Swiss Modular Home - Under Construction Tour

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 26 лип 2024
  • Join us as we give a behind the scenes tour of an incredibly well built Swiss modular home - built by the same company that is manufacturing the windows from the last episode! www.holzbau-bucher.ch
    Huge thanks to Siga for hosting us. www.siga.swiss/us_en/
    A TON of Behind the Scenes - / risingerbuild
    / thebuildshow
    Huge thanks to our Show sponsors USG/Tremco, Polywall, Huber, Dorken Delta, Prosoco, Rockwool & Endura for helping to make these videos possible! These are all trusted companies that Matt has worked with for years and trusts their products in the homes he builds.
    www.Securockexoair.com/en.html
    www.Dorken.com
    www.Poly-Wall.com
    www.Huberwood.com
    www.Prosoco.com
    www.Rockwool.com
    www.EnduraProducts.com

КОМЕНТАРІ • 381

  • @jomcdonald9983
    @jomcdonald9983 Рік тому +190

    MUY buena calidad, el texto imagenes. ua-cam.com/users/postUgkxbnOKZBE4evMO5V2vroHeCjq6d_MV6wJO Un manuel muy completo y trabajado. Resulta muy práctico. Para principiantes y profesionales. Lo recomiendo

  • @thakuralokpratapsingh6540
    @thakuralokpratapsingh6540 Рік тому +289

    I've been a builder for many years and have seen quite a fair bit of sheds. The plans in ryan's package ua-cam.com/users/postUgkxB7IXYxLzb_Ichhe45zM3Im5xfEiSp9vB have some of the nicest looking sheds i've seen in a while.

  • @lelandunruh7896
    @lelandunruh7896 10 місяців тому +1

    My wife is Swiss and always insisting she'd like to build a house to Swiss standards here in Texas. Perhaps if these guys will ship internationally I can finally make her wish come true!

  • @frumpd63
    @frumpd63 5 років тому +215

    Do I build houses? Nope. Do I watch and love this channel anyway? You bet. Epic stuff guys. Much appreciated.

    • @brucefullwood
      @brucefullwood 5 років тому +14

      You're not alone, frumpd63. I'm not in construction in any way (programmer).

    • @bhawthorne5654
      @bhawthorne5654 5 років тому +7

      Same here

    • @andreycham4797
      @andreycham4797 5 років тому +7

      for the most part the stuff he is talking about in his show is not used by majority of builders , but it is still interesting to watch because it adds new knowledge and ideas

    • @billebest
      @billebest 5 років тому +4

      Same here. I just enjoy watching this channel.

    • @McSlobo
      @McSlobo 5 років тому +1

      Same here. I don't even own an apartment. I just enjoy learning about things. He seems super interested in construction techniques which is very admirable. And he seems to read the comments too because he learned the wire thickness and voltage thing. Nobody of us knows everything so the important thing is to be curious, willing to learn, and willing to do your best with that knowledge. Some haters will always hate and mock him about silly things like his home country - like it would matter - but I doubt a guy who is confident enough to make UA-cam videos much cares about haters. And it is also super interesting to see how unique Swiss buildings also are among other European buildings. This is gold on so many levels.

  • @chriscarney9955
    @chriscarney9955 5 років тому +11

    Guys did you know that it is still build code in Switzerland to incorporate a nuclear fall-out shelter in every new dwelling? This is according to articles 45 and 46 of the Swiss Federal Law on Civil Protection.
    This is why most buildings constructed since the 1960s (the first regulations on the subject were passed on 4 October 1963) incorporate a fallout shelter. So Matt, this new pre-fab isnt just going over a concrete 'basement' its a shelter too!

    • @michaelschneider-
      @michaelschneider- 3 роки тому +1

      @Eir Scapes .. Interesting. .. Always thinking the Europeans ... (Swiss)

    • @fnordist
      @fnordist 3 роки тому +1

      Not nuclear fallout shelters, air-raid shelters.

  • @uschurch
    @uschurch 5 років тому +72

    A few answers to questions I saw in the comment section: Price for a wood house of ~1200 sqft: I would say CHF 800k-1.5m is reasonable. I haven't found any concrete prices because these are all special projects, which is to say, most Swiss do not live in top-quality houses like the one in the video. The price also depends on the location as not all residential areas in Switzerland are equally easily accessible (think remote mountain resorts). Price of a similar home, standard build (concrete, bricks, some wood): Around CHF 600k-1m. You can also order wood houses made in other European countries and you'll probably save a bit on the final price, but transport can be expensive. I remember seeing ads from Scandinavian, Austrian and German builders at building fairs a few years ago.
    The Swiss building code is very strict on energy efficiency. People can get subsidies for renovations that make their home more energy efficient. The government can force you to replace old, inefficient heating systems. Part of the reason is that Switzerland doesn't have any domestic energy resources apart from renewable power production like wind, biogas, solar, geothermal heat and hydroelectric power (which requires flooding mountain valleys, in which people prefer to hike and ski). We also incinerate all our domestic waste and produce electricity and heat with it. Our electricity production is about 60% hydro, 35% nuclear, 5% others. All fossil fuel has to be imported, same for nuclear fuel. Another reason for reducing energy wastage are the Kyoto Protocol agreements. IIRC heating is responsible for about a third of the Swiss fossil energy consumption and in turn for a third of the Swiss carbon dioxide emissions. Most heating systems in Switzerland use oil or natural gas. Electric heating maybe outlawed, unless it's solar or heat pump. I am not sure about this one though.
    Switzerland has a comparably old construction structure. We haven't had any armed conflicts fought on our territory in almost 200 years. There was a minor hiccup in 1847, but it only lasted 6 weeks and no urban areas were destroyed. Unlike in the rest of Europe virtually no construction was destroyed in WW2. All new buildings appeared when people decided to expand or tear down and rebuild. The govt can't force people to tear down and build energy efficient, but when you decide to build, you have to build energy efficient.
    Bonus: If you build in Switzerland you are forced by law to build air shelters as well. Small objects like family homes are exempt, but the respective town/village has to provide a big enough collective air shelter. Larger objects like appartement buildings from 25 rooms and up require their own air shelter providing enough room for each person. The air shelter has to withstand a dynamic over pressure of at least 1 bar.

    • @racer98
      @racer98 5 років тому +4

      But that is some nice quality work though, there are only a handful of builders outside of CH that can build something similar but nothing of this quality !

    • @uschurch
      @uschurch 5 років тому +16

      @@racer98 This may in part have to do with a long standing tradition of vocational training and apprenticeship programs for almost every profession. Swiss builders don't go to college initially. They usually start their career at age 16 in an apprenticeship, where they learn their craft from the ground up.

    • @davetaylor8614
      @davetaylor8614 5 років тому +5

      @@uschurch Thank you for your insite! In the US the people rarely stay in one area so the lowest cost and complaining is their method of operation thus keeping good craftsmanship to a select few willing to pay the price. A US Builder of custom concrete homes.

    • @thearchibaldtuttle
      @thearchibaldtuttle 5 років тому +4

      Merci für die Zämefassig!

    • @arrzfr
      @arrzfr 5 років тому +7

      Urs Schuerch couple of comments maybe. The cost of the structure itself as shown in the video would probably be 30%-50% of what you mention. It‘s about 100sqm-ish, and you estimate 10k CHF per sqm, which for a prefab would be outrageously high, even for Switzerland. I’ve seen similar, good-quality prefab builds in Germany that run at about 2k CHF per sqm (that’s probably around 200 USD per square foot). Also, that cost would be stable, no matter where you build, whether it’s in an expensive neighborhood or not. Then of course, as you correctly state, the prefab itself isn‘t enough. The cost of buildable land can indeed be outrageous; Swiss building code; peculiarities of the terrain (hillsides...); the dimensions of your underground structures; all this adds up. In countries where land is more readily available, you just pour a concrete slab on a flat piece of land, and that‘s it. Very little digging, no basements, significantly reduced cost, especially if you don‘t intend to pass on a viable structure to your grandchildren.

  • @stevenazaroff4243
    @stevenazaroff4243 5 років тому +9

    Matt, this swiss euro series is outstanding. Looking forward to the next video.

  • @GG-si7fw
    @GG-si7fw 5 років тому +14

    I love that they don’t use drywall which is energy intensive and creative use of wood. Thanks for showing this from a builder’s viewpoint.

    • @davefoc
      @davefoc 3 роки тому

      I wondered about that. I would have guessed that plywood walls would cost about three times what dry wall costs. I don't see enough advantages to justify that price difference.

    • @charlesrodriguez7984
      @charlesrodriguez7984 Рік тому

      @@davefoc they look pretty though compared to textured drywall.

    • @maurozammarano6651
      @maurozammarano6651 9 місяців тому

      drywall also acts as a fire barrier. Replacing it with plywood without a sprinkler system might not be a good idea

  • @kimstyles4006
    @kimstyles4006 5 років тому +2

    First time new sub. Amazing! I got out of construction in the mid- 90s. I love watching all these improvements. Love your presentation thank you so much.

  • @MrPeterpan1954
    @MrPeterpan1954 4 роки тому +14

    Hi,,I`m from Norway and we use the same air ventilation box and it is a heat exchanger.So cold air coming in are heated up to nearly the same temperature as the air going out. All new houses in Norway have this heat exchanger box from about 1995.

  • @___Q-bot
    @___Q-bot 5 років тому +7

    good show!

  • @switzeridoo
    @switzeridoo 5 років тому +7

    the cement panels as you call it ,is "Fermacell" and its fireresistent and required by law in some places of the house and is also used in the wet areas,kitchen,bath etc for the paver to have a stabil underground
    .

    • @KplusU
      @KplusU 5 років тому +1

      .They are not as porous or hold water as much as concrete board also. It is a better material.

  • @SirKombabomba
    @SirKombabomba 4 роки тому

    Wow- Man!!

  • @j.c.4192
    @j.c.4192 2 роки тому

    Hey Matt! Go do a video in Waco Texas next year with S2A Modular. I think you might want to build for your clients this way too.

  • @perryreasch1499
    @perryreasch1499 5 років тому

    looks like good sound proofing

  • @grahamarnold2591
    @grahamarnold2591 5 років тому +6

    SO GREAT TO HEAR AN AMERICAN PRAISE ANOTHER COUNTRY -- GOOD FOR YOU.GREAT CHANNEL." This Old House NUT" --yours is a modern day version. WELL DONE. CHEERS FROM THE UK.

    • @adamkendall997
      @adamkendall997 5 років тому +3

      Now if we can get the rest of the world to stop blaming America for all the world's problems.

    • @krakca
      @krakca 4 роки тому

      @@adamkendall997 once they stop making them ye

  • @P8qzxnxfP85xZ2H3wDRV
    @P8qzxnxfP85xZ2H3wDRV 5 років тому +3

    This show is great. I'm really glad I found your channel. If you find some people in those factories that speak English, could you also put some interviews into the episodes?

  • @Lnej1
    @Lnej1 5 років тому +9

    Great video, but at 4:10 I am not 100% sure, but I would say that the mineral wool spacer is more for shock sound isolation of finished floor than for heat transfer.

  • @TobIas-or9dj
    @TobIas-or9dj 5 років тому +4

    The Board is called „Fermacell“

  • @explorenaked
    @explorenaked 5 років тому +3

    Hi Matt. Been watching a lot of your videos and they are great. It is great to see the fabulous new products and techniques. However, as a homeowner I have, as I'm sure many have, encountered a lot of the problems you fix for your clients. I would like to request you create short how to videos using some of these products and techniques of how it should be done by either the homeowner or the contractor of an existing home. For example, I just had my roof repaired by a licensed contractor. I think they did it right but it would be great to see things from a real contractor of how they should be fixed so us homeowners can ensure the it's done right. Personally I think you are a fool if you just let them in the door, they do the work and the next time you see them is when they're done. I did pay attention to what they were doing but didn't really know what I was looking for. I guess I just hear and see to many horror stories of how contractors screw people. Thanks for the great content.

  • @Mr.Consitution
    @Mr.Consitution 4 роки тому

    Awesome

  • @jacekszymanski7857
    @jacekszymanski7857 4 роки тому +2

    great video and info :) I'm planing to build my retirement house back in the old country Poland and was so educated while planning, there are so many companies there that are doing these kind of prefabricated frame houses.

  • @b4804514
    @b4804514 5 років тому +11

    It would be really nice to see a finished house. Even in a picture

    • @kenc2257
      @kenc2257 3 роки тому

      Well...you can google the builder "HOLZBAU BUCHER AG"--there are no images of completed homes on their company website (as of March 2021), but there are images of homes and office buildings (and some videos of interiors) available on the Internet.

  • @josephjorgensen3282
    @josephjorgensen3282 5 років тому

    This would save so much and no rain pouring on your frames house

  • @AusTexish
    @AusTexish 5 років тому +1

    Europe is way ahead of North America in terms of home construction automation. It’s amazing, higher upfront cost but lower long term operating cost.

  • @robe5000
    @robe5000 5 років тому +1

    Really enjoying these Swiss made videos .

  • @gdarbo6844
    @gdarbo6844 5 років тому +1

    Go to Keene, New Hampshire to see the same there.

  • @friendsonearth
    @friendsonearth 5 років тому +1

    Funny, in old day, my boss business is moving house, he bought old hoses ready for salvage and move to country side as collage home to sell, but now, is reverse. Think it this way is easier and doable than hiring local expert problem, anyway, like to see how there move whole house in the truck drive along on the highway

  • @Commerical_Real_Estate_Analyst
    @Commerical_Real_Estate_Analyst 9 місяців тому

    In the exterior tour section how do they account for the expansion and shrinkage of the wood when connecting to the Metal Beam at the marriage walls of the modules?

  • @peterwalsh6867
    @peterwalsh6867 5 років тому +2

    Great presentation , very interesting content . I was a builder in Canada for 35 years , retiring 10 years ago , wish I was still at it , now I do furniture , New Heritage Fine Furniture
    Peter Walsh

  • @robthewaywardwoodworker9956
    @robthewaywardwoodworker9956 5 років тому +16

    Looks like a very superior quality build. I would be very interested in the cost of such a home. I worked as the architectural manager in a large modular home plant in western Canada for several years and just looking at the materials going into that home, I suspect it is a very expensive build. Of course that may be right in line with stick built over there. Appreciate the opportunity to get a glimpse into a boutique factory like that. Is that typical of the modular manufacturers over there? Cheers from Canada.

    • @gpolix
      @gpolix 5 років тому +3

      Wayward Woodworker I'm Italian. We build houses like that one here. We use wood or many other materials. Usually an house like that you can see in the video costs 1300 eur/sq meter.

    • @gpolix
      @gpolix 5 років тому

      @Jeremy This is probably the best house you can build. Hemp-lime wood house. Passive house, no heater. Sorry, only in italian.
      ua-cam.com/video/CTnGZe7NdZY/v-deo.html

    • @robthewaywardwoodworker9956
      @robthewaywardwoodworker9956 5 років тому

      @@gpolix Thanks for the reply. 1300 eur is close to $2000 cdn so that works out to approx $180 cdn per square foot. That wouldn't buy much of a house here. Quite amazed at the level of quality and the affordability of those homes. I suppose one would have to factor in the rest of the cost of living, typical wages, taxes and all the rest to get a real vision of the "cost" to live in a place like Italy or Switzerland.

    • @gpolix
      @gpolix 5 років тому +1

      @@robthewaywardwoodworker9956 in Italy we don't pay taxes for the house where we are living. Very expensive house o poor house the same: no taxes. I live in the richest part of Italy, (north east: Padua, near Venice), Life is not very expensive ( maybe 400 eur/month for food + 100 eur/month bill). more we have welfare so hospitals, schools etc are free...

    • @robthewaywardwoodworker9956
      @robthewaywardwoodworker9956 5 років тому +6

      @@gpolix Imma gonna renew my passport and brush up on my Italian! LOL

  • @radcow
    @radcow 5 років тому +1

    Go to the uk please👍👍👍

    • @radcow
      @radcow 5 років тому

      @@MrGioMadrid it's because I'm a builder and was hoping to hear an outside prospective

  • @chrisE815
    @chrisE815 5 років тому +7

    Matt- Excellent content- Thanks for showing us these high quality builds. I find it interesting that your trip was sponsored but a company representative isn't helping you present these houses. Why is that? I would be interested in hearing more detailed information on the construction techniques and materials because they are very different from homes in the USA. Hope my suggestion is not taken as criticism... This series is great and I hope your overseas tours continue.

    • @awax2585
      @awax2585 5 років тому +3

      His trip is sponsored by Siga tapes which he says at least once in every video.
      They seem to show him houses and construction sites where their products are used and he's including the words Siga tape at least once in all of his explanations.
      Furthermore, these houses are built by local companies that might not even operate all over their own country, so they couldn't care less about presenting their shit to a mostly american public ...

    • @xFD2x
      @xFD2x 5 років тому +1

      You can't assume that company has a representative fluent in English.
      In Switzerland they speak French, Italian and
      Swiss German.
      Most (American) movies have audio in their language.

  • @julieta203
    @julieta203 Рік тому

    11:20 thats much larger than 1100 sqf (102sqm). Based on the roof i would est 2.5mt wide per section and each section looks 12m long (40ft shipping container) so 12.5x12m + 150sqm so 1600-1700sqf min.

  • @rud
    @rud 5 років тому +24

    My house here in Denmark was built10 years ago there was strict rules to how air tight it must be and it is tested. But there were no rules to air replacement. So it is air tight as a drum you can’t fart without creating over pressure and I have to open a window to use the fan in the kitchen. Thinking about having fitted a air replacement system.
    Cheers.

    • @HenryLoenwind
      @HenryLoenwind 5 років тому +2

      I'd recommend you do. I'm sitting in a room from the 60s, and I alone manage to get the CO2 up into the "bad for you" levels just by breathing within about 2-3 hours. That must be even worse in a well insulated house...

    • @barbarasmith6005
      @barbarasmith6005 5 років тому +5

      That is very bad building practice to build a tight house without a whole-house ventilation system. You are lucky you didn't get sick.

    • @barbarasmith6005
      @barbarasmith6005 5 років тому +4

      @@HenryLoenwind That's why every superinsulated, airtight house needs a fresh-air, filtered, heat recovery ventilation system. And don't clean with store-bought cleaning products, and make sure anything you bring into the house doesn't offgas VOCs like formaldehyde.

    • @rud
      @rud 5 років тому +1

      @@barbarasmith6005 Indeed, I open the windows several times a day to replace the air. IIRC new building codes now requires that they are built with a ventilation system with a heat recovery system.

    • @rud
      @rud 5 років тому +2

      @@HenryLoenwind I know, I can't close the bedroom door when sleeping without having the window open. It is quite counterproductive to the tightly insulated house. They even made pressure tests that the house had to pass to see that were no leaks. :D It's on my list of improvement. I am considering getting a system with a heat pump that can recover heat in the winter and cool in the summer. Need to save up a bit of money first, until then, I open the windows several times a day.

  • @mucsalto8377
    @mucsalto8377 5 років тому +5

    as the price question pops up here too, I repeat my comment from another vid:
    we build a multi storey house (3x 120m²) in solid timber with a concrete stairwell for fire protection at € 1950.-/m² with all the features he showed. Energy consumption will be 55 kWh/m2 or 0,1 gallon oil/sqf /year. The plot is in Munich city center, which is a quite expensive town to build in. So this is approx. $ 800K or $ 33,5/sq foot. How much is such a house in a northern region (snow and storm) of the US? ~

  • @perryreasch1499
    @perryreasch1499 5 років тому

    $$$$ log cabin is what i want

  • @13c11a
    @13c11a 3 роки тому

    Is this a PassivHaus or the same thing made by different people? Thanks.

  • @tamil1001
    @tamil1001 2 роки тому

    There are so many advantages to modular homes. Wonder why they aren't more common?

  • @andrewschott3635
    @andrewschott3635 5 років тому

    Schaut gut an

  • @simonkenwothy5933
    @simonkenwothy5933 2 роки тому

    I would like to see what designs you do with disabled in mind. Double level or three floors garage being ground floor.

  • @danafield4696
    @danafield4696 5 років тому +1

    Well wouldn't u seal all the joints up tight living in Switzerland ? It's a winter wonderland there soooooo tighten it up buttercup !!

  • @user-ms2wc1qb1n
    @user-ms2wc1qb1n 4 роки тому +7

    I would like to see the completed version of the house and the pricelist.

  • @SR-ee3yt
    @SR-ee3yt 5 років тому

    👍

  • @eyupyoruk2783
    @eyupyoruk2783 5 років тому

    make a rommtour or full housetoor !!!

  • @BrogeKilrain
    @BrogeKilrain 5 років тому +21

    durability important as multiple generations share the house and not every person can afford a home.

  • @tomaocatvianpuiu3558
    @tomaocatvianpuiu3558 3 роки тому

    i want to see some prices of one of those modular homes but i cant get an offer from them ,can someone guide me a little?

  • @seanbouker
    @seanbouker 5 років тому +2

    Matt show us a breaker box😂

  • @JonLeinbach
    @JonLeinbach 5 років тому

    What is the music at the beginning?

  • @IndependenceCityMotoring
    @IndependenceCityMotoring 5 років тому +1

    How does cost compare to building onsite?

    • @thearchibaldtuttle
      @thearchibaldtuttle 5 років тому

      Independence City Motoring it’s not much different in fact. At least in Switzerland it isn’t.

  • @PandorasFolly
    @PandorasFolly 5 років тому

    The Doug DeMuro of houses.

  • @hanshans387
    @hanshans387 4 роки тому +2

    I absolutely love your channel, but pleeeease invest in a camera with a faster autofocus :-P

  • @OlegMykolajovychOlijnyk
    @OlegMykolajovychOlijnyk 3 роки тому +1

    ... жодного вентиляційного отвору!
    Чим там дихати? відкривати вікна для продуху?

  • @jacobkrzyzek5777
    @jacobkrzyzek5777 5 років тому

    Who is the manufacture of that radiant floor sheet/board?

    • @vensti4771
      @vensti4771 2 роки тому

      i think it's fermacell

  • @noraajagger4239
    @noraajagger4239 4 роки тому +2

    8:20 "tongue and groove" is also known as lesbian boards not "male/female"

    • @mv80401
      @mv80401 3 роки тому +1

      I recently ordered a lesbian Ouzo (from Lesbos)

  • @bobann7360Studios
    @bobann7360Studios 5 років тому

    Siding and roofing?

  • @AusTexish
    @AusTexish 5 років тому

    Yodeling you serious? Do you play bagpipes in Scotland?

  • @minniesaab7255
    @minniesaab7255 5 років тому

    👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻

  • @mabisfab77paintball
    @mabisfab77paintball 5 років тому +11

    go visit poland or lithuania see how they build a wooden house

  • @johnvanengelenhoven6646
    @johnvanengelenhoven6646 5 років тому

    The house is not the expensive part. The basement is. All basements are essentially a bunker. Has to meet extreme code. A fighting position with filtered air. Why doesn't anybody attack them? Every able body takes his rifle and ammo home with him. You are going to defend you and yours to a higher degree. Next what about the tunnels and etc, etc, etc.

  • @Alpha-Alpha
    @Alpha-Alpha 5 років тому

    7:10, it should be fiber board, because its toilet area.

  • @DrMortadhaSAbd
    @DrMortadhaSAbd 5 років тому +11

    Great series, I’m interested in seeing the Germany episode, but please tell the cameraman to focus on where you’re pointing and talking and not on you all the time, because we want to see the details you’re mentioning, thanks.

    • @VideoNOLA
      @VideoNOLA 4 роки тому +1

      Personally, I'd give anything to have the camera not point at his face the whole time.

  • @peterbeyer5755
    @peterbeyer5755 5 років тому +1

    In Melbourne, Australia yesterday it was 45C, our houses have no effective insulation, poor design and building standards, when it gets hot the state government turns of the power to while suburbs and we start to fry. You can bake cookies outside on a metal tray. I cannot understand why our government doesn't make it mandatory to make our houses have effective insulation. We have building codes but they are not effective.

    • @ianwatson2285
      @ianwatson2285 5 років тому

      What's to stop you from building to your requirements? Why build down to the crap codes? And yes, you get what you pay for. Good design and materials cost money, lots of it.

  • @lav1daloca
    @lav1daloca 5 років тому

    Anyone know how much this house costs?

  • @FredMcIntyre
    @FredMcIntyre 5 років тому

    😃👍🏻👊🏻

  • @2thelight
    @2thelight 5 років тому

    They're not stingy on materials in the attention to detail is very good but to duplicate that in America would probably be twice the price?

  •  5 років тому +51

    Your viewers must think that almost every house in Switzerland is built with wood :-D ...which is not the case.

    • @MrHunapu
      @MrHunapu 5 років тому +7

      well he covers a small company specialised on building with wood. Absolutly not the standart in switzerland. Not even the inside walls use any wood. Interesting through.

    • @proverbs2life
      @proverbs2life 5 років тому +1

      newman ironic

    • @Joshua79C
      @Joshua79C 5 років тому

      Yet many Europeans and others NOT from the USA think that we also build out of only wood, which is also not true.

    • @OsmoZchannel
      @OsmoZchannel 5 років тому

      @Justin Robinson The assumption is based on the very poor education system in the US which is kinda reasonable since your knowledge about the outside is close to non-existent.

  • @funnyguyinlondon
    @funnyguyinlondon 3 роки тому

    My only worry is the durability if it's typical of Japanese and American homes which deteriorate within 50 years

  • @racer98
    @racer98 5 років тому

    +1

  • @andreycham4797
    @andreycham4797 5 років тому

    fresh air come true HRV with heat pump built in and for each kilowatt electricity spend on ventilation they get upto 3 kilowatt of heat

    • @erik....
      @erik.... 5 років тому +1

      It's better to have a separate water based central heating system and be able to set the ventilation to a reasonable air flow. My system recovers around 80% of the heat so if the outgoing air is 20 degrees celsius and outside temperature is 0 degrees, then incoming is 16 degrees... pretty good.

    • @andreycham4797
      @andreycham4797 5 років тому

      @@erik.... not bad .In states we have electric water heaters with heat pump built in and after all discounts, rebates I can get one for $650 then I would buy HRV for $350 or so and design system which I talked about above . European HRV with heat pump priced for 5000 euro

    • @erik....
      @erik.... 5 років тому

      @@andreycham4797 Yes my heat pump is around $10000 and complete ventilation unit with pipes to every room $3000 so it's a bit different.. but I live in a very cold place (Sweden). Heating was still $400 last month.

  • @manhoosnick
    @manhoosnick 2 роки тому

    I am looking for a company like this in Europe for my little brother to work and learn with, can someone please help? We are french and no trouble for visa etc.

  • @joelhansen7373
    @joelhansen7373 5 років тому +15

    Price? Would Americans pay for the quality?

    • @19stojkovic93
      @19stojkovic93 5 років тому +6

      For price don't ask you will get heart attack for real... They are not normal when come to houses price in Swiss.....

    • @MichaelM.9
      @MichaelM.9 5 років тому +5

      For a wooden house you pay around 600k-1mil (without the land).

    • @gpolix
      @gpolix 5 років тому +4

      @@MichaelM.9 where do you pay 600k-1 mil? in Switzerland? Here in Italy we build same houses/same technology ( Massive Holz Mauer or xlam or frame , like wolf house for example) it costs not much more than a "traditional" full bricks house: here in Veneto (Padua) can buy the same house for 1300 eur/sq meter. Not more. I know Switzerland is more expensive than Italy, a pizza costs five times there... :(

    • @alanhowitzer
      @alanhowitzer 5 років тому +9

      Americans prefer quantity over quality.

    • @jcon6115
      @jcon6115 5 років тому +4

      Alan Fox not all Americans.

  • @SorenYayaOlesen
    @SorenYayaOlesen 3 роки тому

    Well presented, but feet and inches? merica!

  • @jr60288
    @jr60288 5 років тому

    A cinco wide

  • @RiverPlaid
    @RiverPlaid 5 років тому +1

    I to do not build houses but love this channel. And you bet I will be applying as much of the building science I’ve learn from you onto my old home. I’m a bit obsessed with insulation at the moment.🌸

    • @WAJK2030
      @WAJK2030 5 років тому

      denise rivers u should consult an engineer before doing smth. A lot of stuff can go wrong, especially with arrangement of specific layers.

  • @merani2011
    @merani2011 5 років тому

    Все равно-будущее за легким монолитом!

  • @shenlun
    @shenlun 5 років тому +8

    No why would paint the wood white? stain it instead would be my option

    • @unchannelbyryan
      @unchannelbyryan 5 років тому +1

      shenlun I know right! Too pretty to ruin with paint.

    • @sparkzbarca
      @sparkzbarca 5 років тому

      could be that almost reverse liking thing. If most of the houses there are old wood houses then suddenly it's like how everyone covered up hardwood flooring with carpet when it was introduced. Because EVERYONE has this "amazing" wall style. exposed wood walls become the standard and an expensive "custom" home uses non exposed wood.
      The only problem with this whole idea is WHY DID YOU ORDER A CUSTOM ALL WOOD house then lol. Like I could empathize with not wanting the cookie cutter look even if cookies are tasty. But then why not go with a different style of non wood housing if you don't like the look of wood walls. :P

    • @PLF...
      @PLF... 5 років тому

      If you want it exposed you should probably go for some nicer wood without knots

  • @leonk.1031
    @leonk.1031 5 років тому +7

    Please visit a modular home factory in Germany there much bigger and also very interesting

    • @andreycham4797
      @andreycham4797 5 років тому

      enough of wood . In Germany they have more construction technologies which superior than wood

    • @leonk.1031
      @leonk.1031 5 років тому

      Andrey Cham Yeah wright but the factories are pretty impressive to

  • @lsellclumanetsolarenergyll5071
    @lsellclumanetsolarenergyll5071 5 років тому +1

    3' is about 1meter. Also birch is a very common and fast growing wood which is used for a lot of construction in Europe. 240V is standard and if you guys didn't see our GROUND wire is actually the green/yellow wire and is insulated. So the HOT Leads are BLUE and BLACK or BROWN. So each lead is a HOT we don't use any NEUTRAL wire's. That's a major thing and also reduces a lot on the electric cost billing side because you use a lot less KW the KW charge is double to what the USA is charging. But Electric is no longer a monopol system like it is in the USA so in Germany you can have an Electric Provider from Spain for example which keeps competition and price hikes at bay and on top it forces them to build redundant Power Grids not like in the USA where a lot is only Single line build.

  • @lic2kil007
    @lic2kil007 4 роки тому

    The cost for this build in the US I'd say $350k+

    • @mv80401
      @mv80401 3 роки тому

      You underestimate the cost of the SIGA tape for the seams.

  • @Helloverlord
    @Helloverlord 4 роки тому +9

    4:15 it isnt there to insulate the wall from a heated floor but to make space for a floor slab to expand without pushing the wall out and making cracks...

    • @markogilvy9939
      @markogilvy9939 4 роки тому +1

      Yeah that makes more sense

    • @michaelschneider-
      @michaelschneider- 3 роки тому +1

      @HelloverLord. .. Agreed. .. Same wall/floor detail when installing Hydronic in-floor heat system in our Vail, CO remodel in 1999. .. Hydronic heating the only way to go .....

  • @aggabus
    @aggabus 4 роки тому

    1100 sq ft 100 mt sq
    10.5 ft to

  • @bruceandersen3803
    @bruceandersen3803 5 років тому

    Ask your camera man to follow what you are pointing out to us when you are pointing out details. You explain it so well but we cannot see it.

  • @Ewoodster
    @Ewoodster 5 років тому

    I strongly considered building a house in exactly the same style. It was invented in Austria (the country in Europe without Cangaroos!) and is called Holz100 or Wood100 in english. A german company slightly improved the process where you don't see the wooden dowels on the inside. They use wood screws unlike the dowels in the Holz100 system. The Main benefit is the extremely high thermal capacity, so your house doesn't overheat in summer and temperatures don't droo fast in winter. Plus it's prefab, so building the closed hull just takes two days until it is fully rainprove. It turned out that the best building technique (in my eyes) is also the most expensive. Therefore I finally decided to build a standard framed wall or else I would habe to leave the basement and garage away.

  • @blairgarber
    @blairgarber 5 років тому

    that's not plywood it's cross laminated timber CLT

  • @christheswiss390
    @christheswiss390 3 роки тому +1

    I think one of the largest differences to the US of A would be the large windows in the factory building and the vast amounts of sunlight flooding the factory floor.

    • @comment6864
      @comment6864 3 роки тому

      oh so true! In the US you have to be very very careful to not accidentally buy something that no sun floods into ever.

  • @KplusU
    @KplusU 5 років тому +2

    Beautiful episode Matt.

  • @38tech
    @38tech 5 років тому

    Man, they are sooooo far ahead of us. Why is that? Hhhhhum.....i wonder.

    • @internettoughguy
      @internettoughguy 5 років тому +1

      They don't tolerate a hack work ethic.

    • @38tech
      @38tech 5 років тому

      @@internettoughguy i also have to think it has to do with higher standards and their awareness of the environment.

  • @seanbouker
    @seanbouker 5 років тому

    Wait Matt I knowwww you do the building stuff but at 3:50 you just go you know they use 230v so the wires are smaller because they are using half the amperage! And move on like it's nothing... Note I've always been under the impression that European countries used 240v 20-40 amp as standard; instead of American 120v 12-20 amp.... So what you just said was they're actually 230v 6-10 amp? Can anyone confirm this?

    • @kwarts
      @kwarts 5 років тому +1

      Simply said: power is the product of voltage and current. So, double the voltage allows half the current for the same amount of power, at least for single-phase. If you use 3-phase, that is 380 / 400 volts, mathematics are a bid different.

    • @HenryLoenwind
      @HenryLoenwind 5 років тому +1

      "120v 12-20 amp" is 1440 to 2400 Watt. "240v 20-40 amp" would be 4800 to 9600 Watt. That'd be a bit ridiculous, wouldn't it?
      The amps vary a bit country by country (and purpose of the circuit), but you usually have something between 10A (2400 Watt) and 16A (3840 Watt).

    • @NoRoads2AllRoads
      @NoRoads2AllRoads 5 років тому +1

      We use 10-20 amps in Europe. So about 5000W for a circuit. Also, if it's an oven or stove top it can be used 32amps connections

    • @seanbouker
      @seanbouker 5 років тому

      @@kwarts I've always considered the voltage like the vehicle that carried the power... Ie higher voltage; can carry more amps, I realize it can carry less... And I realized that a breaker can regulate it to be less amps from the main ie the smaller gauge wire would be safe to use in that case... But to state as he did that simply because the voltage is double; the amperage is half seems like it was a slip of the tounge more so than fact... For example in the states you would never have 240v 15a line, it wouldn't make any sense... You would have a 240v 30a line with say a 8/10ga wire... It would appear they are using 240v 6-12a ??? With a 14/16ga wire... I guess in my head I just assumed that everything over there plugged into 20-40a wall outlets with beefy wires...

    • @augustreil
      @augustreil 5 років тому

      I hope someone else chimes in cause I'd like to know also. I read someone else's comment that the breakers are 5, 10, 15 amp

  • @rud
    @rud 5 років тому

    Well, if they are going to southern Switzerland, I suppose they don’t need the insulation.
    (Joke)

    • @bonnhoffchristian2563
      @bonnhoffchristian2563 5 років тому

      Oh no. Also in the southern Switzerland you need to isolate your house. During wintertime it can be pretty cold there too.

  • @PLF...
    @PLF... 5 років тому

    Never seizes to amaze how Americans feel about air conditioning... You don't really see it in Europe, it's so noisy and doesn't really work for heating at all. Floor heating is so much better.

    • @Joshua79C
      @Joshua79C 5 років тому

      air conditioning is for cooling as what he points out and you mention is for heating, and not every ac system is noisy or "annoying" sounding

  • @randydueck889
    @randydueck889 5 років тому +8

    It seems to me the interior 'plywood' panels are CLT - cross laminated timber.... not plywood as such.

    • @rickv1013
      @rickv1013 5 років тому

      It's solid wood and translates to three layer plate. In Switzerland it's used as plywood and you can get it from 12 to 60mm thick (1/2 inch to 1 3/8inch). The most common one is 27mm thick (just over 1 inch).

    • @lastnickever4440
      @lastnickever4440 5 років тому

      It is CLT it can be up to 500 mm thick.

    • @lastnickever4440
      @lastnickever4440 5 років тому +1

      ​@@rickv1013 Three layer plates are the thinnest version of CLT. There are version with more layers and up to 500 mm thickness.

    • @rickv1013
      @rickv1013 5 років тому

      @@lastnickever4440 Sounds like those whole glued wall panels from a previous video are CLT as well. I could only find those three layer plates (Dreischichtplatten) up to 60mm in the catalog from a Swiss wood supplier. I've only used up to the 32mm thick panels.

    • @Dracounius
      @Dracounius 5 років тому +1

      @@rickv1013 in general only the thinner CLT panels use 3 layers, so if you want more than 60mm you probably need to go up to 5+ layers (depending on thickness. my appartment building uses 20-30cm CLT panels with 7+ layers)

  • @freedommonger4512
    @freedommonger4512 4 роки тому

    flat roof=leaks

  • @JasJones123
    @JasJones123 5 років тому +1

    Fresh air supply? What ever happened to opening a window?

    • @carynoname2574
      @carynoname2574 5 років тому +1

      Heat exchanger keeps the heat in while adding fresh air. Open the window and you freeze!

    • @JasJones123
      @JasJones123 5 років тому

      @@carynoname2574 It was not a heat exchanger, it was introducing fresh air into the house the same way opening a window would. Heat exchanger transfers heat/energy from one medium to another.

    • @96Lauriz
      @96Lauriz 5 років тому +1

      @@JasJones123 No, it's not operating the same way as opening the window. @Gary OnTOUR is right, the house is equipped with Heat Recovery Ventilation (HRV), that has heat exchanger built-in (recovers heat from exhaust air and exchanges it to incoming air). It's so effective it recovers up to 90% nowadays. It's not the same as traditional HVAC systems found in american houses. (cause they're usually way very leaky anyways).
      It's so much better (comfortable), efficient, healthier (filters outside air) than opening a window. With properly dimensioned HRV you'd basically never need to open a window apart from summer.
      It's common practice here in Europe, and in Denmark we have been doing that since 1980's. Every house since then is more air-tight and HRV is a must. In apartments it's actually a requirement for new builds.
      once HRV, you never go back to natural ventilation (windows)...

  • @douglaspohl1827
    @douglaspohl1827 5 років тому

    PRICE PER SQUARE PLEASE - Please provide some metrics - costs to build and operate please... create demand by education.

    • @WAJK2030
      @WAJK2030 5 років тому

      Douglas Pohl 2.200 to 2.400€/m2. Don’t know about the price per ft.

    • @douglaspohl1827
      @douglaspohl1827 5 років тому

      @@WAJK2030 Be carefull using decimal with us Yanks with numerals we use commas... Big difference. Thanks!

  • @hunterjones9822
    @hunterjones9822 5 років тому

    "Why Don’t we build these here?" Good luck getting past any HOA to build a home like this in any developed neighborhood. If you make it past them planning and zoning and permit departments will have a hayday destroying your dreams....

    • @Blkgoat
      @Blkgoat 5 років тому

      Once it passes engineering it's ok it's the HOA you will have to worry about

  • @LivingBigInATinyHouse
    @LivingBigInATinyHouse 5 років тому

    I love this. Great video!

  • @kwarts
    @kwarts 5 років тому +2

    I'm somewhat surprised to hear that the roof drains into the main sewer, or did I misunderstand?

    • @ursodermatt8809
      @ursodermatt8809 5 років тому

      yep, you did not misunderstand, that's what they are doing in switzerland

    • @kwarts
      @kwarts 5 років тому

      @@ursodermatt8809 Thanks, where I live (the Netherlands) in new developments they try to seperate rainwater that does not need wastewater treatment from water that needs treatment. During sewer renovations they even most time make this separation.

  • @Spad68
    @Spad68 5 років тому

    We have this type of company here in quebec . They prefab to what you want . Nothing new . "Bonneville homes" .

  • @somaswodi8273
    @somaswodi8273 5 років тому +1

    great show Matt....look forward to see you at the NAHB IBS show in February. Travel safe!