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A touch of London in Tölzer Badstrasse

2021-03-03T05:34:38.626Z


It was often referred to as an eyesore, now there is a future for the dilapidated house on Tölzer Badstrasse. The owner has unusual plans.


It was often referred to as an eyesore, now there is a future for the dilapidated house on Tölzer Badstrasse.

The owner has unusual plans.

Bad Tölz

- "We all hope that the long-known project will now be brought to an end," said Second Mayor Michael Lindmair in a nutshell.

On Thursday he chaired the meeting of the building and urban development committee, which dealt with the construction of a two-family house in Badstrasse.

There has been a ruin there for a long time, which is now to be demolished and replaced by the new owner from the Munich area.

The ramshackle house had often been called an eyesore.

The city council's basic benevolence for the replacement building had been there for a long time.

With the new spacing area regulation of the Bavarian building code, the district office was now also on board.

Two halves of a house in a seven-meter-wide building

With the revised application for a preliminary decision, a residential building has now come out that architect Michaela Eizenberger has designed as a kind of “tiny house”, as has long been common in London and Amsterdam.

Two vertical halves of the house will be created in the approximately seven-meter-wide building, which will open up the living and usable areas on different levels.

According to the architect, all of this offers the most open living possible for young people and families.

Despite its limited width, each half of the house will have around 100 square meters of living space.

The concept also convinced the building committee and city architect Florian Ernst, who was also delighted with the “balanced facade with two balconies”.

The only vote against the project came from Julia Dostthaler (CSU), who would have liked a small shop unit on the ground floor.

This is actually no longer needed and is being replaced by an entrance area with a storage room for bicycles and garbage cans.

Outwardly, however, the appearance is that of a row of shops, emphasized Lindmair.

The builder still has to swallow a toad.

Four parking spaces are required for the two-family house.

The space in front of the house is only 4.40 instead of 5 meters deep, so it cannot be used for two parking spaces under building regulations.

This means that four parking spaces have to be replaced.

That is an impressive 60,000 euros.

(Christoph Schnitzer)

Also read:

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- Bad Tölz is looking for a city brand

Experts are sounding the alarm: closed dog schools cause animal problems

Criticism of the Bad Tölz-Wolfratshausen district building authority - the authority is driving up land prices

Source: merkur

All news articles on 2021-03-03

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