst things happened to you, you can surely consider yourself blessed. The positive approach you are taking to things like the wall is realy good and it helps to just move on instead of being negative all the time you look out these basement windows (btw, the granite stones look great in my view). As a sidenote, you need to have spare tiles of every tile (especially floor tiles) in your house as over the years you might crack one (and then you most likely can't get them anymore). So ask your contractor to leave a few at the site, as they anyway haft leftovers. Great video and congrats on the new house, it looks splendid!
@TypeAshton
@TypeAshton 2 жыл бұрын
Absolutely, we feel pretty lucky that, all things considered, the "mishaps" are pretty easy to smooth over. Hopefully we will still move in about 6 weeks and only a few landscaping items will remain to be finished (they warned us that will not be completed on schedule). Also - YES about the tiles and extra flooring. We do have extra boxes stashed away in the technic room which will certainly come in handy down the road.
@typxxilps
@typxxilps 2 жыл бұрын
@@TypeAshton hopefully you will see the spare tiles collecting dust cause those are the best you can have cause they do not make work and they are ready to rock.
@V100-e5q
@V100-e5q 2 жыл бұрын
@@TypeAshton Some tiles have a glazed edge. Be sure to get those too and not only plain ones.
@richard--s
@richard--s 2 жыл бұрын
@@TypeAshton it is rather typical that people move into their new house and the landscaping of the garden is not finished yet. Yes, it's sad when you see the excavator instead of the lawn and how good looking it might already be, but usually they'll do it. They are just happy that you can move in (and pay another part ;-) But finally you will be in your new house. They finish up the things on the outside and eventually it will be done and you will be happy - hopefully. The wall against the hill is really important, you said it. When it's raining a lot, the hill might flow down and the wall must hold all the material back. There can be a lot of pressure against that wall. Hopefully they secure it against tipping over into your garden. I think, that is important.
@Jan_Seidel
@Jan_Seidel 2 жыл бұрын
I think you are on the better side with that massive retaining wall. You don't want mud in your house because the prior planned wall couldn't cope a massive gushing rainstorm and the mountain side moves towards your house. The cracks are *so* wide between the rocks, I think you can plant some crawling plants with modest requirements to survive and get it a bit greener
@ixchelkali
@ixchelkali 11 ай бұрын
I'm from California, where hillsides have been sliding down into people's yards and houses this winter because of heavy rains. Big, thick retaining walls with lots of re-bar are a good thing.
@ChristophSold
@ChristophSold 2 жыл бұрын
For your entry/stage area, an open clothes hanger will eat some of the echoes. Tapestry helps, too. If this doesn’t suffice, think about covering one of the long walls with sound absorbing things like pictures framed without glass. The fuller the rooms get, the less echo you’ll experience.
@eineisbarauftaiwan8137
@eineisbarauftaiwan8137 2 жыл бұрын
24:32 That thing is called a "Ausdehnungsgefäß" it allows for expansion of the water in your heating system and helps to keep the pressure constant.
@norbertx4966
@norbertx4966 2 жыл бұрын
Having built a home (by a contractor) myself and as my professional occupation includes dealing with lawsuits concerning building failures, let me congratulate you to - based on the impression of your video - a exceptionally beautiful house and well executed project. In my experience there is no building project that is completely without problems and delays and it seems to me that your professionals have done a pretty good job all in all. Love your videos and am very happy for you. One can feel your excitement. Wish you all he best in your new home.
@SierraKilo76
@SierraKilo76 2 жыл бұрын
My father used to be an architect and worked also with lawyers and for the court in cases where homeowners to screwed. I'd like to back up what Norbert X said. Building a house in Germany really can be quite an adventure.
@motionpictures6629
@motionpictures6629 2 жыл бұрын
24:20 It's an expansion tank for your heating pipes. It's a metal bubble with a flexible membrane inside. The water inside the pipes can expand into the bubble when heating up. Without an expansion tank, your pressure relief valves would have a lot to do, and you had to refill the heater every few days to keep the water pressure high.
@Commentator541
@Commentator541 2 жыл бұрын
17:21 for this the easiest way to handle it is by just having a large composite panel (wood)behind which the cables would be re-routed and then the tv mounted to it. Not a big deal and will not eat into your room more than an inch. The other cool thing is that you can add strip lighting on the back of it.
@TypeAshton
@TypeAshton 2 жыл бұрын
Oh this is a VERY interesting idea!! Maybe make it more of a "feature" wall. I will run this past Jonathan.
@Commentator541
@Commentator541 2 жыл бұрын
Black Forest Family Essentially it becomes a feature wall, exactly.
@bill2p
@bill2p 2 жыл бұрын
This is exactly what I was going to suggest. When we had our bathroom renovated in Berlin, they put new solid paneling in front of the old plaster wall, and essentially hung the fixtures and cabinets from that, with the pipes and electrical wiring behind it.
@dr.j3245
@dr.j3245 2 жыл бұрын
The composite idea is probably better than my thought of installing a (very thin) drywall to mount the items on and leave space behind for all wiring as well as concealing the hole built into the concrete. The idea of lighting the edges is also great; much like the Philips TVs with “Ambilight” - just without the dynamic light patterns linked to the current TV image. Hope it works out for you! Cheers, Doc.
@anjac9548
@anjac9548 2 жыл бұрын
I once had also such a narrow hallway and I put mirrors on one side that made it look a little more open and breathable :-) Have fun with your new house!
@Aine197
@Aine197 2 жыл бұрын
I bought a run-down little timber-framed house 4 years ago and had it renovated. The electrician wanted to know in detail where the TV would be, which way the master bed would face etc to put in the new sockets accordingly. Of course I realised only afterwards that the bed makes much more sense the other way round, and the TV ended up on a completely different wall… Oh well, it happens……
@TypeAshton
@TypeAshton 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah we had nearly the same situation in the bedroom as well. We also wishes we could have moved the dining room light a bit different.
@Commentator541
@Commentator541 2 жыл бұрын
Black Forest Family There are really cool cable extenders that actually make your ceiling look better - to avoid all the drilling into a brand new ceiling.
@dschoas
@dschoas 2 жыл бұрын
@@TypeAshton You can opt for a lighting rail system, allowing you more freedom in placing the lamps.
@patrickhanft
@patrickhanft 2 жыл бұрын
I do understand, that those decisions regarding TVs are something that can annoy you for quite some time. On the other hand, I think, it is something you can relax on in the long run. Because although TVs seem to be a "standard thing", this is technology that is continuously evolving. Just think how deep and thick and "small" TVs have been only 20 years ago and this will be similar in 10 to 20 years from now. At some point, there will be the need to find solutions to adjust and you will be able to find them.
@t.a.yeah.
@t.a.yeah. 2 жыл бұрын
Do never plan in a way, that you cannot change things. This is not sustained. In 50 years the needs will be diffrent and a house should last way longer. ;) For example inside walls should be removeable to create new rooms and windows should not have special highths. (I feel like I cannot express my thoughts appropriate in English.. 😅 Sounds rough.)
@NormanF62
@NormanF62 2 жыл бұрын
You guys have something that few people can attaining : a dream house built the way you want. Most people buy a house that’s already been built and they have to live with it because with a remodel, your tastes are not going to be any one else’s. The downside of course is you have no control over when you can move in. Hopefully you can do it soon and we’ll see an update when you finally take possession of your new home!
@TypeAshton
@TypeAshton 2 жыл бұрын
We are very fortunate to be able to build a home. Funny enough, with the housing market being so tight right now in our area... we actually did look at some existing properties and weighed the option of renovating to suit our tastes... but with inflation and the rising cost of materials, it was actually cost neutral to just buy a new home. Plus we have the peace of mind of knowing that at least for a little while, we don't have to worry about things breaking. We still have a lot of learning to do with the different technical systems to keep up with the maintenance of the house.
@HelmutQ
@HelmutQ 2 жыл бұрын
Tailoring your house to your needs is beautiful. But don't be too daring. Your needs change over time, especially with kids, and if they are too extravagant the “accessories” may compromise the resale value. We sold our house when the kids left and adapted to the new needs. We still have two floors, but it is convenient to take a shower and the bedroom on the same floor as the kitchen and living room when you are older. We still have a second floor for guests and an “office” but we don't have to change floors so often.
@beyondEV
@beyondEV 2 жыл бұрын
​@@TypeAshton actually, new houses tend to always have some issues. best period is from about 2-20 years. but the way to handled the issues so far, broods well, that the will resolve any issues appearing after you move in without to much trouble.
@rasmusgornandt7062
@rasmusgornandt7062 2 жыл бұрын
About the accousic in your entry hall, I would suggest accoustic elements on the cieling, as a sound engineer in my years long experience this works very well, is quite affordable and can look great. The use of dampening pads that look more ore less like the inside of egg boxes is very efficient, you could mont them in a chessboard pattern direct under the cieling and they are usually availiable in a lot of different colours.
@stephanweinberger
@stephanweinberger 2 жыл бұрын
@17:50 The offset should be no problem: most soundbars come with mounting brackets that allow for a small gap to the wall (you typically don't want the soundbar touch the wall for accoustic reasons). Worst case: just insert spacers between the bracket and the wall so you can route the cable behind it. @23:00 as a lighting technician I think putting some lights out there is a great idea. Especially grazing lighting looks very nice on rough surfaces. You might also think about some vines to break up the wall visually. On hot summer days this can be a perfect cool spot to spend the day outside! Then the closeness of the wall might even be a bonus, as it means less airflow through the back alley and therefore less heating of the stone wall - i.e. it will remain cool for a bit longer. And even 1.7m are enough for a small table - just think of it as the 'intimate space', and the side patio as the 'party space' :-) @24:18 that's an expansion vessel. It's basically gas filled tank with a membrane inside, that allows the water of your heating system to expand when it heats up, in order to maintain a constant pressure throughout the system. @26:00 I'd wait for the furniture. I guess you will have at least some sort of clothes rack and dresser, which will already absorb/disperse a lot of sound. But if it's really not enough those acoustic panels do actually look quite nice.
@crypton48
@crypton48 2 жыл бұрын
Regarding the entry way: My wife died when our daughter was ten months old. So she grew up not knowing her mother. I decided to place a wall of magnet accepting glass panels* to place photos of her. They are placed on the wall of for the stairs upstairs. I can imagine that a photo wall with pictures of your son growing up and your family evolving might be a nice colorful eye catcher in the entry hall. Bought those from either Aldi or Lidl. They have a white glass surface about 35x35cm with a metal back, so you can write on them using a white board maker or use magnets to place the photos.
@TypeAshton
@TypeAshton 2 жыл бұрын
That sounds beautiful!
@dirkhenkel9410
@dirkhenkel9410 2 жыл бұрын
@25:05 You`ll living in a 22nd century house - of course it`s complicated :-)) It`s always heardwarming watching your very well done videos about things or habits we germans don`t might even think about. Thank you for being such a nice and well meaning mirror to me (or us germans).
@TypeAshton
@TypeAshton 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for the kind words! We are thrilled that you enjoy our videos.
@matthiash.4670
@matthiash.4670 2 жыл бұрын
Good advice: Put a pack of each tile type on side for late repairs. It will happen you crack a tile, have to remove it some day or whatever. If you try to buy this specific tile years later you will most likly not find it anymore. I put few packs of each on side and over the years I used some of them already. Best idea I had about that.
@stephenmcnamara8318
@stephenmcnamara8318 2 жыл бұрын
On the noise reduction in the entry way Give it a bit of time Wait to see how you "use" the space, ingress, egress, storage, where you hang stuff, how much stuff . Whether you like a cleaned up behind doors thing, or more of an everything in the open. Acoustic walls/ceilings are always available, but see how much space you need and want to use, then build around usage if the sound issue persists
@TypeAshton
@TypeAshton 2 жыл бұрын
Great advice!!! We are actually going to wait just a bit anyways... we'd love to have my dad's help installing (he used to be a contractor) and he is going to visit us in August. Then we will have a better plan and see how we use the space.
@uliwehner
@uliwehner 2 жыл бұрын
Jonathan is handy he said, i see egg cartons or shag carpet on the walls. groovy! :)
@anitapenkert389
@anitapenkert389 2 жыл бұрын
Exactly. There could be a Garderobe on the left, a Schuhschrank in the little nook, a painting and/or a big mirror on the right wall, a rug on the floor etc. I don't think it will be echo-y once it is furnished.
@dnocturn84
@dnocturn84 2 жыл бұрын
Yes, never judge a room without furniture regarding accoustic / echoing. Put your furniture in and your every-day stuff and judge it again. It will surely echo less than it does right now. And if you're still unhappy with the result, you can do something against it later as well.
@Pystro
@Pystro 2 жыл бұрын
In terms of Garderobe, I would suggest 2 hooks or coat hangers per person. Minimum. Maybe even 4 additional ones on top of that for visitors. You'll have one everyday coat/jacket that you want quick access to, a second one in times of variable weather, scarfs/hats/gloves in the winter, if you're biking you might have rain pants that have to be hung somewhere to dry... Don't skimp on those things so much that visitors have to put 4 jackets onto a single hook if you ever throw a slightly larger party.
@gustavolana4838
@gustavolana4838 2 жыл бұрын
For the decentralized TV issue you can install a hollow wooden TV panel centered in the wall that has a width that covers the sockets, in a way that you can then cover the cabling with it and center the TV on the panel, therefore centering it on the wall.
@chiefhb01
@chiefhb01 2 жыл бұрын
24:53 the white thing on the waterline is a particle filter for the drinking water, that filters out maybe tiny metal bis and stuff from the drinking water. You have to open it at the bottom every 2-3 months to spill out any residue. Any plumber can explain that. The second thing is a pressure valve called „druckminderer“ that handles overpressure coming into your house.
@marcokoch8688
@marcokoch8688 2 жыл бұрын
We finished our house 5 Years ago and i can understand all your Problems. It was already for us complicated without language problems in Germany and a friend and family community with good connections around the city. My wife a Tax Officer and me as a Supply Chain Engineer and SAP expert are very far away from the building stuff. So, you have my full respect to go these steps. Good luck in your new House!
@ACEsParkJunheeWreckedMeHard
@ACEsParkJunheeWreckedMeHard 2 жыл бұрын
Hi, new viewer here. Just found you today. Idea for your hallways: Most people in Germany put a small cupboard into their hallway wich can store shoes, scarfs, bags, ... and different type of wardrobes to put Jackets away. Also in case you own large umbrellas people also have something that looks like a giant garbage can in wich they store their umbrellas and depending on what you like people also have small shelfs to put shoes on. I also saw a lot people having a full sized mirror on the walls in their homes here in Germany
@TypeAshton
@TypeAshton 2 жыл бұрын
I think those are all great ideas. My biggest thing is just that it is all "neat" and put away (i.e. not "open" storage). I think a cabinet or some kind of built in closet could be a great solution! Thanks!
@Andrew-pu7ze
@Andrew-pu7ze 2 жыл бұрын
Putting our Gaderobe there muffles the sounds nicely and a bench to sit down and change or take the shoes of if appreciated.
@RubenKelevra
@RubenKelevra 2 жыл бұрын
25:50 what looks really great in such spaces is making them green. Just put either climbing up or climbing down plants and put an automatic system for watering them based on soil moisture to avoid the work to really "tinker" with them on a 2-3 day basis - as that would require a lot of precise watering for all this soil. :)
@hartfischer5509
@hartfischer5509 2 жыл бұрын
I think, that is why I like our American way, to buy used houses or new model home houses. It is so much more predictable what I am getting. I did my own inspection and got a great house with everything I wanted, including many enjoyable projects where I can improve, repair, and make things nicer. Great show:)
@JalurBarokah
@JalurBarokah 2 жыл бұрын
Hi Jonathan, wow the house is very unique and very interesting, greetings from Indonesia, God bless.
@plcwboy
@plcwboy 2 жыл бұрын
Don't worry about the acoustics until the house is furnished and ready to live in. Every little thing you ad to the room will reduce the echo effect. It probably won't be a problem.
@maireweber
@maireweber 2 жыл бұрын
At the entrance you could have climbing plants in front of the panels and along the ceiling. The leaves spoil the soundwaves and they are great for the room climate as well. At the same time, plants don't make a room feel as stuffed as furniture of the same volume would. There are many varieties of philodendron that would work perfectly there and can rank along for several meters. The variety ph. monstera is even in the picture of the sound panels you showed.
@maltem8513
@maltem8513 2 жыл бұрын
24:20 -> Thats a "Ausgleichsbehälter" or "Ausdehnungsgefäß"... its filled with water and set under (air)pressure (that small black dot in the middle should be a valve) to keep all the tubes of your heating under the same pressure and free of airbubbles at all times. 24:40 -> Thats the decuppling (heat exchange) to seperate your heating system from your radiators / or tubes in the floors, or walls - building it that way will improve the livetime of the whole system drastically. The two thermometers show the "Vorlauf" (red) and "Rücklauf" (blue) so the temperatur of the water as it enters the circulation and as it flows back. 24:51 -> Thats a "Rückspühlfilter" its a filter for your main Water supply - cant tell for sure in your case but usually something like that is in the system to keep lime from entering your house internal water systems, depending on the full setup it might as well include a safety system that will cut the water supply if you have some broken tube (sudden massiv loss of water). About your TV/Soundbar issue - had that myself and ended up mounting it all on a TV Wall mounting system made by Vogels - aint cheap but its worth it ;-) About Murphys Law --- Uhh I hate and love that at the same time ;-)... especially because of the original story behind it *GGG* Entry area / noisy - wait until you have your stuff in that house - that echo might just be gone as soon as there is some furniture ... if not, you could just tighten a sail (like those sunsails) right under the ceiling that should help a lot and if put some lights above it'll keep the room very bright without any direct light. best of luck to you with that date in June!!!
@TypeAshton
@TypeAshton 2 жыл бұрын
Wow!! I just googled the Vogels TV wall mounting system - that looks VERY beefy and really sturdy.
@thatsmealso8480
@thatsmealso8480 2 жыл бұрын
For your sound bar: Just mount a large (maybe nicely painted) mdf-board 2 inches before the wall. Drill holes where you need them and use the existing outlets behind the board. Also gives the wall a nice 3-dimensional look which might look good. Of course: To look really good the board would need to be laquered perfecty with professionaly shaped edges.
@JakobFischer60
@JakobFischer60 2 жыл бұрын
24:34 Pump pumping the water to the heaters. The thermometer to the right shows the temperature of the water going to the rooms (35°C Vorlauf) , the left one the temperature of returning water (30°C Rücklauf). 24:52 sand filter. Collects sand of the water coming in. It has to be cleaned every months by pressing a button and flushing out the sand. 24:58 another filter- Not sure whether it just filters or if it is filled with salt and reduces chalk content of the water
@rickb1055
@rickb1055 2 жыл бұрын
For the sound "problem" in het hallway there are lots of options you can look for acoustic panels (decorative kind) you can go for a Cork wall that will isolate sound and give you the option to pin stuff on the wall like for instance family and travel pictures. If you have a coat rack that also dampens sound. Wall rugs can help with the sounds. the panels you showed were beautiful too. just don't know if it's not too busy if you hang the whole space full with this. Yet another couple of choises that need to made😁
@wora1111
@wora1111 2 жыл бұрын
Listening to you makes me glad to have saved all that hassle and just bought a house. Since German houses are rather solid (and the former owner had similar likes as we do, even was close to our age) there was just about nothing to do and we could move in the same week they moved out (yes, they left the house "clean", even with working kitchen and bathroom). All we had to do, was get new tapestries and paint several walls. For that we hired a friend, who lived at our new place for a week and did all the work while we enjoyed a vacation. But I will admit, seems like we got lucky, very lucky. But sometimes you just got to have luck.
@TypeAshton
@TypeAshton 2 жыл бұрын
That's really cool! Hopefully the move in date will stay and not get pushed back again. Thankfully our landlord was really understanding and allowed us to extend our lease. We kind of had a panicked couple of days when they first pushed it back and our house was already listed online and people were putting in offers hoping to move on June 30th. Now we have another month as a buffer.
@leDespicable
@leDespicable 2 жыл бұрын
Tapestry is an interesting thing in and of itself, since there seem to be huge differences between the north and south of Germany. At least in my experience, tapestry is still used in newer houses in the north from time to time, while it has pretty much gone extinct in the south and can only be found in old houses there. Could be area-specific tho, at least here in southern Bavaria that's the case.
@maximkretsch7134
@maximkretsch7134 2 жыл бұрын
I am a civil engineer and planned my house myself, except for HVAC which was done by a specialised firm. Though I had the house itself built I did most of the installations myself (pool, water, sewage, heating with hot water tank, boiler and pellet store, ventilation system, solar panels, photovoltaic modules, central vacuum cleaner), so I have a pretty good idea of what goes on in your technical room (though mine looks slightly less professional). I had to google most of the assembly and operating instructions on the internet, and I still haven't gotten around to putting together a building manual for my family. When I'm not around, they're helpless. For your entryway, a rug, a few canvas pictures on the walls, and a piece or two of furniture will help. Besides the stairs, for example, a hall closet will fit. An open wardrobe with all the clothes also dampens the reverberation. Friends of ours have acoustic panels, which are also effective, but quite expensive. For the larger wallet there is also something available which is disguised as a "work of art".
@TypeAshton
@TypeAshton 2 жыл бұрын
Ah great ideas! We plan to also put in some kind of storage for shoes, hats, gloves, etc... as well as a bench to put your shoes on. Thanks for the inspiration (also I think a home manual would be a GREAT idea. I think we need to make something similar).
@holgermessner851
@holgermessner851 2 жыл бұрын
Hahaha…. Good one. Possession date… I was told in Canada that I would move into the house in April/May 2010. Of a sudden in the beginning of January - minus 30 degrees Celsius outside - I was told that I would had take possession on January 27. As a German who hates moving at all - moving by minus 30 degrees?! My response: Hell NO! 😮 Well. I took possession on January 27th. Moved in 2 days later. No idea I was in bed to get a little bit warm again. - Final walk through 14 days before moving in? Not ONE door was closing! Water damage in the kitchen ceiling where fridge was - water still pouring down. “Cool. I got a 4th shower for free… 😮” Standing there - I think with an open mouth and 3 times the size of my eyeballs as usual - I completely lost it. How can anyone think that I would sign up on this disaster?! - In the end - they got I don’t know how many people working on all issues. I was so close to canceling the sale at that time. 😢
@patrickiii1693
@patrickiii1693 2 жыл бұрын
Idea for the entry way? When I saw all the stairs, I was thinking nice you don´t need to go to the gym anymore, so maybe add a rowing machine, maybe some weights and a yoga mat....😆
@ingobohn
@ingobohn 2 жыл бұрын
Wow, at 19:20 a caterpillar ("Bagger") is moving which belongs to a company in my little home town (or better call it village)... 😄 Enjoy your new home - whenever you will finally move in. It will be all fine. "It is like it it is, and how it is it is fine".
@TypeAshton
@TypeAshton 2 жыл бұрын
That's cool! We are nearly neighbors then. 😄
@ingobohn
@ingobohn 2 жыл бұрын
@@TypeAshton But now I do live near Heidelberg.
@1st23st4u
@1st23st4u 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the great insights again! All in all it really looks like you had great builders and architects because there could be much worse things happening when building a house. I hope there won't be any more delays and everything goes well moving into your own new home! Viel Glück!
@TypeAshton
@TypeAshton 2 жыл бұрын
Yes, all in all they are a great team. We are REALLY excited and hope it all goes smoothly from here. We've met a few of our neighbors and they told us that for about 2 weeks now it feels like they are working on "overdrive" and have started to work on Saturdays as well.
@nachbarslumpi7093
@nachbarslumpi7093 2 жыл бұрын
Techroom, the white bubble container is a ausdehnungsgefäss. A container which is there to compensate the volumechange of the heating water while getting hot and cold/er again to avoid damage on the installation, also to keep the pressure in the system nearly constant.
@bartoldenhof9377
@bartoldenhof9377 2 жыл бұрын
24:19 That's an expansion vat. When you heat up the water in the central heating, it expands and thus needs somewhere to go. (unless you're ok with the pipes bursting open and all the water spilling out :) ) This thing is half filled with water and half filled with air, and has a rubber membrane in between. That way the water can expand when it is heated, and the system will stay pressurised when the water is not heated.
@dickelstephen
@dickelstephen 2 жыл бұрын
For the tight entry way, work with mirrors on one side, and HORIZONTAL wood reducing walls on the other. Mirrors add light and make the room look open and totally change the perceived space, which is a crazy improvement to quality of life. Horizontal lines are calming (horizons, waves, etc.)
@jaykay8703
@jaykay8703 2 жыл бұрын
Not sure if you have been told by now but the white bubble is a "Ausdehnungsgefäss" (expansion vessel). The expansion vessel has the task of acting like a "cushion" when the volume of water changes; i.e. as the volume of the water (in the tubes) decreases when the temperature decreases and increases when the temperature increases. Because water cannot be compressed, the pressure created by the temperature change must be kept constant. This is exactly what an expansion vessel is supposed to ensure.
@TheDasHatti
@TheDasHatti 2 жыл бұрын
Perfect description!
@strange3916
@strange3916 2 жыл бұрын
for your cable management problem in your living room, you can just fill the holes and you can rent a "Mauernutfräse" from any Baumarkt, so you can cut your own channels for your cables or better you place "Leerrohre" in your walls, so you can decide afterwards. I did this in my complete house too, and placed many "Unterputzdosen".
@TypeAshton
@TypeAshton 2 жыл бұрын
Ah great! Thank you so much for the advice.
@Arckaf
@Arckaf 2 жыл бұрын
or the Better soloution speak with your Elektrican about this issue they normally have the too and expirence to set this right
@Arckaf
@Arckaf 2 жыл бұрын
tool
@seanthiar
@seanthiar 2 жыл бұрын
No need to cut the wall, you will have washboards(baseboards) on the wall in the same color as your floor is. There exist washboards that are designed to contain cables and you can use that for cables. There are whole systems that have different addons with outlets for power, network etc.
@grandmak.
@grandmak. 2 жыл бұрын
Having our own house built happened many years back but I do remember that although the price included the cost for an architect to supervise the building process I had to go there at least twice a day to make sure all went according to plan ( and very often things didn't ), call the contractor because of mistakes that had been made ( once they built a room and forgot to leave an opening for a window!) and report workers for being drunk on the site. Of course it took several months longer than planned and during the garden planning period we found out that they had dumped everything ( from left over material to empty beer bottles ) on the ground and covered it with soil. So you see for some people building a house can be traumatic. But stay assured that after you have moved in all that will be forgotten soon ( unless the cellar os flooded during a bad rainstorm on new years night) . But seriously moving in and decorating the new home as well as the feeling it gives you to own the place - never mind that the bank is the true owner - is so great ! I'll keep my fingers crossed that you will be able to move in soon !
@TypeAshton
@TypeAshton 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah, we went in for a "Surprise" visit and found some of the workers smoking in our house. We had to kindly ask them to go outside... now that the floors are in, as well as the paint on the walls I really don't want smoke damage.
@Dunkler.Krieger
@Dunkler.Krieger 2 жыл бұрын
@@TypeAshton pretty normal that they smoke inside at least until the plaster ist done
@V100-e5q
@V100-e5q 2 жыл бұрын
@@Dunkler.Krieger Not to forget the port-a-potty so they don't use the wall next to the entrance for beer recycling.
@grandmak.
@grandmak. 2 жыл бұрын
@@TypeAshton I understand. Fortunately nowadays construction workers don't drink alcohol any longer during working hours but back then it was normal. House owners used to bring them a "Kasten Bier" regularly to keep them motivated , can you even imagine that ?
@xDJxGNOMx
@xDJxGNOMx 2 жыл бұрын
5:57 That's called Flüsterpost here in germany at least where i live in bavaria. Used to play this as kids.
@Tomm9y
@Tomm9y 2 жыл бұрын
Regarding the wall, the developer should have obtained an engineering report prior to planning. The timber wall in the hallway sounds like a good idea, hope it has underfloor heating too as there's no door to the stairs. Perhaps full height glass door(s) to keep out the cold air.
@TypeAshton
@TypeAshton 2 жыл бұрын
Yes, the downstairs also has underfloor heating (which I think will help a lot in the wintertime - although we have to old dogs who LOVE a nice cool floor).
@RoadsFranconia
@RoadsFranconia 2 жыл бұрын
Tile mounting is a real profession... Fliesenleger even have Meister trainings to do that accurate and correctly.
@TypeAshton
@TypeAshton 2 жыл бұрын
We met with the tile installers (we actually struck up such a good conversation, we are now friends on Facebook and have swapped WhatsApp numbers). They did an EXCELLENT job and even pointed out issues with the design to us that we should raise with the developer. They really went above and beyond - even having us come in to discuss where the grout lines should line up and how we wanted the tile to be laid.
@Micha-bp5om
@Micha-bp5om 2 жыл бұрын
I have a Handwerker who does everything, tiles, pipes, Trockenbau, floors, windows, furniture. He did everything perfecty
@mikeperkonigg8160
@mikeperkonigg8160 2 жыл бұрын
Hello and good evening from Austria. As for your problem for the TV wall and the off-centered sockets, you could think about using a horizontal wooden panel stripe, for instance 1,2m high but covering most of the width of the wall, to cover your electrical installations. So you could use the wall sockets but shift them to another place in the wooden stripe cover. You could use oak if that matches your floor. :)
@TypeAshton
@TypeAshton 2 жыл бұрын
Yes I think this would be a great idea! Thank you!
@emmasly123
@emmasly123 2 жыл бұрын
I have seen people mounting a huge wooden panel on a wall. The panel will then have the holes where you need them and the TV would be mounted onto that panel. All cables will be hidden behind the panel and you can also illuminate it from the back. Can look really fancy. 😊
@CocoLicious
@CocoLicious 2 жыл бұрын
My best friend works for a house construction company here in Germany and let me assure you that you got very lucky with the few (surely very stressful!) problems along the way. It's a constant mess of communication between a lot of actors to get done right. Even here in Germany ;)
@RustyDust101
@RustyDust101 2 жыл бұрын
I can completely relate the frustration you must feel at these delays. Totally, no doubt that it is nerve-wracking, and makes planning for a move virtually impossible. With that being said, let's consider the other side. I am certain that your suppliers and builders did not feel happy about having to delay it again and again. I'd wager any bet that they'd have loved to have supplied you with a perfect house perfectly on time, as well. It's probably that they did not consider such a world-changing situation happening on top of the pandemic. With all of the sanctions, inflation and skyrocketing prices on gas and fuels many suppliers simply can't provide the same services at the same cost anymore. But often they are contractually obligated to not go above a certain price tag. The delivery delay of materials could also be linked not to Russia not supplying the base materials such as steel or aluminum, but the gas for forges or similar production processes. With the cost of gas skyrocketing many producers had to either swallow HUGE production cost increases, thus diminishing already incredibly tight profit margins, or start looking for other providers. In either case for the builders and suppliers not to go bankrupt (which would be a much worse problem for you rather than a simply delay) they had to either slow production of certain parts, or even quit producing for the time being until other suppliers could be found in a similar cost range. Having a supplier or building company go bankrupt during a construction process is horrible for the contractors themselves. So consider yourself lucky that this did not happen (again) in the current situation.
@iracture
@iracture Жыл бұрын
So reminds me of the week we spend at Sankt Blasien. Clouds below us as we cruise over the hills on our bike
@NightDevilMacGeneral
@NightDevilMacGeneral 2 жыл бұрын
There’s a saying that you need to build 3 houses. One for someone you love, one for someone you hate and the last one for yourself, combining your learnings from the other two.
@TypeAshton
@TypeAshton 2 жыл бұрын
That's a great way to put it!
@Yulo2000Leyje
@Yulo2000Leyje 2 жыл бұрын
😂 it didn't stoped me from makeing new mistakes.
@livelovelife32
@livelovelife32 2 жыл бұрын
That's an expensive saying lol!
@syNNaptix
@syNNaptix 2 жыл бұрын
for the echoy entryway i'd actually wait for the gaderobe to be put in place. jackets shoes and cabinets will eat a lot of the echos and maybe, at least thats what i experienced with friends and familiy, you might put a "läufer" and/or a schmutzfänger (essentially a big mat to catch the dust and dirt from the outside) on the floor. all this will eat a lot of echo. revisist when this is in :)
@TypeAshton
@TypeAshton 2 жыл бұрын
Ah great ideas. thank you so much!
@conniebruckner8190
@conniebruckner8190 2 жыл бұрын
I was going to write pretty much the same suggestion as daredemon91... And when you travel to different places, you might find a tapestry or textile painting (or two or three?) that you like , (a practical souvenier) , to hang up on the wall, which will also take away the echo-ey sound.
@BlueFlash215
@BlueFlash215 2 жыл бұрын
I really love your videos! You are so upfront, have a great way of telling stories and make it interesting throughout the whole video. For my house, I basically let them do the heavy work like removing walls, install door frames, do the tiles, etc. All floors, walls, doors, the kitchen, electrical stuff was done by myself, friends or family. Luckily we know an electrician. I learned a lot on the work site since I'm an engineer and normally work on totally different things. For your drill holes: There are many ways to cover up holes. Not only cover them up but fill them so there is no major structural damage. All hardware stores and also amazon has options for concrete, wood, bricks and whatever material you wish to fix. It takes a little work if you really want to make it perfect but it's worth the time. I'd say 1 hour or maybe 2 hours if you need to go and buy the stuff and read through the manual. I hope I could help you. I managed to drill so many holes that I had to fill again.
@TypeAshton
@TypeAshton 2 жыл бұрын
That is AWESOME. Perhaps one day in the future we will be brave enough to take on a renovation ourselves.
@BlueFlash215
@BlueFlash215 2 жыл бұрын
@@TypeAshton I just added a little hint for how you can deal with the holes in your wall. Cheap and easy, doing it yourself. I really feel your pain "ruining" a concrete wall. I really hope it helps and I appreciate your interaction with the community so much. Germany can be very proud to have the two of you loving here 🇩🇪♥ 🇺🇸
@TypeAshton
@TypeAshton 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for all of your help! This is wonderful information.
@MechmanGetrieb
@MechmanGetrieb 2 жыл бұрын
Actually the company that installed the technology in the tec-room should explain the main components to you. Gas main switch in case of emergency for example. Main Water switch and so on. The round sphere shaped thing you showed and asked the function for, is the ( Ausdehnungsgefäss ) it belongs to your heating system and regulates the changing water volume. Cold heating water in summer needs less space in the system. Hot water in the heating system in winter needs more space as water expands when heated up. Inside of that sphere there is a membrane to deal with the changing "water levels".
@heatherk7017
@heatherk7017 2 жыл бұрын
Watching this video brings back (/triggers) memories of our building experiences. We bought our place in its shell construction phase and had to plan/make adjustments to the interior. Even with a German husband who could argue and push back on suggestions/mistakes, it was still me walking to the construction site daily to see the next “surprise” addition/adjustment/deletion. Our text chain from those days was a series of panicked “Wasn’t it supposed to be …” rounds. So as much as I have no desire to repeat the process, I do love that we got to make this home our own, esp. as building or buying in Germany is so expensive everything feels like a compromise.
@TypeAshton
@TypeAshton 2 жыл бұрын
Oh man, your experience sounds EXACTLY like ours... the panicked emails and all. But I am sure in the end, having our house customized to the way we like it will be for the best.
@eisikater1584
@eisikater1584 2 жыл бұрын
I feel with you. I own a house in the Bavarian Forest, where I live in, and I currently have a problem to buy a sack of cement to do some repair work.That's not a problem with the supply chain, I could get a truckload if I wanted, but nobody seems to be willing to sell me the mere 50 kilos that I need. And that goes on down to the smallest items. I recently bought eight batteries instead of the one I needed because they don't come in smaller batches. I had a Lampenfassung to repair, and instead of one, I got three, so there are two left over. And the list goes on. If it continues that way, I can start my own dealership before I run out of storage space in the attics. I understand that beer comes in crates with 20 bottles, and if you have some good friends, that even won't last a weekend. But why has it become so difficult to buy single items? I remember times when you could buy one banana, or a handful of strawberries, but now it's all packed for a family of six, or a small restaurant. I hate wasting things, but sometimes I have to.
@sisuguillam5109
@sisuguillam5109 2 жыл бұрын
That's a very good point! We used to have a specialist store in town would sell you everything in single items or very small batches... And then the Baumärkte moved in and they could not compete anymore.
@Nile9063
@Nile9063 2 жыл бұрын
You could put some drywall behind the tv and cover the holes that way. You could also just install a small facing shell that doesn't cover the whole wall and put indirect lighting behind it.
@ft6637
@ft6637 2 жыл бұрын
The big white "ball" in the technical room is a "Ausgleichsbehälter" so basically it is a diaphragm expansion vessel that allows the water in the heating cycle to expand. In Germany you will have a closed loop heating cycle with a certain pressure on it, like e.g. 2 bars. An in this cycle you will need some kind of pressure storage to compensate for pressure changes. Also ther will be a pressure gauge and hand valve somewhere to fill up the pressure in this cycle. That is a common reason, if the heating doesn't work :D The closed loop heating usually has a heat exchange with the warm water boiler/tank that we saw there to. The warm water for tge taps comes from this tank.
@ft6637
@ft6637 2 жыл бұрын
How does this work different in the USA? And what kind of heater do you have? natural gas? heat pump? solar thermie?
@AleaumeAnders
@AleaumeAnders 2 жыл бұрын
To reduce the noise in your hallway, you could look into plants. You seem to get light from at least two sources (if I saw it correctly one window over the main door and one at the wall where the first stair turns left), which might be enough to get a real lush "djungle" going at the upper walls and ceiling. Leaves are really good at breaking sounds, and it's also a great way to cope with the hot air you inevitably will bring with you when entering during summer.
@mastex5575
@mastex5575 2 жыл бұрын
Get a huge wall carpet with nice motives; you can also rehang your ceiling with echo absorbing tiles and put some flowers into the corners to reduce the echo in the entry hall.
@jazzthrowout265
@jazzthrowout265 2 жыл бұрын
I think you're lucky if those are the biggest hiccups with you house (knock on wood). For the entrance, textile decorations like hanging a persian rug (like a tapestry) or a quilt or something like this from the wall is also a good option to reduce the echo.
@stefanfrank4054
@stefanfrank4054 2 жыл бұрын
The movie-scene " bring it to the point. The greman title is "Geschenkt ist noch zu teuer".And buying an old house hides lots of surprises more than buliding a new one.
@AmauryJacquot
@AmauryJacquot 2 жыл бұрын
the reservoir pointed to in the video is a pressure vessel for the heating system, regulates the pressure in the system
@shimone6116
@shimone6116 2 жыл бұрын
Moving a lot in recent years and more often building or at least renovating on a larger scale ourselfs we learned quite fast that the best way to go is always using a general contractor - that way you just communicate with him and he will take care of his contractors. One main benefit of this: You do not only eliminate the problems of "Stille Post", but he will also be able to organize craftsmen and material in a shorter period of time as you could. As for your Soundsystem: It might depend how much work and dust you want to spend into it. You could openthe wall and move the cable and the sockets the classic way. However you also could close the existing sockets and move on top of the wall behind a skirting board like most people do. Then you would need a small cable duct from the floor to your TV. Putting that on top of your wall does not look as perfect as you might wish, but might be a lot easier than putting the cables into the wall again and making new sockets into the wall. One lesson you can learn from this for your next house though: Make sure that you alwayss have enough empty conduits in your house. When we are building anew we always have empty conduits used for electricity or datacables in a certain height in every wall. That way you never rarely have problems pulling new cables. You would only have to slit the wall up or down until you reach the position where you want to put your new socket.
@livelovelife32
@livelovelife32 2 жыл бұрын
Opening the wall alone is gonna cost let me tell you that. Concrete walls are not easy when it comes to breaking open and fixing. Depending on the amt of work needed that'll be a couple thousand. He's probably better leaving as is and working around it.
@shimone6116
@shimone6116 2 жыл бұрын
@@livelovelife32 As said you might be right that it is way easier to put the cables on top of the wall - especially if the wall is already painted. However - making a groove into a stone wall wall is not that much work as long as it is no steel beton. There are special saws for this. Depending on the kind of stone you coult rent one for ~100€ and you might need to buy your own blae for another 100€ - that's it if you would do this yourself. Plastering everything yould not be as hard as well. The hardest part might be to paint it again so you will see no difference to the rest....
@alanklainbaum1473
@alanklainbaum1473 2 жыл бұрын
Your house is very beautiful. I am certain you will be very proud of your accomplishment. All the hard work will pay off.
@TypeAshton
@TypeAshton 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much.
@danielst6976
@danielst6976 2 жыл бұрын
Water sound does counter noise. Against echos every kind of furniture, carpet, plants or decoration will help. Just pick what please your eyes.
@jobue394
@jobue394 2 жыл бұрын
25:02 The thing on the left is the water Meter.They will renew it every several years.
@devinity908
@devinity908 2 жыл бұрын
Love the house tour and the little guy being happy in there :) as for the entry way: in my experience hanging jackets and maybe having a carpet and some paintings will take care of soundscape. I have to say I really enjoy your Videos, especially as we are looking for houses in the same city. I really envy you on good Timing and the luck you had with your build. Thanks for sharing your experiences. Have a good move!
@TypeAshton
@TypeAshton 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you! We are so happy to move in. Good luck with your search!
@wardandrew23412
@wardandrew23412 2 жыл бұрын
Unless you want to install carpeting, there's not much you can do about noise attenuation. I had my carpet replaced recently, and I was really amazed at the amount of noise that seemed to reverberate throughout the house once the old carpeting had been removed. As far as the misplaced holes in the wall where the TV set is supposed to go, one fix is to install a shallow cabinet centered in the same spot, but wide enough to cover up the holes. That would allow you to properly center the TV and conceal the wiring inside the cabinet. Or you could fur out a portion of the wall a couple of inches, leaving just enough room to conceal the wiring inside it. You could even paint it a contrasting color to make it look like an architectural element.
@Dahrenhorst
@Dahrenhorst 2 жыл бұрын
As soon as you cover the walls in the entry room with anything (garderobe, shoe-cabinet, mirror(s), pictures, plants, hangers and stuff hanging on it, etc.), the acoustics problems will be gone. The granite wall in the back is gorgeous. Since it is so close to the house, you could even put a glass roof between your house and the wall and glass walls at both ends and have a great winter garden, factually adding quite some m² to the size of your house.
@TypeAshton
@TypeAshton 2 жыл бұрын
Good idea! Thank you.
@friederich66
@friederich66 2 жыл бұрын
well, that´s why in the eighties we decided not to build a new house, but instead looking for an existing house. it was a settlemet house that was sold because the owner had died and it was ready to move in after some small work, and we changed a lot of things step by step in the following decades, e,g, a terrace and a wintergarden with fully movable sliding doors, new windows, new flooring, modern bathrooms, gas central heating heating . thermic isolation etc. we never regretted it because it was so flexible in use when we had our children. of course we had to make compromises but it was worth it in the end
@dschoas
@dschoas 2 жыл бұрын
For the TV room, you could install a dry wall in front of the concrete wall with a distance of 80 mm. You can put your outlets anywhere you need them, and can adjust with ease, if you change the furniture layout in the future.
@TypeAshton
@TypeAshton 2 жыл бұрын
Great idea!
@Tom-Lahaye
@Tom-Lahaye Жыл бұрын
Lack of communication between the main contractor and me was something I also experienced, also there was not enough supervision by the main contractor to his sub contractors. Which meant that I had to inspect things on a daily basis myself to be sure things were done as asked for. In one instance I had to let the plasterers to remove a section of external wall insulation from a piece of wall which was agreed to be not insulated by the contractor. The technical room in German houses is also a thing which impresses people from other countries in Europe. Here in the Netherlands the technical installation is mostly in the loft space as basements are only built in the south eastern part of the country where the water table isn't as shallow. The installation is far simpler with mostly a gas combi boiler which also supplies hot water and a mechanical ventilation unit. From next year on a heat pump is compulsory in new builds, combined wit heat recovery mechanical ventilation. By the looks your house use a ground source heat pump for heating, which also can cool the house in the summer, cooling is passive as only the circulation pump uses power, the water in the underfloor heating extracts the heat from the house and dumps it in the cool soil, that stored heat will then be used in the winter for heating by the heat pump.
@charliebecker9391
@charliebecker9391 2 жыл бұрын
To kill the echo in your Hallway, Blocks of Acoustic Tile placed sporadically on both walls can be decorative as well as kill the echo. Just my suggestion. I've seen it done in some meeting rooms where I worked and it was esthetically pleasing to the eye while taking care of the echo. Hope this helps. Best Wishes. Your house looks great. Charlie
@TypeAshton
@TypeAshton 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@ingeborggroth1415
@ingeborggroth1415 2 жыл бұрын
Idea for your entry hall: Why not hang up a decorative kelim or large & colorful (handmade) wool blanket on the wall ? This can lend a very personal note to a house right at the enty.
@Vardraq
@Vardraq 2 жыл бұрын
Regarding your TV wall issue: I have a similar problem, where I need more outlets for routing cables through, and I will solve it by putting a fake wall in front of it. So I will put up a wooded frame work with proper support to hang the TV and then put plywood on it. And then I will put a sound dampening panels (e.g. from WoodUp) on it so the echoing in the room in general will be eaten up. I will then have all the freedoms to route cables where I need them before putting on the plywood and do not have to grind into the original wall.
@berndhoffmann7703
@berndhoffmann7703 2 жыл бұрын
9:32 better this way, I feel with you. I have organized the items all by myself, only using some standard stuff, sadly picking stuff from different companies, bathtub company A, bath sink company B, and even the cabinets came from different companies C + D. All were delivered at different times and different people installed it... :) I was simply going mad. No one did stick to the agreed day so finally, there were 3 teams (not 4 though) at the same time trying to install different items on the very same day in a tiny bathroom :) - I did simply scream the whole day..... But I have to say I still like it to this day :)
@TypeAshton
@TypeAshton 2 жыл бұрын
hahaha yeah I think in the end, having additional warranties will be really great on a lot of these items too. Our little tornado "Jack" does a surprising amount of damage for such a small person.
@klaus2t703
@klaus2t703 2 жыл бұрын
Noise cancelling hints: An acoustic foam "hidden" behind a painting. Or an "Akustik Würfel". Flowers, carpet, heavy decorative cloth, wardrobe..
@TypeAshton
@TypeAshton 2 жыл бұрын
Great ideas!! Thank you.
@franckherrmannsen7903
@franckherrmannsen7903 2 жыл бұрын
Actually you should know what´s in your techroom by looking at the bill. Kinda hard to tell by those few seconds you showed. There is the basic water supply with a meter and a filter by a company called Conel, these lines run into your waterheating system (Brauchwassererwärmung) which is the big drum in the corner and follows the coldwaterlines into kitchen and bathroom, As far as i can see you´ve got a warmwater circulation system for convenience (the pump behind the reservoir) the other pump there is from the heating unit to the heatexchanger inside. The insulated block with the pressure meters is also a pump, but for the heatingsystem. The big unit of Aqotec is the heater in your case i guess you are connected to an external plant (Fernwärme)
@Al69BfR
@Al69BfR 2 жыл бұрын
For your entrance perhaps installing a bigger wardrobe to break up the wall will help and a „Schuhschrank“ will probably help too. And a little bench to sit on while tying up your shoes, some pictures and of course your acoustic panels.
@TypeAshton
@TypeAshton 2 жыл бұрын
Yes! We plan to do just that... something for shoe storage, as well as a nice bench are currently on order.
@maxmosberg6101
@maxmosberg6101 2 жыл бұрын
Hey guys, fellow North American (Canadian) and Engineer who has been living in Germany for multiple years here :) I recently discovered your videos as im currently in the process of buying my own house in Karlsruhe (about 1,5 hours north of Freiburg). I find your videos to be very educational and entertaining - keep up the great work! P.S.: I also lived in Freiburg for a while, I hope the "Schlappen" is still going strong ;)
@DASPRiD
@DASPRiD 2 жыл бұрын
Hah, greetings from Karlsruhe to Karlsruhe ;)
@HansTechow
@HansTechow 2 жыл бұрын
BTW, that big round white thing contains a balloon that keeps the pressure in the water pipes up for the heating.
@stephenmcnamara8318
@stephenmcnamara8318 2 жыл бұрын
Exactly. With the underfloor water heat, you need that really inelegant balloon as a backup for lost pressure. Most of the water returns will have on/off valves and should be labelled. Take pictures of any labelling done now - and keep those in hard copy in case the marker wears off over time.
@_aullik
@_aullik 2 жыл бұрын
It also helps with things like water hammer if a valve closes too fast
@wr6293
@wr6293 2 жыл бұрын
Good that you have this easy going attitude. I know of couples whom broke up because of issues during building or rebuilding.
@TypeAshton
@TypeAshton 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you. I think we have both kind of adopted this "team" attitude because we are both going through the gauntlet together. Everything is new and we are just making the best of it.
@HansTechow
@HansTechow 2 жыл бұрын
I bought a house exactly a year before you guys did and moved in exactly a year before you will (hopefully!) move in. It's so interesting to see how your experiences align and where the differences are just a year later.
@TypeAshton
@TypeAshton 2 жыл бұрын
That's awesome! Did you have COVID delays with your build as well or did it start construction before the supply chain issues?
@HansTechow
@HansTechow 2 жыл бұрын
@@TypeAshton No, I was extremely lucky. They delivered two weeks ahead of schedule, no sourcing issues, no cost increase, no communication error from Stille Post. What I've heard from the main contractor is that the issues started to become really bad just before my house was finished. I have a few friends who are in the same position you are in, work just stops because some stuff is missing. When I bought the house in fall of 2020 people were worried for me because the price was so high. When I tell people now how much I've paid they usually say "Wow, that's so cheap". All within two years. So insane.
@TypeAshton
@TypeAshton 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah we still feel really lucky. We purchased it in June of last year and fixed the price. Since then, prices have only gone up with inflation,.
@WillisKeeper
@WillisKeeper 2 жыл бұрын
Manly solution for the TV issue: Just get a bigger TV to cover the holes. Excellent excuse for buying a crazy big TV.
@AnoNymInvestor
@AnoNymInvestor 8 ай бұрын
🤣🤣🤣
@VladyVeselinov
@VladyVeselinov 2 жыл бұрын
If you want cheap acoustic insulation = bookshelf, rugs, curtains. If you wanna do it right, it will be worth learning some acoustics. You have the room reflecting sound, which is made up of a spectrum of frequencies and the shape of the room affecting which part of the spectrum will be the loudest. Then you can measure your rooms, do some calculations and figure out where to place absorption panels and/or diffusion panels. Diffusion scatters sound to make the reverberation in the room more natural and cancel out some of it. Absorption will "wear down" the waves before they hit your ears. Keep in mind the positioning, materials and mass required to absorb different parts of the sound spectrum are different. Now I know you're not building a recording studio here, but if the echo is really annoying and you can't be bothered learning all of this, you can pay an acoustician to tell you what to do. Otherwise if you find the subject matter fun, you can do the math yourself, figure out where to put what panels and install them yourself.
@franzfred7511
@franzfred7511 2 жыл бұрын
for your cable mess..... there are "Aufputzkabelschächte" that hide the cables and are easy to fit. take a look.
@tacoiest6145
@tacoiest6145 2 жыл бұрын
when I bought my house the hallway was also a hollow hard echo mess. I had the wall around the stairs lined with high pole carpet (glued to the wall) in stead of wallpaper and call it my cuddle wall and all the echo disappeared. also a hatstand with a couple of jackets or curtain besides the front door will help a lot in reducing echos. my cuddle wall has been up for over 10 years and because of the dark colour you can't see any dirty fingerprints and with vacuuming it ones a year there is no dust problem and vacuuming is the only maintenance I do on that wall. this wall dampens so well that if my phone rings on loud on the other floor of the house than I am on I will probably not hear it.
@TypeAshton
@TypeAshton 2 жыл бұрын
Ah that sounds like a good solution! We also have a toddler that has a tendency to touch/destroy everything, so this could work well for us!
@tacoiest6145
@tacoiest6145 2 жыл бұрын
@@TypeAshton just sent some pics for inspiration to your gmail
@TheAlanSaunders
@TheAlanSaunders 2 жыл бұрын
The white cylinder is an Expansion Vessel/tank (Ausdehnungsgefäß). In a sealed, pressurised heating system (combi boiler - Kombikessel) the water expands when heated and the expansion vessel maintains the correct pressure. There is usually an expansion vessel within the boiler casing but large systems may require an external one. One side is filled with water from the central heating system and the other side of a diaphragm is pressurised with air or nitrogen via a Schraeder valve.
@d3bugg3r
@d3bugg3r 2 жыл бұрын
The big round Ttnk you questioned is a blancing Tank for warm Water so there will be no leak due to rising pressure in the pipes as the warm water expands
@TypeAshton
@TypeAshton 2 жыл бұрын
AH okay!! That makes sense and is super interesting. So I guess it is just filled with air and it will pressurize itself?
@d3bugg3r
@d3bugg3r 2 жыл бұрын
@@TypeAshton well normally there is a membran inside which can move, the other side behind the membrane is often filled with nitrogen - yes it will pressurize itself - after many years the membrane can fail, then you have to replace it as it will not work anymore
@TypeAshton
@TypeAshton 2 жыл бұрын
That is super interesting. I hate to ask this, but it is all so new to us.... how do you know that it has failed? Do pipes start leaking or is there an issue with air getting into the pipe system?
@d3bugg3r
@d3bugg3r 2 жыл бұрын
@@TypeAshton to get an idea, you can knock on the outside, if its a hollow sound it should be good, if it is a dull sound its probably fuilly filled with water -> dead
@kenardturner7173
@kenardturner7173 2 жыл бұрын
Liked the blooper reel. Shows the number of takes to get it right.
@SG-eb4uw
@SG-eb4uw 2 жыл бұрын
Meassure twice cut once.... my dad always said, zweimal abgeschnitten und immernoch zu kurz.... cut two times and still short ... lol
@philipp1736
@philipp1736 2 жыл бұрын
On the holes in the wall: it is definitely possible to fill/repair them even if they're in a concrete wall. The issue is cost. You could use mortar to fill it & then put on matching wallpaper and paint it (probably better to replace the whole strip of wallpaper in that spot) If done correctly & very precisely you shoulnd't see the difference. You could ask your contractor if they're able to do it (they should) and how much it'd cost. Obviously it'd have cost less before the wallpaper came on. Anyway, in the end it's about how much you are willing to spend to have it fixed. But it is possible. On the noice reduction issue: It is going to be less noisy the more stuff you have in that room & the more people are present. Wood does reduce noise quite well, so anything made out of that will work. I'd avoid smooth metal surfaces that reflect sound more easily. Also fabrics are great, but it's not everyone's taste to have tapestries hanging on their walls, although there are some stylish modern pieces that look nice. On that note, paintings or prints on canvas are also great for that purpose. That all depends on what style you want to decorate your house in.
@stephanweinberger
@stephanweinberger 2 жыл бұрын
I guess the problem is not so much covering/filling the old holes, but getting the new ones in the desired location. That would be a PITA in a solid concrete wall. But hiding the cables should not be a problem. In the worst case - if the soundbar or TV really sits flush with the wall (which is usually not the case anyways) - you can just add spacers where the mounting brackets screw into the wall, so you have a little space behind them to route the cables. Then everything will be nicely covered by the devices.
@V100-e5q
@V100-e5q 2 жыл бұрын
And get some feet of the Rauhfaser (woodchip wallpaper). Because there are some different types which migh look very differently at repair spots.
@NormanF62
@NormanF62 2 жыл бұрын
With the TV room, you can’t change the wall or what’s built in, the obvious solution is to exchange the furniture until you have something that works. As long you have the purchase receipt, it should be possible but you might need to experiment to find the perfect setup! You’ll no doubt be happy once you find it.
@TypeAshton
@TypeAshton 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah for sure. We really like the furniture we picked because, as opposed to the "original" layout this offers more seating places. But I think we can make it work. In the end these are just small details. But I also like the idea that we could possibly switch up the furniture placement... even if it was mirroring the L shape of the couch.
@Pystro
@Pystro 2 жыл бұрын
@@TypeAshton You could always just put something next to the TV to make the whole arrangement (TV shelves + CD rack or whatever) visually centered on the wall.
@RubenKelevra
@RubenKelevra 2 жыл бұрын
Concrete walls are super easy to patch and move stuff. We do this all the time :'D
@XzavionSaturnine
@XzavionSaturnine 2 жыл бұрын
Glad that most of your lessons were more on the positive side. If I had to provide one important piece of advice here: get surplus tiles of your bathroom, kitchen whatever surfaces you have, even the wood. If you ever break a tile in 10 years cause you chnge something, you will need those, same for other accidental damages. Better than searching for something that looks "almost" the same then. And I could probably explain what all the parts in your tech room do, but I won't be able to explain how to operate them. Here goes the same as you said, better leave that to a professional. One thing I am curious about is, why are the outside walls made of concrete? Was that a concious decision? Usually it is only the basement that has concrete walls and for the living areas you would use "softer" stones like "Kalksandstein" so you don't need a percussion drill to get a nail into the wall. Or were the wall prefabricated, delivered and then placed there?
@TypeAshton
@TypeAshton 2 жыл бұрын
Good idea! We hope they builders will have some left over for us once we take possession. If not, we will ask them. As for the concrete walls, this was the suggestion of the builder.
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