Semi-detached
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- This article is about housing. For the album by Therapy? see Semi-Detached.
Semi-detached housing (often abbreviated to semi in the UK, Canada, and Australia, as in "three-bedroom semi") consists of pairs of houses built side by side as units sharing a party wall and usually in such a way that each house's layout is a mirror image of its twin. This style of housing, although built throughout the world, is commonly seen as particularly symbolic of the suburbanisation of the United Kingdom and Ireland, or post-war homes in Central Canada.
This type of housing can be thought of as being a half-way state between terraced or row housing and individual (detached) houses. Terraced housing is constituted by continuous row houses with open spaces at the front and back, semi-detached houses have front, rear and any one side open spaces and individual detached houses have open spaces on all sides.
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[edit] History
During the 19th century a father and son architectural partnership, the Shaws, drew up some of the very first designs for semi-detached housing in London. Examples of their work can be seen in Chalk Farm, North London. In the British housing boom of the 1920s and 1930s semi-detached houses sprang up in suburbs throughout the country, and were popular with middle class home owners who preferred them to terrace houses. The design of many of these house, highly characteristic of the era, was heavily influenced by the Art Deco movement, taking influence from mock Tudor, chalet styles and even ship design.
In the immediate post-war years many council houses also followed the 'semi' format, giving many Britons a first experience of private garden space.
[edit] Currently
In Australia, townhouses and are generally found in complexes. Large complexes often have high security, resort facilities such as swimming pools, gyms, parks and playground equipment. A townhouse is typically a different form of real property title from a detached or semi-detached house. A townhouse has a Strata Title i.e. a type of title where the common property (landscaped area, public corridors, building structure etc.) is owned by a corporation of individual owners and the houses on the property are owned by the individual owners. A semi-detached house sits on a single property, owned in its entirety by the owner of the semi-detached house. Semi-detached houses only come in pairs, whereas townhouses may number more than two, attached together.
During the house price boom in the years to 2004 many UK property developers found they could create value by demolishing semi-detached houses and building two detached houses on the same site, often with a very narrow gap between the new units.
In Canada, some semi-detached homes have linked basements, such that the houses do not have individual basements. These are called linked semi-detached homes.
[edit] Toronto
Semi-detached homes are very popular and symbolic in Toronto, and are somewhat Toronto's version of a New York City brownstone. They were built in a perdiod starting post-WWI and continued to be bult well into the 1950's, when suburban bungalows were begining to be built. Many of them were bult in a questionable manor, leading to a massive wave of re-modeling in the cities gentrifying neighboorhoods. They are most common in the section of 'old toronto', however they may be found in older sections of the cities suburbs (and other Ontario cities.)
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Shaw Hardwick architectural history sitede:Doppelhaus

