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Le 06/02/2016 09:56, Mike Horvath a écrit :
> How high are storeys in European buildings in meters usually? Is 3
> meters sufficient?
Do we speak of space between floor and ceiling, or between identical
element, from one level to another ?
And about modern (like post 1960) building, or older ones ?
For instance in Paris, Haussmanian's building have decreasing storey's
height as you go up. Historically, the owner lived at the bottom, and
the higher you went, the less money you owned. Under the roof, bedroom
for servants are usually quite small, both in surface and height.
Minimal height, inside, for a surface to count for rent and sell is
1.80m. Doors are usually higher, I would say between 2m to 2.15m, and
there is usually a margin of 30 to 60cm to the ceiling.
If we are in some office, there might be some additional height in the
ceiling itself before reaching the supporting floor (for cable and
ventilation).
And in some region, small houses might also have a ceiling below 1.7m
(dating from a time when people were smaller, and heating was
expensive), they are painful to sell now. (and most modern furnitures
won't fit... no full height fridge there)
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On 6-2-2016 12:39, Stephen wrote:
> On 2/6/2016 8:56 AM, Mike Horvath wrote:
>> How high are storeys in European buildings in meters usually? Is 3
>> meters sufficient?
>>
>
> Will this help?
>
>
http://www.ctbuh.org/HighRiseInfo/TallestDatabase/Criteria/HeightCalculator/tabid/1007/language/en-GB/Default.aspx
>
Interesting!
--
Thomas
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On 2/6/2016 6:39 AM, Stephen wrote:
> On 2/6/2016 8:56 AM, Mike Horvath wrote:
>> How high are storeys in European buildings in meters usually? Is 3
>> meters sufficient?
>>
>
> Will this help?
>
>
http://www.ctbuh.org/HighRiseInfo/TallestDatabase/Criteria/HeightCalculator/tabid/1007/language/en-GB/Default.aspx
>
>
>
>
Yes, thanks! I decided upon 3.5 meters since that is a happy in between.
Mike
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