American reacts to 'Why American homes are Flimsy compared to Europe'

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  • čas přidán 18. 05. 2023
  • Thank you for watching me, a humble American, react to 'Why American homes are Flimsy compared to Europe'
    Original video: • Why So Many American H...
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Komentáře • 2,9K

  • @insu_na
    @insu_na Před rokem +3245

    The problem with American houses isn't so much the material but the architecture. You can build really solid and sturdy houses with wood, but Americans just keep using 2x4s with drywall and plywood as walls. In America "punching through a wall" is a bit of a meme, but it's certainly possible. Anywhere in Europe, even the parts that build their houses from wood, you'll just break your hand.

    • @marydavis5234
      @marydavis5234 Před rokem

      No 2x4 are use in building houses in the US, don’t believe everything you read on the internet about any country.

    • @shadmtmtn1603
      @shadmtmtn1603 Před rokem +273

      There is actually high buildings made in wood, the record being a 20 stories building in Sweden (over 250 ft tall). Knowing the codes are very strict, it means really resistant structures to be allowed, resisting to wind, fire, water and earthquake hazards !
      Wood is indeed not the problem 😉🖖

    • @PatsFanGermany
      @PatsFanGermany Před rokem +180

      If someone knows how to build good, sturdy houses from wood, it's the swedes.

    • @holger_p
      @holger_p Před rokem +37

      @@shadmtmtn1603 That's new and "experimental". That's why it is in the news. But also things like hospitals, or schools are build of concrete and are more robust, resistent to the weather. They just decide to apply another technique to family homes.

    • @AlexKall
      @AlexKall Před rokem +42

      Exactly! Europe is vast and houses are built different in different countries but the houses are generally built sturdy.

  • @tschaytschay4555
    @tschaytschay4555 Před rokem +1389

    As a German I just can't never get over holes in north american walls. Just the concept of a wall someone can punch a hole in is so... strange. And I don't want to imagine how much you can hear from your neighbours or family members, I like my privacy, thanks.

    • @smaragdwolf1
      @smaragdwolf1 Před rokem +143

      as Friends told me in the past, they try not to laugh to loud, because the Neighbors in the next house (not appartment, HOUSE) could hear them!
      In my Appartement here in Germany, i can bearly hear the TV of my older neighbor... and its directly behind my wall and she has set it loud.
      Whatever you do in US-Paperhouses, you can be sure that the entire Street WILL hear you.

    • @ThePixel1983
      @ThePixel1983 Před rokem +80

      This might also be why Americans NEED so much space around their houses. In Germany, we can live close to the street and to neighbours, they won't hear you.

    • @momsspaghetti2246
      @momsspaghetti2246 Před rokem +100

      Imagine an abusive american guy trying to punch a hole in a german wall to let his aggressions out 😅 at least the ambulance and hospital costs will be cheaper

    • @real_Nessa
      @real_Nessa Před rokem +4

      ​@Smaragdwolf that's so insane. Where's the living quality? 😮

    • @smaragdwolf1
      @smaragdwolf1 Před rokem +9

      @@real_Nessa do you mean my living quality/living conditions?
      Its okay, i guess. Its a Single-Appartement in a big House near City center, about 30m² and a small balcony, 10th Floor, View onto a busy Shopping street for pedestrians, City mainstation is near, Tram-station close to the House, Cinema in throw-distance,.....
      Dont have to deal with loud Cars, Rent is affordable.
      Depending on your Lifestyle, such an Appartment can be enough for many years.
      If you meant something else, pleased rephrase your question.

  • @claracatlady9844
    @claracatlady9844 Před 5 měsíci +104

    Suddenly the never ending trope of “Noise Complaints” in American movies, shows and books makes more sense. I always thought that was sooooo unrealistic, like how could you make THAT much noise even if it is a party. In my house (with closed windows) unless there are fireworks or a freaking parade I don’t hear nothing.

    • @stephandickens2943
      @stephandickens2943 Před 4 měsíci +5

      I can clearly hear people outside talking next door from inside the house; granted the very old house I live in has basically zero insulation. You can hear EVERYTHING.

  • @Malabrace
    @Malabrace Před 11 měsíci +67

    Him: moved 7 times.
    Me: still living in my great-great-grandparent's house, built in the 1800s

    • @toasterhavingabath6980
      @toasterhavingabath6980 Před 2 měsíci +1

      My current house was built 300-400 years ago!

    • @sydryi3086
      @sydryi3086 Před 29 dny

      the house I live in has been around since the 1700s, still standing no matter how many storms hit us.

  • @freakymeff
    @freakymeff Před rokem +848

    it's mindboggling that anyone would tie themselves into 30-year mortgage payments over a house you can punch holes through. Like, this doesn't make sense to me.

    • @woutdezeeuw1604
      @woutdezeeuw1604 Před rokem +9

      If you look a bit beyond the surface, it's not that mind boggling. You can build a house to last a 100 years, but lets say it costs 2x more to build? If you build cheaper for a shorter life span, you allow for changing circumstances/demographics better. Like 50 years ago there used to be bigger families, with a lot more children, and a house with many rooms would make more sense. Today there are a lot more singles, so more smaller apartments, perhaps tiny houses are needed. If everything was built to last 300 years, this also makes it more difficult to adapt.

    • @Soken50
      @Soken50 Před rokem +92

      @@woutdezeeuw1604 Imagine being able to build a sturdy home, live in it while it accrues value, sell it, move to your new place of employment and see there are already sturdy homes you can buy and do minor repairs in instead of starting from scratch or worry it's gonna collapse around you. If you need a smaller home you can divide a property, my apartment is one of 8 apartments in a late renaissance era manor, my bathroom is older than the US constitution, it's gone trough quite a few remodels but there isn't much damage apart from some minor cracks in the plaster and wooden door paint from thermal cycling which is easily patched.

    • @woutdezeeuw1604
      @woutdezeeuw1604 Před rokem +3

      @@Soken50 If you know the future in advance that might be valid, but for all you know you would have built that house in a random area in Detroit that is dead 30 years later. In down town Paris a long term investment is less of a gamble, but depending on where you live it doesn't necessarily make sense to build for a future that far ahead.

    • @Soken50
      @Soken50 Před rokem +48

      @@woutdezeeuw1604 Oh yeah, sure, let's sink money in a disposable home in the very unlikely case your city is built on a single industry that can't weather the worst economic down turn in history, that's totally not an inconsequential calculated risk in aggregate. No wonder a third of Americans live paycheck to paycheck...

    • @woutdezeeuw1604
      @woutdezeeuw1604 Před rokem +2

      @@Soken50 I'm just saying there are many situations in which you don't need to build for something to last a 100 years (by the way Detroit is in no way an isolated/rare case). Even in my town brick houses are torn down because by today's standards insulation is no longer good enough, ceiling heights are now higher than what they used to be 40-50 years ago, stairs inclines are not as steep as they used to be, average room sizes are bigger, the list goes on. The houses could physically have lasted another 50 years I'm sure, but economically they are not viable for another 50 years. And therefore you can make the argument that these houses were overbuilt, and they are surely not accruing value.

  • @Nemioke
    @Nemioke Před rokem +933

    We in Finland have the most forest by area in Europe - maybe even in the world. We use wood, but the houses are way sturdier than in the US. Triple or four paned windows, insulation methods and overall construction is very solid - very different to US methods. Our building code is very strict - that's also very important.

    • @Octanne
      @Octanne Před rokem +9

      In Europe I think you right but in the world The Amazon forest in at the door 😅

    • @AlexKall
      @AlexKall Před rokem +42

      Finland and Sweden has the most in terms of percentage of land mass at 68% each. But if you instead go on total areal of forest in Europe it would be Russia without taking total landmass into account.

    • @BenjaminVestergaard
      @BenjaminVestergaard Před rokem +54

      😂 if someone can punch a hole in a Finnish-style log cabin... Fear them!

    • @komandos5128
      @komandos5128 Před rokem +18

      ​@@AlexKall i wouldn't count russia as european nation. But if you insist, then i think you should only count the parts of russia that actually are in europe.

    • @perolavhavik2585
      @perolavhavik2585 Před rokem +22

      While Norway doesn't have as much forest as Sweden and Finland, we still have enough wood to build our houses. Our houses are also sturdy and built to last. The house I'm sitting in now was built in 1910 and it's still good.

  • @smol_hamster_
    @smol_hamster_ Před 11 měsíci +282

    Strong(er) earthquakes and tornadoes are pretty rare in Europe (the tectonic plate is pretty stable and the continent is very mountainous), that's why you don't really hear about this stuff happening in Europe.
    When it comes to the energy-saving part, brick houses (at least here in Europe) are built in a way so that they retain heat during winter (you don't have to heat them as often) but remain cool in the summer. That's why many places in Europe don't have AC. In my family's house, we have a wood stove on both floors and during winter we save some extra money on heating by burning wood in the stove. The heat from a few hours of burning wood can last us 3-4 days until we have to burn wood again.

    • @ChiaraVet
      @ChiaraVet Před 10 měsíci +48

      As an Italian, I have to strongly disagree about the earthquakes part. Sure, we don´t have them as often as Japan, but Italy is one of the highest earthquake-risk regions in the world nonetheless. and yet our old houses and buildings(someone said medieval castles?) lasted for centuries, while the cheaper, badly built buildings of the 70s and 80s, before the new building rules came into force, come down like paper castles whenever there´s a slightly stronger earthquake. The technology to build earthquake-safe buildings doesn´t allow for cheap, low quality buildings, that´s it.

    • @HisuiOgawa
      @HisuiOgawa Před 10 měsíci +22

      @@ChiaraVet Your country has the unfortunate honor of having been ramed into Europe so hard it made one heck of a mountain range (I never get tired of how the Alps dwarf everything when you get near lol), so I don't think you can qualify for that "stable tectonic plate" part of their comment. 😂
      I'm always amazed your historical buildings don't take more damage than they do, to be honest. We get a few eathquakes here in France, but nothing to the level of what you guys get.

    • @tomvladik
      @tomvladik Před 8 měsíci +1

      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1755_Lisbon_earthquake

    • @haroina391
      @haroina391 Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@tomvladik yeas in portugal we are also at risk of having very strong earthquakes but it doesn't happen since 1755 the ones that happen are very very soft and somehow I'm never able to feel it it has to be my mother calling and saying 'did you felt the earthquake' and I'm like 'what are you talking about' and then I see the news and indeed there was 1 earthquake but I think that it was estimated that it has a high probability of a very strong earthquake happening in the next 50 years if Im not wrong

    • @tjguzik
      @tjguzik Před 8 měsíci

      Macedonia, Italia, border od Slovakia and Austria - earthquakes more than 4 Richter scale - that is only in last year...
      be educated, not shitbag..

  • @NOGlameows
    @NOGlameows Před 10 měsíci +71

    I’m guessing the reason you’re not able to save 4000 dollars a year if you moved to a brick house, is because you live in a warm area and you don’t probably spend that much money on heating your house in the winter. Heating the house during a very cold winter is super expensive and that’s where most of the savings are made.

    • @no8to8racism
      @no8to8racism Před 5 měsíci +9

      Well I live in the Austrian alps, in a house made of stone, built around 1840. I barely need to turn on the heating during winter, and in summer it's pleasantly cool inside.

  • @melange78
    @melange78 Před rokem +381

    I have lived in the US for three years and I have studied architecture and building. American houses IN GENERAL are built to last for maximum 30 years. In Europe they are built in general to last at least 100 years but often more. A Swedish wooden house is built to last more than 100 years so it is not just the choice of materials, it is the initial plan of the builder.

    • @crowman6330
      @crowman6330 Před 10 měsíci +20

      "At least 100 years" is an underestimation, where I live woth basic maintinance, they are planned for At least 3 Generations down

    • @user-py2xh6hr8x
      @user-py2xh6hr8x Před 10 měsíci +10

      That’s true to some extent, we have houses built in 1880 that still look good but they have been taken care of and alot of our culture in Sweden is to take care of your house and renovate if needed.
      Even the basic Swedish apartment over-go renovations.

    • @mademoiselledusfonctionell1609
      @mademoiselledusfonctionell1609 Před 10 měsíci

      Sturdier dimensions give sturdier houses.

    • @gallouelenegallouelne2908
      @gallouelenegallouelne2908 Před 9 měsíci +3

      Bro houses here are built to stand for like 200 years

    • @gallouelenegallouelne2908
      @gallouelenegallouelne2908 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Some houses are build out of rocks but they are only there for decoration

  • @avmavm777
    @avmavm777 Před rokem +605

    Europe has a past history of building wooden houses, but it also has a history of large fires - The Great Fire of London 1666 for instance. Building regulations were often strict to encourage sturdier houses made of stone to cope better

    • @letheas6175
      @letheas6175 Před rokem +34

      Same in Amsterdam, after a big fire in which a lot of the city was burned to the ground, they changed to brick /other materials mostly

    • @vomm
      @vomm Před rokem +9

      But modern wooden houses are just as fireproof as concrete blocks

    • @avmavm777
      @avmavm777 Před rokem +23

      @@vomm and most houses aren’t modern in Europe. They certainly can use more wood in their modern production now than they used to but couldn’t previously.

    • @jeffafa3096
      @jeffafa3096 Před rokem +8

      @@letheas6175 In Amsterdam a lot of houses have a combination of wood foundations and brick walls, or a mix of brick/concrete/wood walls. Nearly all the older houses (18th century to pre-WW2) in the wetter parts of the country have this, because wood just works really well as a foundation in these parts. Modern structures can now also be built on reinforced steel foundations, but wood is still used quite often as a foundation for buildings in our country.
      So we still build a lot with wood, only it's always been more of a mixture between wood and stone here...

    • @letheas6175
      @letheas6175 Před rokem +1

      @@jeffafa3096 Yes, I know. Lol. Thanks for explaining to those who dont, though!
      I especially love the modern architecture in (mostly) wood, like the Haut building near Amstel. Top notch building honestly. I think it even won some awards.

  • @TheJackD67
    @TheJackD67 Před 11 měsíci +106

    I live in North Peloponnese, Greece, on the slope of a mountain about 800 meters above sea level. My place is a two-story stone house build 103 years ago, so it's relatively new since there are some stone houses in our village made way back in 1820's, after the greek revolution against the Ottomans. We have pretty harsh winters with lots of rain and snow and the temperature falls well under 0C specially at night. In the summer the sun is very hot and the temperature reaches many times over 36C, sometimes even over 40C, specially in mid/end July. We expect such temps at the end of this week actually. The Corinthian Gulf is right below us, very close and is a territory well known for it's seismic activity. We have tectonic tremors/earthquakes (2-3R) every 2-3 months, a couple of 4-5R eartquakes every year and a big one about 6R every 10-20 years.Our houses are made to protect us from all these elements, stay cool in the summer, warm during winter (stone walls are over a meter thick) and while they shake hard during earthquakes, they don't fall. Only the inside plaster surfaces get cracked, but that's something that some new plaster and paint easily covers. I understand that the problem with american wooden houses is that are not made to last like wooden houses in northen Europe do. It's a shame because once upon a time american products in general were famous for their sturdiness, a few still do, like Harleys❤. I think Americans nowdays treat their houses like any other product, use it while it's new and then throw it away and get another. No sustainability concept involved, probably because of your newer-bigger-better approach to things. Might be good for a few things, definitely not for houses.

    • @e.o.7177
      @e.o.7177 Před 9 měsíci +1

      1m thick walls! That’s amazing!

    • @MIGBMWLOVER
      @MIGBMWLOVER Před 7 měsíci

      tell me brother!

    • @jakej2680
      @jakej2680 Před měsícem

      I live in a wooden house in the US built in the 1700s. And the earthquakes don't cause any damages.
      Seems like maybe the Greek financial skills crossed over to architecture 😂😂

    • @TheJackD67
      @TheJackD67 Před měsícem

      @@jakej2680 Yeah,funny you should mention that. "Architecture".I wonder where that word comes from...🤣😂

  • @kalev60
    @kalev60 Před rokem +50

    Northern and eastern Europe uses a lot of wood especially in the countryside even log-houses that have really nice sound blocking capabilities built in, but climate dictates thicker walls , more isolation and more attention to sound isolation, plus less demand for quick construction kind of leads naturally for more quality builds. Also stick-framing has took about 100 years to get insulation materials that can actually deal with how thin the walls are and block sound good.

  • @sarahlemke9803
    @sarahlemke9803 Před rokem +530

    Up until like 10 years ago I used to think that those thin walls were just built for movies, sitcoms and such, for the effect of punching through them. Because our German walls are usually made of bricks.
    Actually, I thought that several things that wouldn’t make sense in Germany were just for the camera: windows that slide up (so teen girls’ bf can climb through at night), toilet bowls with much water in them (so the highschool bully can have their moment), doorknobs instead of handles (so it’s easier to break in), vents instead of radiators (for the villain to poison an entire family by gas or sth) etc… 😅

    • @FloofersFX
      @FloofersFX Před 11 měsíci +37

      Oh man, the toilet one too, you're completely right on that, I've thought about the others a lot.

    • @pikachuchujelly7628
      @pikachuchujelly7628 Před 10 měsíci +14

      It really depends. Most middle class US homes have brick walls (on the outside), and even the inner walls can't be punched through. However, many of the cheaper homes just have vinyl or stucco exterior, which is incredibly weak.

    • @sarahlemke9803
      @sarahlemke9803 Před 10 měsíci +4

      @@pikachuchujelly7628 thank you so much for the insight!

    • @mademoiselledusfonctionell1609
      @mademoiselledusfonctionell1609 Před 10 měsíci +6

      In Sweden since like 50 years, we mostly build partitions
      using drywall. But we use thicker sheets of drywall.

    • @mademoiselledusfonctionell1609
      @mademoiselledusfonctionell1609 Před 10 měsíci +11

      @@pikachuchujelly7628
      I watch a lot of funny animals-clips (mainly to cope with depression),
      and I saw one of a dog chewing through a door. An entrance door.
      The door seemed to be made of plastic and very thin.
      There is no way a dog could do that here. A beaver - yes. A dog - no.
      And many doors to flats are steel to prevent fire from spreading
      and also to make burglary more difficult.

  • @annab6948
    @annab6948 Před rokem +477

    In Sweden, Where I live, we use wood a lot because we have the materials growing in abundance. However, the more south you go, the more stone and brick you encounter. In my home country, Poland, it is almost always brick and stone.

    • @jessepylvalainen2288
      @jessepylvalainen2288 Před rokem +27

      We use a lot of wood in Finland too. Some houses are brick layered but still wood founded

    • @Alfadrottning86
      @Alfadrottning86 Před rokem +20

      Here in Iceland - we used to use a lot of wood (except the Alþingi being of solid stone) - but the more recent buildings are usually made of stone - and also rather ugly
      *used to build out of wood refers to the old times, before we actually completely deforested our island so it looks more like an alien landscape now.

    • @annebritraaen2237
      @annebritraaen2237 Před rokem +14

      @@Alfadrottning86 Norway was also pretty deforested at one point. So they wrote the obligation to plant new trees for every tree you cut, into law.

    • @Alfadrottning86
      @Alfadrottning86 Před rokem +7

      @@annebritraaen2237 well, i would assume so - after all, our ancestors are Norwegians. But it might be easier to re-forest when you have some or quite a lot left.
      Here we had to start from nothing; from decades of nature adjusting not to have trees at all.
      Oh, also the Elves!! lol

    • @X33dbv
      @X33dbv Před rokem +5

      @@Alfadrottning86 And ur trees are very little cause of ur environment and the time for actual growing is short.
      Nevertheless beautiful island and I hope u get ur forests back in future.

  • @Alek4275
    @Alek4275 Před 9 měsíci +42

    the insulation thing is true. My grandma house is very old (over 300 years as far as I know) and back then people used to build really thick brick walls with small windows in order to insulate the inside from the outside. Inside her house there's almost always the same temperature (around 15-20° C both during summer and winter), no matter how hot or cold it is outside. She tells us that back when she was a kid it was actually really cold during winter, as windows were made of wood and didn't keep the cold air outside, but now, with modern windows frames, she almost doesn't need the heating.
    I need to add that the structure is over 300 years old and still standing, with the last renovation of the roof made in 1917. I seriosly doubt that a wooden structure would be able to last even half of this time.

    • @peterjackson4763
      @peterjackson4763 Před 7 měsíci +2

      There is a wooden house from the 13th century near me, It was extended in the 17th and occupied until the 1950s. The extension is brick.
      Part of my parents house was Victorian. The exterior (and formerly exterior) walls were 2' thick and solid. The windows were quite large, but after they were replaced by double glazed ones that part of the house would stay warm with little heating,. If left to cool down it would take a long time to heat up though.

  • @anoitecerempobrecido
    @anoitecerempobrecido Před 11 měsíci +27

    Brick and concrete houses also take much longer to build, which further adds to construction price. The oldest house I lived in was from the 12th century. Walls were made of 50 cm (~20 inch) thick granite stones. I couldn't get phone signal inside the house.

    • @DanielixKlimax
      @DanielixKlimax Před 9 měsíci +2

      Only fifty? That's thin...

    • @j59of2
      @j59of2 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Mine`s has 60 to90 cm walls tick. An old farmhouse in est France.

    • @DanielixKlimax
      @DanielixKlimax Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@j59of2 That's better. Still thinner then walls in my houses. One has about 2m (empirically measured during installation of heat pumps) and the other about meter (funnily old farm house too and likely quite bit older than the first one).

    • @Deserthacker
      @Deserthacker Před měsícem

      @@DanielixKlimax You sure you didn't accidentally buy a bunker instead of a house? :D Out of curiosity: Which country?

    • @DanielixKlimax
      @DanielixKlimax Před měsícem

      @@Deserthacker Czech Republic...

  • @LordStradh
    @LordStradh Před rokem +353

    Here in Sweden and Finland wood is abundant, and used to build houses. But unlike the US you can't walk through the inner walls...
    Even with wood we build sturdy and lasting, we simply have harder building code.
    Our interior walls are thicker than the standard us exterior wall, and the exterior ones much thicker, and well insulated, and yes we insulate internal walls as well, so sound is dampened.
    If your home is from the 1920:s it is likely of higher quality and building than what is represented in this video.

    • @lillm6874
      @lillm6874 Před rokem +32

      And Norway👍😊

    • @solar0wind
      @solar0wind Před rokem +17

      Here in Germany, wooden houses aren't completely uncommon either. In fact, my parents live in one, and in last summer's heatwave it was 10 degrees cooler inside than outside at times. No need for AC.

    • @flower_power
      @flower_power Před rokem +6

      The wooden houses in Europe are build of a better quality of wood. The walls are mode of sollid wood in stead of a framework

    • @fabiosoares7660
      @fabiosoares7660 Před rokem +1

      Here in Portugal (Southern Europe) is very rare to find wood houses and stone houses you will just find them in rural areas or in countryside.
      Also When I was studying, my English teachers all said the same thing, that American houses are made of wood because of earthquakes, wood is a lighter material compared to brick and stone, so the chance for people to survive to the earthquake is bigger.

    • @Lylantares
      @Lylantares Před rokem +7

      Yep. Wood is a very good insulator if you use it correctly. German pre-built wooden houses have thick walls. They can still be framework, but the framework is both on the interior and exterior walls and it is filled with isolation. And every interior wall had double planks.

  • @Trashbd
    @Trashbd Před rokem +159

    A friend of mine moved to US (New Hampshire) to work at Boyd's and the first thing he did was buying a house and then insulate it properly (to Swedish standard), his energy consumption shrunk to less than half the projected consumption, his point was that insulation don't only keep warmth in, it also keeps it out when it's hot...

    • @MaticTheProto
      @MaticTheProto Před 9 měsíci +13

      That’s how insulation works yes

    • @sk-sm9sh
      @sk-sm9sh Před 9 měsíci +15

      It's so weird to me that people don't insulate their homes because insulation material like rockwool isn't even expensive. And it's amazing material to wrap your house with. Not only does it insulate from cold in winter and from hot in summer it also dampens sound, helps prevent mold, it blocks fire, and it will prevent infestation of bugs/mice/etc.

    • @MaticTheProto
      @MaticTheProto Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@sk-sm9sh yeah im in canada rn and you can literally hear the neighbors through the wall sometimes when they have a window open

    • @sk-sm9sh
      @sk-sm9sh Před 8 měsíci +3

      @@jensv874 10k for all the benefit it comes with is really not that much. How much for the construction of the entire house ? If money is issue then usually there are some other aspects to cut on for instance build a smaller house.

    • @haroina391
      @haroina391 Před 8 měsíci

      @@jensv874 maybe if it was 15 years ago probably all the money that you didn't pay for cooling and heating already covers way more than 10k imagining you would pay 1k each year for cooling and heating (so 83€ per month) you would have already have more 5k than if you choose to not insulate

  • @Rnd227
    @Rnd227 Před 10 měsíci +9

    Some towns were built (out stone) in the middle-ages. There was no shortage of wood at the time. So the quantity of available wood was no factor.

  • @stephanelsner9391
    @stephanelsner9391 Před 10 měsíci +13

    In many German cities, all houses were built of wood until the late Middle Ages. However, there were often devastating fires in the narrow city centres and houses began to be built of stone or brick, depending on what was locally available. Nowadays, there are even regulations that forbid the building of wooden houses in some places, as they do not fit into the townscape.

    • @ms-ht1cj
      @ms-ht1cj Před 4 měsíci

      Yeah, same in Poland. We used to have many wooden buildings, Middle Ages or even later, but it changed, I think after the WWII.

  • @chrischi510
    @chrischi510 Před rokem +173

    I find it fascinating. I’m from Germany and the oldest wall in my house is from 1180 and the newer parts are from the 1580.
    It’s fun to live in a old house with tons of history in my city. I learned a lot from my city’s history just to be interested in my house. But it’s has big wood beans in it like in the old Fachwerkhäuser in Germany.

    • @operatorchakkoty4257
      @operatorchakkoty4257 Před rokem +6

      There is this renovated water tower in Stralsund that I really wanted to live in, but the rent is astronomical.
      Imagine living in a 2-story apartment in a tower! Can't get more eccentric than that.

    • @23GreyFox
      @23GreyFox Před 11 měsíci

      @@operatorchakkoty4257 There is one, the Eiffel Tower. Eiffel had a personal room on top.

    • @operatorchakkoty4257
      @operatorchakkoty4257 Před 11 měsíci

      @@23GreyFox had?

    • @astyandelacroix8001
      @astyandelacroix8001 Před 11 měsíci +3

      @@operatorchakkoty4257 I mean, he can't legally own anything, anymore...

    • @hanssama1954
      @hanssama1954 Před 11 měsíci +4

      Das zeigt sehr schön, dass nicht das Holz das Problem ist, sondern die Konstruktionsweise. Ich habe auch schon in einigen Historischen Häusern gearbeitet. Die Qualität der Holzkonstruktion ist auch nach Jahrhunderten immer noch beindruckend.

  • @taranvainas
    @taranvainas Před rokem +166

    I always laugh when in American movies people protect themselves from danger in their homes with a little chain on the door. It is not necessary to enter through the door in an American home, it is enough to kick any wall!

    • @TheProkonover
      @TheProkonover Před rokem +14

      Or just fire one of their guns from outside. CHances are that you will hit somebody. Or use a flamethrower/molotov, place goes up in smoke withing an hour.

    • @mr.fringeminority5426
      @mr.fringeminority5426 Před rokem

      Please, come demonstrate your mighty foot on the side of my house. I'm interested to see the results.

    • @theunhappygamer1744
      @theunhappygamer1744 Před rokem +2

      Obviously you are just joking but it is a lot harder to go through a wall than you might think. While dry wall on its own is easy enough to break through it becomes stronger when braced against wooden studs, you end up putting smaller sized holes in the wall instead of breaking through the entire sheet. And that's if you don't hit a stud, it once got a boxer break hitting a wall stud hard enough to break bone.

    • @taranvainas
      @taranvainas Před rokem +14

      @@theunhappygamer1744 No, no, I'm not kidding. I have seen enough images of how houses are built in the USA and I assure you that in five minutes I can enter any of them. I mean, of course, those that are built with wood and drywall. It's not hard to tell where the studs are. And I don't even tell you if instead of kicking I decide to use the car... In a minute I go through the whole house. It's unbelievable that even in Tornado Alley people who lose their homes build their homes the same way. It's crazy. With how easy it is to make bricks! Do you lack clay in the USA? And stone?

    • @danwasson1930
      @danwasson1930 Před rokem +2

      @@taranvainas Of course you would be shot for trying.

  • @juliegale3863
    @juliegale3863 Před 8 měsíci +6

    Ryan - a bit of history. In Europe we built wood frame houses and used up all our wood, particularly oak. In my country of England we are famous for our black and white oak beamed house. We also used up our wood for ships. They gradually filled int the spaces with bricks as brick making was cheap. Eventually houses became all brick. My own house though is built with concrete blocks 40 years ago, new when I moved in. Roof is timber frame and has had some outside bits renewed but on the whole is solid. It is warm in winter, cool in summer and quite cheap to run. But will admit it is tiny. Now north of the border in Scotland they built of stone and their houses are still standing despite awful weather.

  • @stuartfitch7093
    @stuartfitch7093 Před 10 měsíci +6

    Recently I wanted to mount a wall bracket in my home. To do this I needed to drill numerous holes for screws. The wall I was attaching the bracket to is so hard that I burnt through two proper masonry drill bits before I had drilled two holes deep enough to accommodate a wall plug. This is just how hard and thick house walls are in the UK. Especially in older houses.

  • @fabiancarre2417
    @fabiancarre2417 Před rokem +118

    The house of my grand parents is more than 600 years old and it will certainly stand 600 more years. The walls are made of stones and are almost 1 meter thick...

    • @burkhardproksch637
      @burkhardproksch637 Před rokem +8

      you have never seen a house made of wood that is 600 years old, because it rots away under your butt. good for the earth becomes fertilizer again, but never for generations in the long run.

    • @zapster252
      @zapster252 Před rokem +6

      @@burkhardproksch637 Or it will be eaten by termites.😂

    • @tangfors
      @tangfors Před rokem +4

      @@burkhardproksch637 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kirkjub%C3%B8argar%C3%B0ur

    • @herrbonk3635
      @herrbonk3635 Před rokem +6

      @@burkhardproksch637 I prefer stone materials in most kinds of buildings, but in Sweden we still got many houses from the 1600s and 1700s that were made out of timber (and some planks too, of course).

    • @kodilodinoza
      @kodilodinoza Před rokem +2

      So ypu are living in the castle aren't you?

  • @robertotarter7839
    @robertotarter7839 Před rokem +171

    Tornadoes are less of a problem in Europe ( we still have them tho) but earthquakes are a HUGE problem in many areas, Italy and the balkans especially!

  • @timmy7201
    @timmy7201 Před 9 měsíci +9

    Living in a European semi-detached brick home...
    - Can't hear my doorbell, when I'm two stories up...
    - Can't hear trains passing by, less than 200 ft away...
    - Can't hear my neighbors, whilst they have two teens and a 3 year old in their house...
    All inner walls and roofs are build from bricks or concrete, not from drywall. I would dare to say that my insulation is on point! 👍

  • @LexMeRep
    @LexMeRep Před 11 měsíci +5

    I'm from Hungary and my mom and uncle built a twin house (2 separate houses that share a wall in the middle), the building was over 3 years and it's mostly bricks, cement and concrete. The only thing that has wood is the roof.

  • @gggdebeste5515
    @gggdebeste5515 Před rokem +30

    A lot of houses in europe are build or remade in the 1950s not because of storms or earthquicks but because between 1910 and 1945 we had a big problem with high explosives

  • @danhodson7187
    @danhodson7187 Před rokem +210

    I'm in the UK and have only moved once. My parents house was about 150 years old and was still in fantastic condition. I'm sure i'll move again as I don't view this as a 'forever home' but I'm sure this house will still be here long after I'm gone. As Al Murray says, we don't get tornadoes and earthquakes here because we don't deserve them 😆

    • @vikinnorway6725
      @vikinnorway6725 Před rokem +8

      UK houses are wierd looking too me. To many small rooms and tiny small houses.

    • @definitelynotatroll246
      @definitelynotatroll246 Před rokem +32

      @@vikinnorway6725yeah on average our houses are some of the smallest in Europe, I think it’s down to being a tiny island with a massive population, land is really expensive here

    • @aw3s0me12
      @aw3s0me12 Před rokem +3

      @@definitelynotatroll246 Yes!

    • @aw3s0me12
      @aw3s0me12 Před rokem +7

      No...
      the UK is the country with the most tornadoes per unit area in the world: around 40 to 50 tornadoes occur there each year, but most of them are weak. Southern England forms the western part of a European "tornado alley" with the highest number of such events.
      While on the other hand in total: *Germany* had the most T's in Europe.
      *Also >>* Peterson (1992) notes that during the *early twentieth century there was actually more interest in tornado research in Europe than in the United States.*
      ;)

    • @redshirt49
      @redshirt49 Před rokem +9

      @@aw3s0me12 Yeah, we do get some tornados in Germany. Only in the North though. Our houses are concrete though, so uh just stay inside and don't stand near any trees. They have a habit of smashing people and cars standing under them during storm season.

  • @EnjoyFirefighting
    @EnjoyFirefighting Před 11 měsíci +4

    Used to live in a centuries old house in the historic downtown area in my county town in southern Germany. The family living in the apartment underneath us had a small kid but due to the thick walls we never heard her crying. Also we were able to run the ashing machine in the middle of the night without them hearing it at all

  • @pradrev
    @pradrev Před 7 měsíci +2

    Brick house doesn't need to have airconditioner because the bricks work as a termoregulator. Same in the winter, if you stop heating, the mass of walls keeps the temperature same. Wooden houses overheat in summer and cool quickly in winter.

  • @tronotrond
    @tronotrond Před rokem +244

    As a Scandinavian now living in Texas it's definitively not the wood, but this video resonated a lot. Houses are generally constructed very cheaply here, that's for sure. And many just doesn't seem interested in taking care and maintaining their homes either. There are definitively less regulations in place to ensure a properly built houses, and there are less safety mechanisms built in to avoid things like a bathroom leak causing major flood damage. Overall you can see the windows, doors, and materials are of the cheapest types, with gaps and inaccuracies everywhere. I'm sure it varies a bit, but one other major difference is the use of drywall which cracks and breaks as the house matures. My house was constructed in the late 2000s but the design and material choices makes it seem so much older. Not to mention it came with a gray, generic carpet in every room. I thought carpets went out of fashion in the 70s! You can visibly see many places how the ceiling or walls are crooked. It's "hidden" by applying "orange peel" texture absolutely everywhere. In Scandinavia, people want hardwood floors and flat, straight surfaces - which naturally takes more time to get right. The roof has shingles that lasts 10-15 years, vs roof stones that lasts 30-40 years in Europe. Naturally many things are also different due to different climates and other things.

    • @asjaosaline5987
      @asjaosaline5987 Před rokem +7

      In Europe there is Plenty of Earthqyicks and Tornades, thought still less than other places in World. Why you dont hear about them is reason,that they do not make quick work of our civilization, Houses here are sturdy. Last time Tornado made harm here was that it destoyed farmhouse and raked some other buildings lightly, but as it reached a Town it Died out. I Felt a Earthquik few year back, If Force was 8,3 and was actually suprised by its Force, but i made public damage only by 6000 euros.problematic thing here is Floods they weaken the Earth itself and dosent matter how quality house is made it will do alot of damage. So people usually also Thing where they want to build they home considering Topological and Weather impacts. In Estoniamy Home country most used building material is Stone, It is followed by Log Buildings Then comes Brick and then comes Wood.

    • @asjaosaline5987
      @asjaosaline5987 Před rokem +4

      In Estonia we have over 50% of territory covered with Forests and its enought to build whole citys of Wood, thought we also have Harsh Regulations what regulate how many m3 Forest can be Cut is Year to keep it sustainable and also protect Nature Mating and Nesting period.WOod is usually used here For Furniture, Heating and extracting Chemicals like cellulose

    • @fabiosoares7660
      @fabiosoares7660 Před rokem +4

      Here in Portugal (Southern Europe) is very rare to find wood houses and stone houses you will just find them in rural areas or in countryside.
      Also When I was studying, my English teachers all said the same thing, that American houses are made of wood because of earthquakes, wood is a lighter material compared to brick and stone, so the chance for people to survive to the earthquake is bigger. Here in Portugal, about 5 years ago, prefabricated houses started to be made, but in my point of view and in the point of view of many people, prefabricated houses are more expensive than buying land and building your own house made of brick.

    • @TheBrazilRules
      @TheBrazilRules Před rokem +3

      @@fabiosoares7660 It may look cheaper because you can buy it for many years, literally laying one brick at a time. You are just spreading the cost through the years. Also helps that you don't pay other people to build it for you.

    • @ananovak1468
      @ananovak1468 Před rokem +1

      @@asjaosaline5987 8,3 earthquake in Europe?? When?where?

  • @arjan_speelman
    @arjan_speelman Před rokem +140

    I suspect the lower availability of wood wasn't as much of an impacting factor as the higher availability of flames in cities where homes are build closer together.

    • @LeSarthois
      @LeSarthois Před rokem +8

      It's both, really. Wood frame houses have been banned in Paris and London for years yet they were still built, simply because there was little effective enforcement of the laws.
      The reason you no longer see those houses is because they rotted away, were burns and replaced by stone buildings or were razed.
      The thing is that many European countries did ran out of wood. France passed legislation and bought large forests as early as the 17th century to ensure a safe supply of wood - for warships. (If you ever visit France and see a sign in/near a forest saying "Forêt Domaniale" that's a State-owned forest).
      On the other hand European houses used less wood overall because most would use wattle and daub and similar methods of building a frame and fill the frame with different materials.
      Tho of course this may varies depending on the place.

    • @Moribax85
      @Moribax85 Před rokem +6

      Well, to be fair London was razed twice by fires, but so was Chicago. The difference is that the brits learned from it.

    • @SantaMuerte1813
      @SantaMuerte1813 Před rokem +3

      @@Moribax85 And to be frank, most European traditional "wooden houses" aren't just coating mounted on frames, but frames filled with clay or similarly subtantial materials. So even those are solid walls.

  • @sdmayday
    @sdmayday Před 11 měsíci +16

    One thing I always wondered about is, if you really wanted to, could you build a house made out of stone in the US? Would you be allowed to simply build it or would you have to jump through a number of hoops for legal reasons? Are there workers and engineers who know how to do it and is it possible to find materials (bricks, insulation etc.) at reasonal prices?

    • @hoshyro
      @hoshyro Před 10 měsíci +1

      Talked to a US guy who works with buildings a while back and apparently concrete is stupidly expensive to use in construction over there in the States

    • @pikachuchujelly7628
      @pikachuchujelly7628 Před 10 měsíci

      Yes, there are stone houses in the US, though not very common. Some houses are partially built from stone (as a façade) with the rest being wood.

    • @andrayellowpenguin
      @andrayellowpenguin Před 7 měsíci +3

      I know of a family who moved over from Europe and wanted to build their home like we do over here. They did it, but it was very expensive and they had to pretty much run the whole thing themselves. Not sure if it was being control freaks or if they just felt they couldn't trust the builders were experienced enough with the materials, especially since they were so much more expensive

    • @sdmayday
      @sdmayday Před 7 měsíci

      @@andrayellowpenguin Thank you for your comment! So it is doable, but not likely cheap or easy to do.

    • @etienne8110
      @etienne8110 Před 4 měsíci

      Main issue wouldn t be the materials. It would be the workers.
      Finding an architect would be easy enough (an european one working from overseas is doable). But workers knowing how to lay bricks, move heavy stones, build a support wall, check heavy maconnery etc... That will be hard.
      You ll have to rely on a team of workers from overseas, and that is what will cost the most...

  • @kukenballenvegavalle
    @kukenballenvegavalle Před 11 měsíci +3

    I (euro) visited my wife's expat, grandfather in southern California a couple years back and noticed that the tiles in the bathroom were loose in the flooring. I just figured that it wasn't caulked correctly or something so I lifted the tile to go show him and saw that no sealing layer was below the tiling. The tiles were coming loose because the bare wood flooring below the tiles was expanding due to exposure to moisture. I told him right away to call the contractor that did the bathroom renovation to demand compensatory damages. He told me he cheaped out on the "option" to add a sealing layer and the insurance won't cover damages, so he's been procrastinating paying up for it.

    • @asatrv
      @asatrv Před 2 měsíci

      This blew my mind. So you pay for a new bathroom that becomes disgusting and imho unusable in less than a year? Why would you do that. I always thought the 'muricans had their economical thinking straight.

    • @DontUputThatEvilOnMe
      @DontUputThatEvilOnMe Před měsícem

      @@asatrv I’m sure there a Europeans that cheap out on crap too. Not everyone has a bunch of money laying around all the time.

  • @GabrielFerCav
    @GabrielFerCav Před rokem +102

    Here in Brazil almost every house is made of brick and cement. When I was a kid I couldn't wrap my head around how people in movies could punch holes in walls - didn't know the concept of drywall, thought houses were made of bricks everywhere.

    • @therealnancybee710
      @therealnancybee710 Před 11 měsíci

      Are the inside walls also made of brick?

    • @ejokurirulezz
      @ejokurirulezz Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@therealnancybee710 idk about Brazil, but in Greece, yes, even the inside walls are made of bricks, if not, it's piled up boulder or stone, but that's more expensive since it's also natural insultation, but besides that, the outer walls have thermal insultation and sound proofing (modern houses at least) in both the inner and the outer side.

  • @sortiztube
    @sortiztube Před rokem +188

    In southern Europe there are no wooden houses. Wooden houses are not proper homes, wooden houses are cottages/cabins.

    • @MrProthall
      @MrProthall Před rokem +10

      Sure, unless you build a proper house out of logs. There are enough mansions like that.

    • @fillehh9328
      @fillehh9328 Před rokem +17

      I live in Sweden, here 95% of all houses are made of wood.

    • @eliasgamper3313
      @eliasgamper3313 Před rokem +17

      It’s possible to make Houses out off wood more sturdy then any other material. In the Alps we have Houses, cottages. . . hundreds of years old.

    • @antoniodasilva1230
      @antoniodasilva1230 Před rokem +6

      ​@@MrProthall ill take my cement and stone house over your log house any day basically my place is still solid and its seventy five year's old and will still be around for over another hundred our two and yes i hace central heat radian floors ect.ect 😂😂😂

    • @erik....
      @erik.... Před rokem +6

      Wooden houses are not actually made out of only wood. Modern wooden houses often have double layers of drywall on each wall which makes them very stiff, soundproof, fire resistant and the core of the walls is very well insulating. And for the ground floor, of course it has floor heating and is made out of concrete.

  • @MarkLangdahl
    @MarkLangdahl Před 11 měsíci +4

    On using wood for house building we actually do that a lot in Europe too. The frame is almost always made of wood. But the outer walls are typically bricks in most countries. In places with large amounts of timber close by like the Swedish and Norwegian forests you also still see a lot of wooden houses. When it comes to the energy cost the major difference I think is better insulation of the houses. We still do have some houses with bad insulation here in Denmark. But you can get cheap loans from the banks for fixing that because basically the investment to put in a layer of isolating material like Rockwool is recovered by the energy savings within five years of investment. In the worst cases even less than that. If your energy bills are significantly lower than the $340/month mentioned in the video the insulation could be why. If your house is from the 1920's it's from before balloon framing became widespread. So it's probably just built of thicker wood which leads to better insulation.

  • @BlackAcePlays
    @BlackAcePlays Před 8 měsíci +2

    My aunts farmhouse here in Austria is ~300 years old, made of wood, except for the basement which has a 4ft natural stone wall, and still is mostly original. They only replaced the windows with energy saving ones and renewed the sealant between the gaps of the woodwork. I am curious how the US cardboard houses look after that time. 😅

  • @suzanneroberts855
    @suzanneroberts855 Před rokem +40

    Trees can’t be the only reason that wooden homes aren’t as common in Europe. I live in an old house. The original section built in 1580 was built of stone. It was doubled in size in the 1700’s out of hand made bricks and we doubled the whole building again about 12 years ago from new bricks but my point is that we have large ancient woodland very close which wasn’t used for the bulk of any of the builds and believe me, the people that have lived here have never been wealthy it’s wasn’t about money.

  • @zoebunnyx
    @zoebunnyx Před rokem +132

    My house was built in 1750 and the large supporting beams in the main downstairs rooms were salvaged from an old Ship so they could be another 50+ years old. This house is built to last and should survive another few hundred years easily 😂 They certainly don't build them like they used to.

    • @khadajhina270
      @khadajhina270 Před rokem +10

      MOVE OUT! i claim this place as my own. I always wanted a pirate fortress! x3

    • @tenniskinsella7768
      @tenniskinsella7768 Před rokem

      Zoebunny to be fair lot of new builds get criticised for their workmanship in Britain

  • @kowalskastudio
    @kowalskastudio Před 10 měsíci +2

    In Poland we have lots of woods, it's almost 30% (29,6 in 2021) of the country, and we export wood a lot. However, houses are a mixture of wood, brick and concrete, to make them last as long as they can and be persistent to nature in all forms. Wooden is mostly roof construction, and walls and fundaments are made of bricks, metal, concrete and plaster. More village houses or small town ones used to be made entirely of wood. We consider it regional now. But they were made with logs and half logs, it had to be very persistent as well and stays for decades. Village ones don't last this long, but this is still something like 50-60 years or so (more or less) before they get into complete ruin, depending on whether people live there or not, and if yes it can go way longer. For me, the tale of the houses always reminds me of one of the three little pigs.
    Regarding forests, it is always in the mind of a Polish person to take care of trees and forests, and when some politicians are trying to lower the safety margin protecting forests against overcutting, or there is a danger of building a road inside of the natural habitat there is always very loud resistance. We care even for single trees, especially when they are very old, we call them the monuments of nature. So this is not a case of getting rid of all the trees we used to have :). It's just stupid to cut down this many trees when you can use literal clay lying in the ground. It's also a difference in the scale of countries' sizes. We think in a smaller scale in Europe, less ground per country to maintain, so you mind it more. Although, unfortunately, some regulations are threatening forests, woods have to be protected against human greed.

  • @styrelsefksu4463
    @styrelsefksu4463 Před 7 měsíci +1

    Here in northern sweden most older houses are made from timber logs and in the 1800s it became popular to paint them red There are a couple of reasons for this
    The red paint (Falu Röd färg) was a biproduct from the copper mining industy and wealthy farmers wanted their timber houses to resemble mamsions made out of bricks and it was a way to preserve the timber
    it spread and the red paint with white corners and white window frame became the norm
    more modern and sometimes a room that was not timbered was added on to the house people also started to put a layer of planks on the outside of the timber to make the houses look the same after they added the room
    The house I grew up in was bought by my grandfather in the 1950s. The house had two original rooms from the 1850s those where the kitchen and a bedroom chaimber that was the original timber part the chaimber also had a round brick fire place owen thing that would heat up the house really well all night and would still be warm in the morning (kakelugn in swedish)
    Later on the living room was added and then the hallway/bathroom/staircase was added as well
    the upper floors roof was raised and made into an apartment in the late 1960s early 1970s while my grandfather lived downstairs me my sister and our parents lived upstairs
    my parents took over the house when my grandfather passed away in 1977 and the apartment was removed as we did not need an extra kitchen anymore the kitchen and living room was renovated with new windows a new fireplace was built by my uncle to replace the old one but it had the same chimney as the Kakelugn in the chamber
    the upstairs living room became my older sisters room and the old kitchen became my room and when I moved it became an office/ guestroom
    one of the other upstairs rooms became a washroom with washing machines and dryer
    the house was sold in 2015 to a new owner
    a house can be a good investment but it requires time money and knowledge to keep it in good condition, older generations had much more knowledge about how to build and do things then we have today
    if my father wanted to build or renovate something he went out to the outhouse and figured it out by himself
    the same with my uncle who built the firewall
    he took apart an old timber house by himself, moved the frame and then rebuild it from scratch to make it into a summer house
    no CZcams and no Google only common sense knowledge passed down from generation to generation

  • @The_Panther
    @The_Panther Před rokem +32

    Europe is located in the interior of the Eurasian Plate, which is surrounded by other plates such as the African Plate, Arabian Plate, and Anatolian Plate. These plate boundaries are characterized by relatively low seismic activity compared to plate boundaries where subduction or significant plate interactions occur, such as the Pacific Ring of Fire.

    • @CherubicLynx
      @CherubicLynx Před 11 měsíci +3

      We do have earthquakes sometimes (Austria-Switzerland border), strong enough so you can feel them and sometimes your stuff rattles. Also i've seen avalanches following those little quakes. But certainly nothing that destroys houses or streets like in other parts of the world.

    • @miriam7779
      @miriam7779 Před 10 měsíci

      Maybe Eurasian plates don't quake that often, but in terms of intensity .. countries that sit right on the plate can tell otherwise.

  • @thoso1973
    @thoso1973 Před rokem +52

    Practically all brick buildings constructed in Northern Europe, have thick insulation between two brick or concrete walls. It keeps the building energy effective especially during the winter. Also, some European nations only allow clean water to enter buildings via the plumbing - 100% drinking water quality whether it comes out of your tap or flushed out in the toilet.

    • @not_even_known_yet3167
      @not_even_known_yet3167 Před rokem +6

      Some? I thought it was standard in at least Western Europe?

    • @haribo836
      @haribo836 Před rokem +3

      A method used in the German speaking corner (Germany, Austria, Switzerland) is actually just one inner wall of brick or concrete, than a thick padding of insulation on the outside, which is then covered with thick plaster. It gives that characteristic style where the windows are recessed, while they rest on the inner wall, where with a double wall, they are flush with the outer wall.

    • @terranaxiomuk
      @terranaxiomuk Před rokem

      ​@KurtFrederiksen We have water treatment centres. They didn't stop running because of brexit. I'm not too sure what memes you are getting your information from.

  • @fgh-wy9sg
    @fgh-wy9sg Před 11 měsíci +1

    I live 8n west Germany and we have tornados yearly, usually not too bad, but every 3 to 7 years they rip forests appart and the cities issues warnings that roof tiles might be falling off. That storm was the same strength that ripped apart whole neighborhoods in the US the year prior. And from research, I can say that our inner walls are way thicker than the typical outer walls in us houses

  • @laughingjackaso8163
    @laughingjackaso8163 Před 5 měsíci

    as an aussie that lives in a brick veneer house, and from hearing it mentioned somewhere before, it comes down to building codes. having said that, most 'newer' homes over here are going the way of cheap and thin. many new house frames over here are now being built using steel framing instead of timber

  • @tomkirkemo5241
    @tomkirkemo5241 Před rokem +40

    What IS fascinating is, I'm in Norway. On the smal farm I live we still have 4 large buildings built in the 1640's...still standing. And for the 12 years we lived here we haven't had to do one single repair on them. They are made from whole timber though.

    • @avmavm777
      @avmavm777 Před rokem +1

      I wonder if the climate there helps wood last longer - colder temperatures? Also I think Norway is less densely populated than many other European countries so fires couldn’t spread as quickly, so there was less risk of losing them - especially on a farm

    • @Roel_Scoot
      @Roel_Scoot Před rokem +4

      The keyword here is WHOLE timber as in a log cabin.

    • @Lubben
      @Lubben Před rokem

      Same with my family house. It's built in 1620 and still standing. The house itself have been expanded a lot since then. But the logs from when it was built is still 100% intact.

    • @Lubben
      @Lubben Před rokem

      @@avmavm777 Our capital Oslo was rebuilt every 25 years due to fire.

  • @michuXYZ
    @michuXYZ Před rokem +12

    "My wife is texting me, i thought i blocked her" killed me 😂😂 hope she's not going to see this video

  • @autarchprinceps
    @autarchprinceps Před 11 měsíci +2

    Earthquakes are comparatively rare in Europe and mostly limited to the south and south east. Tornados and high intensity storms though aren't uncommon, at least in central Europe. Coast see more sea storms and spring floods. What we don't get are hurricanes, because they move from the water they form over generally eastwards, not westwards, so we don't really have an ocean they could form over and hit us.
    As for building quality, there are big differences in Europe as well. For example my walls are 1.4m thick and constructed from steel reinforced concrete, aerated concrete, stone wool and red bricks in layers, but that doesn't mean there aren't much thinner constructions in other places, and isolating against sound is about more than thick or sturdy construction, it's also about detaching the different elements from swinging together. A single hard construct will just act as a sound conduit, especially for sounds like steps, less so talking perhaps. Also you need good windows as well, sealing properly, and with triple or quadrupel glasing insulated by filling it with low transfer nobel gas. That latter part of course also goes for insulation. Nothing worse than to build a well insulated house, but leave one place much less well insulated. It will serve as a single spot to condensate much of the humidity and easily mold, as well as transfer the heat out.
    Another reason we don't typically have air conditioning, is that we don't have air based heating either, we have water based heating. I assume that makes it a lot harder to be double purpose with the cooling, but it serves better to be double purpose with showering/washing, so we don't have separate boilers, or at least we in Germany don't, quite common in the UK still. As I said, very different across Europe as well, not just Europe vs America.

  • @schneejaeger
    @schneejaeger Před 11 měsíci +1

    My grandma's house is a 150 year's old and it has outer walls a meter or 3,33 foot thick and it's made of massif granit bricks. It's inner walls are 1 fott thick. That could take a schell from a tank.

  • @nespolinho
    @nespolinho Před rokem +18

    I'm from Italy.
    My house is a stone building from 1420.
    Not even the oldest in the road where i live.
    And when we build wood house they are actually more expensive then brick, cause they are made properly and last for a very long time.

  • @willewiking98
    @willewiking98 Před rokem +32

    we have a lot of wooden houses in northern europe too, they are just built VERY differently to american houses

  • @Orlof11
    @Orlof11 Před 10 měsíci

    I think the estimate of 340/month or 4000/year is viable because you have to combine electric and oil/gas/wood bill over a year (heating=burning cooling=electricity). But the same goes for woodhouses like the ones in northamerica who are made out of logs. It depends on your insulation.

  • @Helawutz
    @Helawutz Před 10 měsíci

    6:54 - The reason for that might be, that stone is better in keeping the heat outside. (insulating)
    Thats also a reason why we usually dont have ACs on our houses.
    In my Bedroom i barely get over 18 °c (64,4°F) when its 30 °C(86 °F) outside.

  • @AshtonishingJelly
    @AshtonishingJelly Před rokem +67

    I remember watching the show where they make over houses for people, and my husband being a carpenter kind of being in shock at how they build it! To us it kind of looks like cardboard walls on a fragile tree sceleton 😂😂😁

  • @almanoor-bakker5964
    @almanoor-bakker5964 Před rokem +78

    Places like Scandinavia have lots of wood built houses too... They are sturdy built and can be 100s of years old.

    • @StevenQ74
      @StevenQ74 Před rokem +3

      But Scandinavia has no earthquakes and hurricanes

    • @theoteddy9665
      @theoteddy9665 Před rokem +20

      skandinavia use logs, USA use planks.. totaly different houses

    • @erik....
      @erik.... Před rokem +11

      @@theoteddy9665 no, we use regular sawn timber, say 220x45 maybe for framing the outer walls, and 70x45 for interior walls. But usually a thicker layer of plywood/OSB and plasterboard on the inside than I've seen used in the US. That makes all the difference for sound transmission and fire resistance.

    • @thetoyodacar2264
      @thetoyodacar2264 Před rokem +1

      We use wood too but we also do not have tornadoes to worry about lol

    • @AudunWangen
      @AudunWangen Před rokem +13

      ​@@StevenQ74 We have a harsh climate, though. Heavy rain and moist, hot summers, winters with snow, ice and cold, and on the coast, strong winds.
      Most countries don't have to account for a 60-70°C temperature difference when building houses, but we do. We have to build in a way that makes it possible for materials to expand and contract, and that's also a reason why brick and mortar with any significant amount of humidity in it is usually not the best option. Dry, impregnated wood works better, and some old cabins with wood impregnated with tar last for hundreds of years as long as it has a working roof.

  • @pepita2437
    @pepita2437 Před 10 měsíci

    There are a lots of forests remained, mostly in Eastern Europe. As I mentioned most of the Carpathian mountains are covered with dense forests. Where I live, if you look around, the you can't see the end of the forests in certain places.(just visit Harghita, and Făgăraș Mountains, and you'll see what I mean)
    Despite this, forests are very protected, and even if it was allowed to chop trees, we would still use bricks, and stone to build.
    As it was said in the video, you can save money regarding heating and cooling that way. Esp in the mountains the temperature change can be brutal. For ex, Liban in the mountains of Harghita is a place I often visit. In the Summer, the temperature can be between 27-30 Celsius, and 1-5 Celsius. Stone/ brick houses retain heat during the night, but it's cool during the day.
    Also they can bear the insane amount of snow that gathers on top of it during the winter. Also the temperature in winter is very low too, it's between -10 and -30 Celsius. Stone wall keeps the heat in very well.

  • @lucathenovak
    @lucathenovak Před rokem +88

    Dude tree houses in Europe are twice as strong as your house. My father with my grandfather made a tree house for us children and around 10 years down the road when we got older and left he decided to keep it because it was very sturdy with a good size so he transformed it into a smaller regular house with some minimal modifications. BTW there are some crazy storms in the mountain village where they are and that little house never had a problem in about 7-8 years after the transformation.

  • @RealConstructor
    @RealConstructor Před rokem +26

    In The Netherlands we used to build houses in wood until the city fires which destroyed many houses. Also our houses needed to be built on wooden stilts/piling and foundations (otherwise they would sink in the moor and peat grounds) and the coal mines needed to be reinforced by wooden studs. All the wood that was left in our country was used for piling, window frames, wooden floors and mine studs. What felt short was imported from Scandinavia and the Baltics. On the other hand we had a lot of rivers bringing free clay, so brick was used for foundations and house facades more and more. And after concrete was invented, floors and foundations were made of (reinforced) concrete. With pvc and aluminium window frames, the wood is fading out of new houses. Sometimes the inner wall of the cavity walls are a prefabricated timber frame with window frames and all. The outer wall (facade) is still in brick. So the row houses (the most common form of housing in our country) are, what we call wind and water proof. Which means the finishing works (inner walls, door frames, stucco, tiling, installations, painting) inside are done in climatized conditions. The pitched roof construction is still in wood with ceramic or concrete roof tiles. To make the roof storm resistant, the roof tiles can be screwed (more expensive) instead of loosely laid.

  • @mdesmet9111
    @mdesmet9111 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Europe hardly ever gets hurricanes and if they get one, it's usually a very weak, local one. Hurricanes normally form above the ocean, where the water temperature is over 26°C, which is very rarely the case in the Northern Atlantic. Only the East Pacific and the Tropical Atlantic regularly surpass this threshold. As for earthquakes, we do get some in Southern Europe, but very rarely in Western or Northern Europe. Just look up a map with the tectonic plates and it'll all be clearer.

  • @goblinslayer310
    @goblinslayer310 Před 11 měsíci

    the energy bill: depends on where you live, do you live in florida, for example?

  • @sundflux
    @sundflux Před rokem +92

    As a Finnish, I found this very interesting too, I always wondered how the heck those American houses always fly away with tornadoes =D No windpower can rip off sturdy brick house off the ground. And we have very harsh winters, we have to build them extremely well insulated to keep nice +20 C inside at winter when it can be -20 C (that would be -4 F for you). And they're built to last (mostly, minus post-war houses which were supposed to be temporary, but still standing and people fix them).

    • @theshrikeer
      @theshrikeer Před 10 měsíci +3

      You're very much underestimating the power of the tornados here

    • @antoniajuel9582
      @antoniajuel9582 Před 9 měsíci +5

      Tornadoes are a force of nature. They will rip apart even concrete houses. They will literally suck you out of a basement if the door isn't, like, a metal safety door with a barring mechanism.
      That said, most of the houses torn down by hurricanes in Florida would still stand if they were built with European methods.

    • @martinpoulsen6564
      @martinpoulsen6564 Před 8 měsíci

      ​@@antoniajuel9582 ...or just built to same code as in quake areas, like on the west coast.

  • @ehmzed
    @ehmzed Před rokem +32

    I live in Italy and I've always seen wooden houses in American home-building TV shows and never questioned them, until just a few days ago when I saw a comment on the internet about houses being made of wood, and I was like "wait a damn minute, your houses are made of wood?? Mine sure isn't?? Nor are any houses around me". The only wooden houses I see are the ones in mountainous regions.
    Edit: I'm stupid, where I live most roofs actually have wooden beams lol. But yeah the rest is made of bricks

    • @eliasgamper3313
      @eliasgamper3313 Před rokem +1

      In the north of Italy there are many houses built out of wood.

    • @lillm6874
      @lillm6874 Před rokem +4

      There’s nothing wrong with houses built of wood, it’s more the way they’re built 😊
      In Norway most houses are built of wood, and they are much more steady than American homes 👍
      You can buy wood houses/log houses from the 17 - 18th century that are better than houses built today😊

    • @fabiosoares7660
      @fabiosoares7660 Před rokem +1

      Here in Portugal (Southern Europe) is very rare to find wood houses and stone houses you will just find them in rural areas or in countryside.
      Also When I was studying, my English teachers all said the same thing, that American houses are made of wood because of earthquakes, wood is a lighter material compared to brick and stone, so the chance for people to survive to the earthquake is bigger. Here in Portugal, about 5 years ago, prefabricated houses started to be made, but in my point of view and in the point of view of many people, prefabricated houses are more expensive than buying land and building your own house made of brick.

    • @ajc5479
      @ajc5479 Před rokem +3

      @@lillm6874 Here in Ireland we have masonry built houses that are crumbling after a few years. Yes it is certainly how they are built.
      If you go cheap and cut corners, expect bad results.

    • @ehmzed
      @ehmzed Před rokem

      @@eliasgamper3313 I know, I always see them in South Tyrol, they're so pretty, but I assumed it had more to do with being in the mountains where there's an abundance of wood. Also, I'm stupid, because come to think of it, where I live most roofs actually have wooden beams lol

  • @esarge66
    @esarge66 Před 7 měsíci

    Here in zone 4 (sort of right through the middle of the US) city codes require 2x6 walls with R-19 and R-30 insulation in the ceiling. The sheathing for new construction is usually OSB with a water resistant coating. The climate here is actually pretty demanding, as the humidity is very high, it gets dangerously hot in the summer for a month or so, and it gets moderately cold in the winter. The philosophy is that the building is dried from the inside (by your hvac). Drywall, like it or not, is an efficient interior surface. As a basic system, stick framing has a couple of key advantages: it is versatile, fast, and can be done competently with little training (most guys have learned on the job). The other thing I would say is that these building techniques, combined with modern windows and doors, end up with a very tight, efficient building envelope, so much so that you may be required to install a system to provide fresh air inlet to keep from asphyxiating yourself. A house like this will keep itself at the perfect temperature and humidity year round for not too much money. Compare this to the notoriously miserable experience of a drafty, moldy old masonry house in the UK or NZ (especially with climate change pushing the extremes).
    Now that's all I have good to say about these crummy houses! Due to giant SUV loving, wannabe plantation owner American vanity, the currently trendy designs have ridiculously complicated roofs, sprawling layouts, useless ostentatious features. I think the world is ready for much better concepts of what a dwelling is, neither the old labor intensive gravity challenged masonry fortress, nor the flimsy high tech system of boxes. I would like to see a fusion of strong bones and modern materials with efficiency throughout.

  • @DerBjjjg
    @DerBjjjg Před 10 měsíci +1

    He says his house was build in the 1920s but wood frame houses only boomed since the 40s. He could very well live in a house that isn't built with wooden frames.

  • @leii1306
    @leii1306 Před rokem +47

    Here in Poland, we sometimes have tornados. They are rare but happen because of climate change. And what is different than in US, our houses are usually brick/stone, and if a tornado destroys something then it's a roof. The wind can take a roof but not the whole house - in comparison to US where houses are destroyed to the ground.
    And about reasons why we don't build wooden houses more often. Maybe it's because of lack of wood but in my opinion it's also mentality. Wooden houses are considered like something temporary and cheap, you can have a wooden hut in a wood for holidays, but the home for the whole family? In my opinion they will need to be much cheaper than the normal ones for people to buy them.

    • @fabiosoares7660
      @fabiosoares7660 Před rokem

      The last tornado that I remember, it was 10 years ago , now I have 20

    • @Lillireify
      @Lillireify Před rokem +3

      Yeah but you can't compare american's 1200 tornadoes per year with strength up to F5 category with our 5 per year with F2 category TOPS and write "oo we have brick houses, they last" - seriously, it's plain stupid. For half of the US territory building something that lasts is asking yourself for financial trouble.

    • @xsardas1999
      @xsardas1999 Před rokem +1

      We had tornado nearby like 3 yrs ago. It was like mentioned not that big bu it still destroyed a lot of buildings. None was torn apart, but after roofs and trees, some bricks also went flying i saw some attic were leveled to the floor/ceiling . And if roof is not present in the storm it doesn't end well. Most of these homes were soked with rain meaning they had to get some serious rework of the walls if they didn't want cracks and mold in them. We don't have any earthquakes and part of Poland that do have them (Silesia) often have serious problem with walls cracking or foundations losing stability over time.
      If someone wanted to prepare their home from huracanes, they wuld have basicly live in a bunker, our brick houses don't stand a chance

    • @RandomescStuff
      @RandomescStuff Před rokem +2

      Actually, "tornadoes happening due to climate change" is a common myth. It (the climate change) has its influence on tornadoes' strength, ect., however, we have historical records of strong tornadoes dating all the way back to 1600s and further (e.g. the Lublin 1931 F4, Rawa Mazowiecka 1958 F3, Oleśnica 1535 F4, ect.). Poland has up to 30+ tornadoes a year, and they should be taken seriously. The reasons why it seems as if we're getting barely more than 5 tornadoes per year are that:
      1) most Polish tornadoes are weak, and usually only 1 or 2 (if any) are rated F2 annually. The last F3 tornado in Poland occurred almost 11 years ago.
      2) they go underreported in the mainstream, as the coverage they get on major news sites and in news papers often is just small, not well informed articles that most people simply glaze over, thinking "oh, that's scary" or something similar, and then move on, forgetting that it happened at all in about a week. You won't get much information about a certain event unless you're specifically looking for it.
      If you're interested in researching more about Polish tornadoes (and European tornadoes in general), ESWD is a pretty good starting point. Also, and I'm saying this just for the sake of safety, even if most tornadoes here are weak, they still can be deadly, as shown by e.g. the Kraków February 17, 2022 tornado, which killed 2 people and injured 2 others.

    • @Glorious_Kim_Jong_Un
      @Glorious_Kim_Jong_Un Před 10 měsíci

      Rare
      Tornadoes are common in some US states. If you think a Polish wood house could withstand the strongest tornadoes the US gets, it just shows how little you really know of tornadoes. They can destroy brick homes too and even roads.

  • @helgewitt2837
    @helgewitt2837 Před rokem +41

    as they say, wood is NOT necessarily a bad construction method. I am carpenter and civil engineer.
    The use of wood does not make a house flimsy. I live in a combination of both methods. The inner load carrying structure of my house is wood framing as well. Only the outer shell is made of bricks to withstand the influence of water (rain) and wind much better. BUT we use much thicker inner frame walls with bigger sections and with much more insulation. My house e.g. has 260mm insulation in the walls and even 300mm in the roof. The windows are made of Triple insulation glazing. yes, 3 glass panels with air inbetween. I can literally heat my home with some candles.😂
    The outer walls are nearly 50cm thick overall. in comparison, many walls of american homes are about 10cm (4inch) in thickness and very often only single glazing is used. THAT makes them flimsy in my opinion.

    • @ElwoodEBlues
      @ElwoodEBlues Před 11 měsíci +4

      The thin walls and single-pane windows are probably the cause of the high energy consumption of American homes.
      To my knowledge, an American home uses about 11,000 kilowatt hours yearly, while German single-family houses uses between 4 and 5,000. One reason it's probably the intense use of air conditioning which would be much more effective if the houses were insulated better.

    • @xristoskoumpourlis1614
      @xristoskoumpourlis1614 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@ElwoodEBlues yeahh, the difference good insulation does is huuuuge

  • @TheBestGames974
    @TheBestGames974 Před 5 měsíci

    I currently live in a log house that was built over 120 years ago. My grandfathers sister used to live here also and this house was built for my grandfathers sisters' mother. It is really sturdy and all the fireplaces etc are in good condition even though the house was empty for 20 years before me moving in. So in europe we defenetly also have many wooden houses, mostly log houses and they are still standing strong.

  • @millenialmusings8451
    @millenialmusings8451 Před 10 měsíci +1

    In india almost all houses are exclusively made of bricks and cement. When I came to US I was shocked to see how flimsy houses here are. Wooden finishing is also inferior to concrete and steel. I wanted to buy a house here but just doesn't make any sense. It's a shame.

  • @tapiredanslombre9588
    @tapiredanslombre9588 Před rokem +39

    In France,
    we have more sort of steamrollers than tornadoes( as in 1999 for the most violent) , although since the beginning of the 2000s the number of tornadoes has been increasing in frequency and strength little by little, for the moment it is still easily manageable nothing comparable with the U.S.A., or japan
    when it comes to building more in stone than in wood, it was in the Middle Ages and still is, for fire safety issues among others and because stones are more resistant to projectiles launched from catapults and other siege weapons including incendiary projectiles, but also that the wood was used to make frames, boats and siege weapons,
    summing up greatly

  • @Mosern1977
    @Mosern1977 Před rokem +16

    Norway here - and we build wooden houses mostly.
    Having watched some US construction videos, they are similar, but ours are thicker (to allow more more insulation). US houses looks a bit more like how we build garages and similar things.
    Of course most people doesn't move around as much, so the houses are normally well maintained. Adding to the Norwegian climate that lends itself to staying indoors large parts of the year, most people spend a lot of time and money on home improvements.

    • @layziek2137
      @layziek2137 Před rokem

      And we don't have much tornadoes or earthquakes here either 😁

  • @FloatingWhales
    @FloatingWhales Před 8 měsíci +1

    I have been living in Denmark and Finland, in multiple apartments and row houses, and I recently moved to a different town to study, it was the first time I came across drywall as a divider to the bedroom. As hilarious as I found this, it also gives me a ton of stress, it is so flimsy that I am afraid that I'll break it by accident...

  • @alessandromancuso7242
    @alessandromancuso7242 Před rokem +1

    Just to be clear:
    In Usa about 30% of landmass is forest, in Europe 37,7%... and Europe has more then double the population of Usa... So it is not a lack of wood problem, it's that we care about our flora and fauna...

  • @cipix37
    @cipix37 Před rokem +75

    I am from Europe, I was taught at school that all countries that face frequent natural disasters tend to make houses out of wood.
    It makes sense, since they are much cheaper to rebuilt.
    In case of brick houses, they wouldn't be completely wiped by a disaster, but they might just get damaged enough to be rendered unsafe, or have some irreparable cracks in the walls.

    • @jarivuorinen3878
      @jarivuorinen3878 Před rokem +5

      Some wood construction is actually pretty earthquake-resistant, more so than stone or concrete structures. It can flex when designed right, and it can be pre-tensioned. Stone or concrete building usually also needs sturdier foundation. But as with everything, there's a bias when you look at old houses and how they've endured the elements, because bad construction has been destroyed and dismantled and usually rebuild already. All the old buildings you see in any country MUST be of good construction and well maintained, otherwise it wouldn't be there for you to see :)

    • @nookiedrivein6153
      @nookiedrivein6153 Před rokem +3

      Well I am from EU as well, but I think why USA used lot of wooden houses is because back in the day they had lot of empty land and there was influx of immigrants (during WW2 and after WW2), so they had to make big number of houses fast, so they used wooden "montage" houses to quickly set them up.
      In Europe, houses were mostly made out of bricks, sometimes stone blocks. Also lot of houses are quite old and several generations lived in such houses.

    • @matsv201
      @matsv201 Před 11 měsíci

      It's really the other way around.
      If you have a week house, you will face a lot of disasters.
      Whe did you last hear about a guy in a field that died.of a earthquake..never. because its the house that will kill you.
      It's the bad buildings that are the disaster.
      Not to say that Europe.
      Specially Germany is immune. Building loads.of buildings on flood plains, and get flooded.
      Natural disasters really don't exist. It's code is not up to nature disaster.

    • @charlesrodriguez7984
      @charlesrodriguez7984 Před 6 měsíci

      @@nookiedrivein6153and homes here often last up to 100 years. People often say they last 30 years but I’ve seen a neighborhood of houses older than that in the USA.

  • @Dukenukem
    @Dukenukem Před rokem +18

    you need geological features to make a tornado, thats why the region is called tornado "walley". Same goes for earthquakes, you need tectonic plate interaction. We do have very limited earthquakes as the plate itself is pretty large and the most violent earthquakes are on the southers edge (greece, turkey, ect...). Tornadoes are starting to appear due to more temperature swings, with more energy the wind does not need so specific features to form.

    • @xristoskoumpourlis1614
      @xristoskoumpourlis1614 Před 11 měsíci

      i have seen mini tornadoes in greece but it was away of land at sea and very small ones

    • @haravassiloglou5679
      @haravassiloglou5679 Před 10 měsíci

      Turkey is not in Europe, try Italy. next time

    • @H4PPY_23
      @H4PPY_23 Před 10 měsíci +1

      ​@@haravassiloglou5679why do you say it's not? Just look at the map of Europe

    • @Sway22
      @Sway22 Před 10 měsíci

      @@haravassiloglou5679 it is tho.

  • @blanestevens3229
    @blanestevens3229 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Wood was used to build fleets of ships in the 1500/1600 centuries which allowed the European nations to rule the world. Hense no forest's left to build house's out of wood.

  • @TheJHA67
    @TheJHA67 Před měsícem

    In Norway we also use wood to build houses.. But 4x2 is only used in internal walls.. 2x6 plus 2x4 is used in external walls, this is done so that there will not be a bridge for cold or heat to penetrate the wall. .and all walls are insulated.. internal walls and external walls with windproofing in external walls.. 30 cm (11 13/16 in) with external panel and internal cladding, such external walls are common today. same with the roofs which are thickly insulated. So the kid can almost play football on the 2nd floor without being heard down to the 1st floor :)

  • @huldradraco
    @huldradraco Před rokem +11

    Most of the houses in Norway are made of wood. They're sturdy and built to last, many are hundreds of years old

  • @drstefankrank
    @drstefankrank Před rokem +26

    I can just compare my German wooden house with an American one. It's the thickness of the studs, the amount of insulation in and outside the house. It's just way more massive, but also more expensive. For example the inside drywalls are backed with thick particle board. This gives a huge amount of strength. They are full of mineral wool for sound dampening. Our windows and doors are all double seamed to be air tight. The list goes on and on.

  • @TallisKeeton
    @TallisKeeton Před 11 měsíci

    Wait, I dont understand, I know that when living in one building with many flats the sounds can be irritating but this can not be the same with separate buildings standing some meters from each other, right? :)

  • @TheArtanis7
    @TheArtanis7 Před 11 měsíci

    For heating question - actually wood is better insulator than brick. But it is the question of thickness and aditional insulation materials like styropor or stone wool. I now sit in brick house and outside is hot and in house is quite cold and i dont have AC. But also in winter is cold.

  • @ashnacestach
    @ashnacestach Před rokem +31

    Thanks for the great video reaction! In Europe, the type of housing can vary greatly depending on the country. For example, here in the Czech Republic, our history has been quite diverse. From ancient times, we used stone (mostly for sacred buildings and castles) as well as wooden huts and log cabins. The climate also played a role, as we needed homes that provided good insulation against the cold in winter and prevented heat from entering during the summer. Therefore, even though wood was commonly used, it was often combined with masonry to ensure proper insulation for at least parts of the house using materials like clay or bricks. We lost a significant amount of forests during the Middle Ages, mainly due to clearing land for agriculture. From the Baroque period onwards, stone and brick constructions became more prevalent. In recent times, concrete has been widely used for its faster construction. However, if you cross the border to Slovakia, you will see a much greater prevalence of wooden houses. It's truly a very diverse situation.

    • @lianaaida2206
      @lianaaida2206 Před rokem +1

      Pekne vysvetlené 😀 dokonca som sa aj ja niečo nové naučila 😅

    • @asjaosaline5987
      @asjaosaline5987 Před rokem

      IN america, People just get robed. In estonia When person wants a new house, First he Faunds a architect and tells them exactly what he needs, How thick should be walls and what tilt roof should have and also discuss materials to be used. Then he Finds a company who will fulfll contract or build it self with his family. Yes it is more Huzzle for Aquiring building materials but belive me House will be much cheaper. Most costly thing in Estonia House building is Workforce. And ofcouse we have module houses here what have lower quality and they cost more. I Think It would be also true Forr americans if they lets ARchitect Design house on they will and build it self or Hire Company it would be much cheaper and better quality

    • @fabiosoares7660
      @fabiosoares7660 Před rokem +1

      Here in Portugal (Southern Europe) is very rare to find wood houses and stone houses you will just find them in rural areas or in countryside.
      Also When I was studying, my English teachers all said the same thing, that American houses are made of wood because of earthquakes, wood is a lighter material compared to brick and stone, so the chance for people to survive to the earthquake is bigger. Here in Portugal, about 5 years ago, prefabricated houses started to be made, but in my point of view and in the point of view of many people, prefabricated houses are more expensive than buying land and building your own house made of brick.

    • @michellemaine2719
      @michellemaine2719 Před rokem

      @@asjaosaline5987 I know a Czech family who built their house themselves over a period of 25 years. It is beautiful, large and all their own. During that time, they lived in a 1 bedroom flat, which is also still theirs.

  • @loboclaud
    @loboclaud Před rokem +9

    In Portugal there aren't any wooden houses. Houses have to be built of brick and stone.

  • @tfell4782
    @tfell4782 Před 10 měsíci +3

    You're absolutely right how Europe would probably be using more wood if it hadn't already cut all its forests down. You can see this if you look at architecture from 1600's and backwards when a lot more woodland was abundant in Europe. Houses before 1600 tend to incorporate a lot of timber in their structure and we refer to them as "timber framed houses" and they generally make up a huge component of areas of historical districts in towns, villages and cities. These houses are incredibly popular among tourists and often a large part of what makes an historical area in North-Western Europe be seen as "quaint" or "charming". But yeah then we um, ran out of wood. In comes brick. But you can still see examples of timber framed housing in Britain, France, Germany and some limited areas of Denmark and Poland. In the UK the most concentrated areas to see them are places that got rich and thrived from wool trade in the medieval times like Kent, Essex, Sussex, East Anglia and Shropshire.
    I've edited this so many times! But just to add. The reason the timber framing has lasted so many centuries in Europe is likely due to the fact that its from Penduculate Oak which is very slow growing and generally rock solid.

    • @cokeweasel1064
      @cokeweasel1064 Před 6 měsíci

      The whole point of criticizing Americans about their wood houses, is to show you how dumb you are for building like this in a country with multiple natural disasters every year. Are Americans too stupid to understand that hurricanes and tornadoes happen every year, and maybe they should build differently to prevent it from happening again? You guys broadcast your misery everytime it happens, no one feels sorry for you guys because you do fuckall to protect yourselves.

  • @BayushiTawa
    @BayushiTawa Před 9 měsíci

    The town you see at 5:00, is Ronda, in the South of Spain. They have had some earthquackes nearby from time to time.
    Biggest in recent times was in the town of "Lorca" pretty serious...

  • @Sandro_de_Vega
    @Sandro_de_Vega Před rokem +27

    It's always been fun for me. In my country, when there is such a hurricane that the government sends text message warnings to residents to stay at home, the worst thing that can happen is a tree will fall down ... but it doesn't matter. If it falls on a house, there will be minimal damage. Just need to replace a few tiles.
    In the US, a spring breeze can blow away an entire neighborhood.
    The problem is not building with wood. Many places build wooden houses. The problem is that in the US all the walls are built in the style of Japanese interior walls. From toilet paper, rice and unfulfilled dreams.

    • @marydavis5234
      @marydavis5234 Před rokem

      No American houses are built using toilet paper or rice, my house is made with a Brick on the outside and the inside frame is a combination of heavy wood and concrete and I’m from the US.

    • @DNA350ppm
      @DNA350ppm Před rokem

      It might be sensible to buid with light weight materials where earth quakes are common.

    • @friedrichhayek4862
      @friedrichhayek4862 Před rokem

      It matters. You are living in a dictartorship.

    • @hagvisual
      @hagvisual Před rokem +1

      ​@@friedrichhayek4862 dictatorship? where did you get that from? sturdy house that doesn't fall from wind? how is that political ? i think your comment gave me a stroke.

    • @DNA350ppm
      @DNA350ppm Před rokem

      @@KurtFrederiksen True! I don't know if we all agree on Turkey being a European country, but anyway there was suppressed criticism about criminal neglect of the building rules: "The collapse of many newly constructed buildings caused public anger and doubts about the Turkish construction and contracting industry following seismic codes.[524] After the 1999 İzmit earthquake, new building codes were enacted to make buildings more resilient to earthquakes.[525] The quality of the concrete is often a factor in collapse, especially in older buildings, but the engineering and design of newer high rise buildings, and improper placement of support columns and beams, may contribute to collapse.[526] The building codes, last updated in 2018, required quality standards in engineering design, construction and material.[526] There were complaints that the building codes were poorly enforced." This quote is from a comprehensive wiki-article about what happened at the Turkey-Syria border in February this year: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2023_Turkey%E2%80%93Syria_earthquake

  • @chrissampson6861
    @chrissampson6861 Před rokem +10

    One factor not covered is selection effect:
    The thousand year old buildings all over Europe are those buildings built to last a thousand years - whatever the material stone, brick, timber and plaster infill, cobb/adobe - there might have been 10 flimsy wood houses on that plot before but once someone build a really solid house, it's there for centuries.
    Walk through the main streets of somewhere like Winchester and it's a gallery of the best put together buildings from about the last 1200 years and when we see a 200 year old stone building next to a 400 year old timber and plaster one we don't stop to ask what happened to whatever was there before the 200 year old one - assumedly something was because that's prime land in the middle of of a prosperous town.

    • @peterjackson4763
      @peterjackson4763 Před 7 měsíci +1

      The oldest building near me (not counting the ruins of the castle) was probably not built to last a thousand years. It was a cruick built longhouse. Dozens of such houses from before 1600 survive. The one near me is from before 1300. It was occupied and maintained until the 1950s, having been extended in the 17th century.

    • @chrissampson6861
      @chrissampson6861 Před 7 měsíci +1

      ​Clearly it was built to last 700 years (even if not intentionally) because it did.
      I'm not under any delusion that whoever built the cob (clay, dung, straw) house down the road from where I grew up planned for it to last 500 years, but due to luck and the fact they did a good job, it has.
      The selection effect still applies you see the dozens of surviving longhouses, but not all the ones that didn't.

  • @k0k0z
    @k0k0z Před 11 měsíci

    On the heating point, I have a old style budged self built 30yo house I renovated last year, it was Brick/Styrofoam/Hollow Brick I added 15cm styrofoam insulation on the outside, 3 pane windows and finally finished it, I cut my gas usage by volume by 50% with the insulation, windows and smart valves on heaters. And its old style heaters, not really efficient ones so there something to work on as well. Really helped witht he gas price due to whats happening in Ukraine. The bill part might not be that much stretched.

  • @manolisgledsodakis873
    @manolisgledsodakis873 Před rokem +9

    Here in Greece the old houses were constructed from rocks and mud but newer ones from reinforced concrete pillars with ceramic hollow brick infill (with external insulation) to meet earthquake regulations. The old houses had roofs constructed with wooden beams and ceramic tiles but newer houses have a flat, reinforced concrete roof - sometimes with a false tiled roof above. Fires can still cause damage but the risk of collapse is extremely low.

  • @korrigan6698
    @korrigan6698 Před rokem +16

    Hello, I live in a region in France known for its half-timbered houses. There are still many, especially in the city where I live. But entire neighborhoods have been replaced over the centuries by stone or brick houses, and the reason is quite simple: the fires that reduced entire neighborhoods to ashes in a very short time and with many victims.
    Today the town center still existing in half-timbering is very closely monitored and the teams and especially the means of the firefighters are always ready...

  • @Turn1t0ff
    @Turn1t0ff Před 3 měsíci

    When I sold my first business in 2008, I discovered Huff Hause. A German company who prefab.
    They shipped out and constructed a home to my specs. Built it into a hillside for me in the English Midlands. My energy bill is almost nil as the structure is naturally insulated.
    I used to live in an old convent - a 1200 year old house on a hill overlooking a church. The walls were 4ft thick. Horrible in summer but great in winter.
    Homes in England were built for insulation. Even copy/paste homes. Brick layer, cavity, brick layer.
    I was dubious at first when looking at Huff Hause as they are all pre fab, but they're incredible.

  • @kilipaki87oritahiti
    @kilipaki87oritahiti Před rokem

    I’m Norwegian and here in Norway traditionally we build with wood of course and still do, and we have earthquakes, and we still have seldom issues structure wise. Like Britain didn’t even have double sided windows until not that long ago, we have had that for a long time already.

  • @vevet4463
    @vevet4463 Před rokem +8

    I live in Portugal, here about all the houses are made out of brick, stone or cement. Only in the last decades pre fabricatdd wood houses have appeared . I can say that even when we had a forest fire that burned out some village houses, the walls remained standing. Here we listened to the story of the 3 little pigs😅😅. Joking aside Portugal is a country that has a lot of stone and even today people buy houses oved a 100 yrs old and just restore the inside.

    • @XofHope
      @XofHope Před rokem +1

      Yep! My parents remodeled my grandparents' house some 20 years ago, from the outside it looks like a modern house. Only the walls were left standing, 80 cm thick walls, like those of our castles, everything inside was modernized. I'm sure it'll still be here long after I'm gone.

  • @quelithe
    @quelithe Před rokem +10

    In my country (Slovakia) wooden houses were part of folk history and it´s comming back in modern design. It´s just made very good and you can´t just punch hole into a wall...
    Btw earthquakes are very common in Italy for example.

  • @toreon1978
    @toreon1978 Před 9 měsíci

    So. We do now also have wood frame houses but usually only for pre-fabricated houses which are now maybe 25% of builds. But even those are quite a bit sound - and 8-12 inches heat - isolated. They cost nearly as much as stone houses, maybe 10-20% less.
    Europe has very few fault lines so very few earthquakes. But even if they happen houses often only crack and don’t fully break down.

  • @Dennan
    @Dennan Před 5 měsíci

    you dont need to have your heating on, thats how you save, i live in sweden and sometimes duriing winter i dont have my heater on couse my house keeps the warmth inside.

  • @romanmir01
    @romanmir01 Před rokem +22

    I am 46, moved 23 times, this includes moving 5 times between countries and 3 times between continents so far. I travel a bit, last year visited 14 countries including Ukraine. The most impressive buildings that I have seen are in Austria, Vienna and in Hungary, Budapest but also in Manhattan)

  • @solaccursio
    @solaccursio Před rokem +6

    I like to watch "Love it or list it" on Tv, they renovate homes in a couple of weeks and it's always funny to my european eyes to see internal walls made of wood laths, outer walls made of wood... they seem like playhouses to me, and the renovation looks quicker and cheaper... but when I hear "Oh this house is oooooold, it was built in the sixties!!" I fall out of my chair... here in Italy I don't think I ever heard "old" about a house built less than a century ago.