Brøndby Garden City, Denmark The Brøndby Haveby or Brøndby Garden City is a small community located just a short drive from Copenhagen, Denmark. The houses are arranged in a circular pattern.
Hambledon Road, The Ponds, Sydney West, NSW. The home is in the middle of a new-build development which has seen thousands of high-density detached homes spring up
The 3D-printed house is in Beckum, in western Germany. (Business Insider, 2022)
The 3D Printing Process (Business Insider, 2022)
Greenlands Colourful Housing
The colour coding of buildings and houses in Greenland dates back to its 18th-Century colonial era, when wooden houses were sent up from Scandinavia as timber kits. There were no house numbers or street names so all buildings were one of five base colours – red, black, yellow, green and blue – and each colour had a specific meaning. What the colours signified
Red buildings - signified churches, schools, teachers’ or ministers’ houses.
Yellow bulding - were assigned to hospitals, doctors, and health care personnel.
Green buildings - was at first the symbol for radio communication and later became the colour of telecommunications.
Blue buildings - often reserved for fish factories.
Black buildings - Police stations
The reasoning behind the colour coordination was, of course, to make it easier to distinguish between the houses and to create a system in a time before street names and house numbers. Free to choose colour Owners today are free to paint their abode in any colour they choose. As a nod to the past, some churches remain red, while hospitals continue to be yellow.