Typical Houses From Around The World

From country to country, a typical house for each region has distinct architectural differences no matter where you go. Of course, houses can be drastically different even within a single neighborhood or street, but they will still have some similar features that are common throughout the country.

Here is an overview of a typical house in three amazing countries from all across the globe; they all have their own distinctive features and quirks that makes them so unique.

The United States

Due to its enormous land mass, as well as how drastically different the climate can be throughout the country, houses in the south of the United States can differ greatly from houses in the north. Additionally, due to the various creeds and ancestry that make up the modern USA, houses can vary in style depending on their age; some are more gothic style, whereas others have been inspired by ancient Greece.

Despite this, the average house has a few distinctive and key features, such as a low-pitched or flat roof (commonly with a balustrade), as well as symmetrical windows arranged around a central doorway, which itself would have a decorative crown and narrow side windows.

For those looking to buy a home in the United States, it’s a good idea to get a good mortgage advisor from Azembel.com, as they can provide support and make getting your dream home more of a reality.

Japan

Although Japan is becoming far more modern and Westernized, there are still plenty of Japanese houses that are far more traditional and are drastically different from their American counterparts due to their unique architectural features.

One of the most well-known features are their sliding panels, also known as shoji. As traditional houses don’t historically use glass, these were used as both external and internal walls in order to let light through their translucent paper sheets. Sliding panels, also known as fusuma in Japan, are panels that act as both doors and walls. These are unique as they can be dynamically reconfigured to open up space in a room and completely change the layout.

Other cool features include: wagoya, which is where complex wooden joints and ropes are used to make the frames of houses without the need for nails; a genkan, which is the entranceway to a house where visitors and occupiers are expected to remove their shoes; and tatami floors, which are floorboards made from rice straw.

Germany

Traditional German architecture features a lot of half-timbered buildings and A-frame roofs, which is especially common in traditional homes in Bavaria. Most homes in Germany are made from bricks, particularly in the north as there was less rock available there. In modern times, homes are built with a brick masonry form of sand and limestone, usually alongside asphalt roof tiles. A lot of middle-German homes were built with the purpose of being ‘all-in-one’, which means that a lot of houses from this period had both living quarters and livestock stalls under the same roof. In modern times, owning a house in Germany is an expensive dream, with land and construction being double or even triple that of the United States. They usually have a much larger down payment of 30-50%, which is why these days many German people don’t live in historical houses, and instead opt for cheaper apartments or condominiums, and why only 42% of German people own their own homes.

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  1. It’s interesting to see houses in different parts of the world! Our house in New York State was a very large log home with cathedral ceilings and gigantic windows on nearly 7 acres of woodland with few neighbors; our house here in California is maybe half the size, stucco, on a postage stamp, neighbors everywhere. I kind of wish we still had the New York one, but the weather there was terrible …

    BTW, unless I’m mistaken, the house in the picture is the one from “The Haunting of Hill House” on Netflix. Definitely don’t buy that one, whatever you do! 😀