Housing in Japan
A house is being built right next to us so I thought I'd use the opportunity to show how the housing is in Japan. Unfortunatley I've started a little bit late and I missed some of the earlier stages. Anyways the first stage is to tear down the previous house. A high-hoe (sp?) comes in with a claw instrument and tears the house down. It takes more than one day and free space is at a premium so what do they do? Well they just drive it right up and park it inside the house of course! I wish I had have taken a picture of that! All the debris is taken away in these miniature dumptrucks. The roads are quite small here so you can't have any big dumptrucks in Japan. Everything is carted away right down to the bare earth and then they start building again. First some foundations are poured. And this is where my pictures start (pretty much).
Not sure if you can tell from the pictures but the foundation is about two or three feet tall and they build the floor on top. So there's lots of airspace between the ground and the first floor. I'm pretty sure that basements are illegal in Japan. Something to do with the humidity and mould and whatnot.
Japanese always seem to throw the buildings up so darn fast and I think I've finally figured out why. If you look at all the wood, you can see that it's been pre-cut and formed so that the whole house goes together like one big Lego project. Of course there's not exactly a lot of room in which to work so you pretty much need to build from within the house!
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