It is practiced in Poland to have an apartment ownership. Renting an apartment is seen as a necessity, something forced, because you have to live somewhere and it is often the only one
Solution for the poor. This necessity is not cheap because usually it costs 1/3 of the salary and this is the lowest price. It is not profitable, but the business is favored by banks that do not want grant loans for the purchase of a new apartment or from the secondary market. Despite
these artificial difficulties, Poles prefer to have an inclusive it pays off more. The cost of renting an apartment is equal to a monthly installment in a bank that will agree to grant a loan. It seems that banks and people renting their apartments will not understand this to others. Lack of this understanding creates a peculiar phenomenon on the market, which I do not fully understand these high rental prices.
In Poland, four types of residential real estate can be found. These are Kaminice, old housing estates building in the splendor of communism, housing estates of new buildings and houses with lawn.
Tenements cause me with unpleasant feelings. I have never been in a tenement house and I am surprised how can you live in places where there is a lack of space? Why is the renovation of old tenement houses and their surroundings to live in the same money how much does a modern estate affecting less depressive man costs?
I live in Stary Siedl built in a time of friendly Russian occupation.
These buildings are called dovecote. From the outside, they are terrible but then there was such a style of social architecture. Completely unrelated architectural solutions. There are aluminum cables in the walls, because in the late times Poland was the mining power of copper ore, but copper wires were unique. Living rooms are tiny like in Japanese houses or prison carcens. Fortunately, my apartment consists of three rooms, someone removed the walls here and I have one big room like I like. I live on the 11th floor, so I have light, but these are old housing estates where large trees have already grown out of small trees during the construction and they come up that there is a bodily in the apartments.
It is very important to me at least outside the apartment, the surroundings are. There must be a lot of nature, a lot of shops and open space and a lot of parking space. As I mentioned, it is a complete trash but the buildings in Osidl were already a very well planned work. We will not find it in modern housing estates in Poland.
The new housing estates are characterized by a low up to 4 -story floor of buildings. They are very tightly planned. Here, every meter has to gain himself. Free space is a loss for the investor, it causes it not to have much. The new housing estates are fenced, with a whole range of obstacles and difficulties. They resemble internment camps a bit. The buildings from the outside look nice but the apartments inside are not logically planned. It is tight and often dark.
Lawn houses become very popular. The price of their purchase or construction is prime with the purchase price of the apartment in the estate. The difference is in operating costs, in the estates it is much cheaper and you do not have to involve yourself in looking for ski companies removing defects. Houses are usually bought by people who are not very geographically and their lives bind to stationary guarding and dabania about the inclusion of the property.
What can surprise you in Poland if you live in a housing estate built in communist times?
People who live here do not speak to each other. Here everyone is stranger and are xenophobes. However, they often argue with each other. The walls of the buildings are very thin and you can often hear even the smallest quarrels.
Poles smoke cigarettes on balconies, and smoke from one balcony enters the neighboring apartments. This devoid of Polish culture or rather its lack is protected by the authorities and regulations in Poland. In a few cases I saw people leaving the building to be outdoor cigarettes but this truth is rare.
There are garbage sucks in the buildings, from which the stench is extracted on the cage. Periodic disinfection is not performed. I don’t understand why people don’t take garbage outside? They are terrible lazy people, they come down from the second floor but only because they pay for the winds so they want to use it as much as possible to lose anything.
There is a park in front of my house with park benches in it. One bench is occupied by people who drink alcohol here all day and night and it is forbidden. They behave quite loudly. But it doesn’t bother anyone. At the beginning I thought that Poles were cowards and porpostu are afraid of drunk revelers. I understood this one when I was on a fight for a fight. I informed the administration of the estate about it and she wrote back to me that she had informed the police. And it ended. Nothing changed. The passivity of Poles and their pathologity conpctation is forced by the laziness system of authorities. I have observed many times how Polish police are afraid of drunkards, probably because Polish regulations protect drunkenness in this country. So if you drink alcohol in front of your house in Poland and pour into the staircase, it is treated normal in this country and your protest will not change anything.
The estate has its administration, i.e. the management office. Contact with her is very archaic and does not take place on an informative road. The 1990’s of the last century are still here.
One day I was called to court for not paying something. But I didn’t get a notification. The court did not recognize my attention. In Poland, in these housing estates, the customer must worry about paying payments even those he does not yet know (he is to ask) and not the seller. That is why everything is so primitive here because it is not a service. The employees of adminsitration are in Wrodog focused on residents and treat them as their property. It is not possible to change the administrator, when he has companies that compete on the market.
Here, when you get home very late, you won’t find a parking space. One day he had to park in an empty parking lot for people who buy a subscription. People who want to water parking are so few, and Płen parking lots are half empty. It was only one night forced by circumstances, but I became a break in the license plate. When I informed the police about the cards of the license plate. The police ignored it. This is how you live in Poland. (Brux/BruxNews)
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