sabanss wrote: ↑09/11/2022 23:51
Veće kupatilo od 6 m2?
Nemojte da širimo dalje. Možemo se pravdati siromaštvom ali ne treba to uzimati kao normalno - kako ljudi već rekoše u ovoj diskusiji.
Ne znam kako poredite New York i Sarajevo, centar svijeta i rupčagu na Balkanu. U najbližim normalnim državama kao što su Italija, Austrija ili Njemačka mislim da je prosječno kvadratura životnog prostora po glavi oko tri puta veća od naše. A amerikancima su oni smiješni u kako malim stanovima žive.
Ja sam jedino od stambenog zivota iz Italije vidio Trst. Nema tu neke razlike. Kako je u drugim dijelovima Italije - ne znam
Nego, ima Eurostat. Sve ljudi biljeze.
https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/cache/dig ... ml?lang=en
The size of housing can be measured as the average number of rooms per person: there were on average 1.6 rooms per person in the EU in 2020. Among the Member States, the largest number was recorded in Malta (2.3 rooms per person), followed by Belgium and Ireland (both 2.1 rooms). At the other end of the scale were Romania (1.1 rooms), Croatia, Latvia, Poland and Slovakia (all with 1.2 rooms on average per person).
A related indicator is the number of persons per household. There were on average 2.3 persons per household in the EU in 2020. Among the Member States, this number ranged from 2.9 persons in Slovakia, 2.8 in Poland and 2.7 in Croatia down to 2.0 persons in Germany, Denmark, Finland and Sweden.
I meni najzanimljiviji dio.
Around 14 % of the EU population live in a home with a leaking roof It is not only the number of people living in a home which impacts the quality of life, it is also the quality of the housing, such as the ability to keep the house warm, the lack of toilet and shower and a leaking roof. In the EU in 2020, 8.2 % of the population did not have the ability to keep the house adequately warm. The highest shares were observed in Bulgaria (27.5 %), Lithuania (23.1 %), Cyprus (20.9 %) and Portugal (17.5 %), and the lowest in Austria (1.5 %), Finland (1.8 %) and Czechia (2.2 %). On average in the EU, 1.5 % of the population lacked a toilet, shower or bath. This was most common in Romania (21.2 % of the population), followed by Bulgaria and Latvia (both 7.0 %) as well as Lithuania (6.4 %). Regarding a leaking roof, 13.9 % of the EU population had such a problem. The highest shares were observed in Cyprus (39.1 %), Portugal (25.2 %) and Slovenia (20.8 %).