Where would you live?

Where would you live?

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West
preferably in Bergen

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>north and south both got the disgusting 70s house
also west

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Solely judging by the houses, North

I wouldn't.

Try building a facade that doesn't involve wood, holy shit.

Everywhere except where I'm currently living. I'm currently living in an ugly apartment in Oslo

Norway's main export used to be wood. These days, however, it's cheaper to import wood from the baltic countries than to log ourselves. Yay, globalism.

Why? Wood is good.

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Based

>it's cheaper to import wood from the baltic countries than to log ourselves
funny you should say that, because there are pallets of baltic wood for sale at one of the local grocers

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What's wrong with wood?

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central or north, based on knowledge and not thoose houses that doesnt represent shit

Can't you see that using the same building style over and over again is at least mildly autistic?

Bricks and stones look better.

If it ain't broke.

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Tromsø

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not a bad choice, here is their view

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west and north, east looks souless

nothing autistic about building wooden houses that last and not putting all kinds of fake shit on them like they do in usa

Oslo EAST. Preferably Grønland.

Yes

They crack during winter if it gets too cold outside and the temperature difference inside vs outside is >30-40 degrees celsius

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where is it?

a small town on Senja

>Grønland
>Oslo Øst
Teknisk sett østkanten (øst for akerselven), men vil vel egentlig kalle det sentrum.

how is the industrialized life?

All looks the same

Another town on the island as taken by a hiking british tourist

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it really does, doesn't it?

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>Can't you see that using the same building style over and over again

Shut up Fritz

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>East garden
Pukes internally

Central's my definite favorite
- spacious garden
- adequate distance to neighbor
- comfy colors
- nice big terrace
- both garage and carport
- dormer with a good view

However there's something to be said for a ground floor level built partially into the terrain, with naturally cooled rooms for storage, so the modernist houses get points for that.

wat is this picture?
are you the streetviewautist?
just random houses dont represent a country or region

>the same
This. No really significant differences.

the houses are randomly selected, but the intention for how they are found is not.

>they're all made of wood so they're all literally the same

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wat?
are you saying your intentions are not random?
man wtf, you are so scizo

I mean that I'm not randomly stabbing at the countryside and posting what comes up, I am selecting a location that is clearly low density housing in small towns within a reasonable distance to a major city.
You're insufferably shallow.

I am from the west, but greatly prefer the climate of south, central or the inner parts of the east.

>low density housing in small towns
you should look more rural or even farm houses, thas where you find regional differences. houses buildt after ww2 up to 70 are all the same in slightly dense areas.

so?
they do not represent the regions still
i remember your other thread
>hurr durr i searched for neighbourhoods with a goal
all post-war architecture has no regional difference

south

I don't know why you're so useless. Seeing how common families live is interesting to me. These homes also seem to compare very closely with similarly zoned american ones. There's nothing at all wrong with it, and your objections just comes off as petty.

in norwegian commieblock tbqh

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wooden houses are a symbol of poverty here desu so in none of them

those 70s houses look very similar to houses built from that time frame in minnesota as well, in fact one of them reminds me very strongly of my childhood home

generic apartment complex look

being polish is a sign of poverty here

Lol, I actually lived here when I was little. The block is even further down the slope, so you can't see it.

just different culture, no need to be rude

Same here. We hire them to build shit for us and to pick strawberries.
Then again, we hire swedes to be banana peelers and waiters, so....

I'd peel your banana any day bro

>Seeing how common families live is interesting to me.
This goes straight into a rather complex aspect of Norwegian culture. East or west, there can be wealth or poverty in either place. Your original question appeared to be mostly about nature and climate varies a lot. Tromsø is buried in snow these days, the south is bare except from the mountains which are barely passable this time of year.

Equinox brings storms to the west and north coast, not so much in central or east.

uwu

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funny how Poles build for Norwegians something they would never want to live in

What did he mean by this?

that's interesting. Could you post an example?

The wooden houses are usually older than polish foreign workers. Most of them where build during our "landsfader" period, back when socialists were suspicious of globalism and jewish bankers.

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We wouldn't like to live in wooden houses like yours. After several years of work in Norway a Polish worker builds a house in Poland that would be considered a palace in Norway.

Don't be silly, we hire poles to do high rise buildings and office buildings and stuff. Those houses are pretty much "package houses" built in the 60s

New houses are usually in some sort of quasi-functionalist/eco style. Most of the examples posted ITT are "husbankhus" which was the predominant style from the 1960s up to the early 90s.

>high rise buildings

You mean that Norway has skyscrapers? I'm impressed now.

Anyway, I know Poles build ordinary houses too because my neighbor worked as an electrician there.

>You mean that Norway has skyscrapers?
No, high rise. Skyscrapers we don't have.

>I know Poles build ordinary houses too because my neighbor worked as an electrician there
The exception that proves the rule, I guess. I mean, most construction are going on in the cities, where they build in the hight.

>I mean, most construction are going on in the cities

Probably, but there must be houses being built also in the suburbs and small towns and I doubt Norwegians build them on their own.

We hire polish toilet cloggers after the houses are built

I've already been there and Bergen is a real dream city

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sure can

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>skyscrapers
Pic related was proposed. The politicians extruded a brick.

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