How to measure a plot of land
The need to know the exact dimensions of a summer cottage may arise for various reasons, but the calculation method will always remain the same. One hundred square meters is equal to 100 square meters, but the area may be slightly larger or smaller due to the unevenness of the sides. For an accurate calculation, you only need a few pegs, a tape measure and some free time.
Dimensions of land
To begin with, it is important to accurately determine the dimensions of the sides. To do this, you need to drive pegs in the corners and use a tape measure to measure the length and width
If the site has identical sides, then there is no need to measure all 4. Be sure to write down the received data on a piece of paper. If the shape of the land plot is irregular, all four indicators will have to be measured. In addition, to carry out calculations it will be necessary to know the angle between the sides. All this greatly complicates the calculations, so in case of minor discrepancies, the values are rounded.
How to calculate square meters
Further actions completely coincide with the rules for calculating area, as in a school geometry course. To determine the size of a rectangle, you need to multiply the width by the length, for example:
- width – 30 m;
- length – 50 m;
- S=20*50;
- The size (area) of the plot is 1000 sq. m.
Projects of brick houses from 400 m2
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Square
up to 150 m2150-250 m2250-400 m2from 400 m2All
Floors
One-story 2 Two-story 43 Three-story 157 Four-story 51 With a basement 183 With an attic 86
Peculiarities
Houses with a garage 155 With a terrace 223 For narrow plots 6 With a flat roof 10 Cottages with a swimming pool 115 With a sauna 184 With 3 bedrooms 2 With 5 bedrooms 87 With 4 bedrooms 47 With a boiler room 248 With a bedroom on the 1st floor 213 With 2 bedrooms on the 1st floor 62 With 2 bathrooms 8 With 3 bathrooms 29 With gym 100With second light 109C 3 bedrooms on the 1st floor 13With a winter garden 47With a pitched roof 4With a gable roof 9
Dimensions
12x12 2
Style
Canadian 2English style 2Modern style 10Classic style 9European style 10
Type
Townhouses and semi-detached houses 4 For two families 7 Mansions 52 Country houses 253
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There are 253 projects in this category.
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O-504-1K
O-504-1K project of a two-story brick house with an attic and a garage measuring 19 by 21
504 m2 | 18.9 x 20.9 m |
45,000 rub. |
U-545-1K
U-545-1K project of a two-story brick house with a basement and a garage measuring 18 by 23
545 m2 | 18.2 x 23.3 m |
70,000 rub. |
V-433-1K
V-433-1K project of a two-story brick house with a garage measuring 31 by 28
433.19 m2 | 30.8 x 28.4 m |
60,000 rub. |
A-692-1K
A-692-1K project of a two-story brick house with a basement measuring 17 by 26
692 m2 | 16.7 x 25.6 m |
RUB 39,140 |
A-423-1K
A-423-1K project of a two-story brick house with an attic measuring 20 by 16
423 m2 | 19.9 x 15.7 m |
RUB 24,225 |
A-497-1K
A-497-1K project of a three-story brick house with a basement and attic measuring 16 by 16
497 m2 | 15.5 x 15.9 m |
RUB 28,500 |
A-460-1K
A-460-1K project of a two-story brick house with a basement and a garage measuring 15 by 18
460 m2 | 15 x 18.1 m |
RUR 26,315 |
M-451-1K
M-451-1K project of a two-story brick house with a garage measuring 21 by 19
451 m2 | 21.2 x 19.3 m |
50,000 rub. |
U-443-1K
U-443-1K project of a two-story brick house with a base measuring 17 by 14
443.7 m2 | 17.1 x 13.9 m |
60,000 rub. |
W-406-2K
W-406-2K project of a three-story brick house with a basement and attic measuring 14 by 14
406.3 m2 | 13.6 x 13.7 m |
RUB 37,100 |
W-481-1K
W-481-1K project of a two-story brick house with a basement and a garage measuring 19 by 17
481.5 m2 | 18.6 x 16.7 m |
RUB 48,100 |
U-521-1K
U-521-1K project of a two-story brick house with a basement and a garage measuring 23 by 17
521 m2 | 23.3 x 16.9 m |
RUB 85,000 |
E-605-1K
E-605-1K project of a three-story brick house with a basement and attic measuring 11 by 20
644 m2 | 10.5 x 19.6 m |
RUB 37,000 |
S-710-1K
S-710-1K project of a three-story brick house with a basement and attic and a garage measuring 21 by 16
871.9 m2 | 21 x 15.9 m |
RUB 63,945 |
U-444-1K
U-444-1K project of a two-story brick house measuring 18 by 18
444.52 m2 | 18.5 x 17.6 m |
50,000 rub. |
U-483-1K
U-483-1K project of a two-story brick house measuring 31 by 22
483.61 m2 | 31.1 x 21.8 m |
60,000 rub. |
C-423-1K
C-423-1K project of a two-story brick house with a base measuring 16 by 20
423.02 m2 | 15.6 x 20.1 m |
72,000 rub. |
U-548-1K
U-548-1K project of a two-story brick house with a base measuring 20 by 15
547.97 m2 | 19.8 x 15.3 m |
45,000 rub. |
U-1420-1K
U-1420-1K project of a two-story brick house with a basement measuring 30 by 50
1419.81 m2 | 30.2 x 49.9 m |
150,000 rub. |
O-494-1K
O-494-1K project of a two-story brick house measuring 20 by 19
494 m2 | 19.5 x 19.2 m |
60,000 rub. |
O-490-1K
O-490-1K project of a two-story brick house with a garage measuring 21 by 18
490 m2 | 20.5 x 18.3 m |
45,000 rub. |
O-493-1K
O-493-1K project of a two-story brick house with a garage measuring 21 by 20
493 m2 | 21.4 x 20.3 m |
60,000 rub. |
O-438-1K
O-438-1K project of a one-story brick house with an attic and a garage measuring 26 by 13
438 m2 | 26.3 x 13.3 m |
45,000 rub. |
O-471-1K
O-471-1K project of a two-story brick house with a basement measuring 19 by 17
471 m2 | 18.9 x 17 m |
45,000 rub. |
O-860-1K
O-860-1K project of a two-story brick house with an attic and a garage measuring 28 by 23
870 m2 | 28 x 23.3 m |
RUB 250,000 |
O-1000-1K
O-1000-1K project of a two-story brick house with a garage measuring 30 by 34
1000 m2 | 30.4 x 33.7 m |
RUB 250,000 |
O-416-1K
O-416-1K project of a two-story brick house with an attic and a garage measuring 23 by 10
416 m2 | 22.6 x 9.9 m |
45,000 rub. |
O-466-1K
O-466-1K project of a two-story brick house with an attic and a garage measuring 23 by 10
466 m2 | 22.6 x 9.9 m |
45,000 rub. |
U-526-1K
U-526-1K project of a two-story brick house with a garage measuring 26 by 17
526.39 m2 | 26.2 x 17.3 m |
55,000 rub. |
U-450-1K
U-450-1K project of a two-story brick house with an attic measuring 21 by 13
450.07 m2 | 21.2 x 13 m |
50,000 rub. |
35103802356036193620362436573683369837353737378427910983390339134073460347135033499350235093511351235133518351935433547
105.64 m2 | |
Box 4.6 million Warm contour 5.4 million White box | |
More details |
122.73 m2 | |
Box 7.3 million Warm contour 8.2 million White box | |
More details |
115.97 m2 | |
Box 7 million Warm contour 7.9 million White box | |
More details |
216.47 m2 | |
Box 11.8 million Warm contour 12.9 million White box | |
More details |
18 m2 | |
Warm contour 1.65 million | |
More details |
128 m2 | |
Warm contour 6.85 million | |
More details |
43.48 m2 | |
Warm contour 3.7 million | |
More details |
381.58 m2 | |
Warm contour 19.8 million | |
More details |
51 m2 | |
Warm contour 4.5 million | |
More details |
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Story
Tithe
was a rectangle with sides of 80 and 30 (“thirty”) or 60 and 40 (“forty”) fathoms and was called
the government tithe
. It was the main Russian land measure.
Known since the 14th century. The “Book of the Sosh Letter” gives the following definition of tithe: “In tithe
The length is 80 fathoms, the diameter is 30 fathoms, and the fractional (that is, square) in the tithe is 2400.”
Originally tithe
measured in two quarters and was a square with sides of 1/10 (2500 square fathoms).
According to the land survey instructions of 1753, the size of the state tithe
was determined to be 2400 square fathoms. In the 18th - early 20th centuries it was also used:
- economic oblique tithe
(80 × 40 = 3200 square fathoms); - economic round tithe
(60 × 60 = 3600 square fathoms); - hundredth tithe
(100 × 100 = 10,000 square fathoms); - melon tithe
(80 × 10 = 800 square fathoms) and others.
After the October Revolution, in connection with the transition to the metric system of measures, in accordance with the decree of the Council of People's Commissars of the RSFSR of September 14, 1918, the use of tithes
was limited, and from September 1, 1927 - prohibited.
Standing apart is such a measure of area as TITH, which is constantly found in old Russian literature when determining the size of land ownership. A tithe was equal to 2,400 square fathoms, or 1,092 hectares. In a word - and this is useful to remember - a tithe is almost the same as a hectare.
Now we will understand the gigantic difference between the amount of land owned by a serf and a landowner. A peasant's land allotment usually consisted of two or three dessiatines; a tithe allotment was considered completely beggarly. Let us remember the lines of A.V. Koltsov from “The Plowman’s Song”: “Well, trudge, Sivka, / With arable land, tithes.” This area was completely insufficient to feed a large, usually peasant family per year, especially since the landowner allocated the peasant the worst land, which gave low productivity. But the amount of land the landowner had was in the hundreds and thousands of dessiatines.
Konstantin Levin (“Anna Karenina”) has 3,000 acres in Kalyazinsky district.
Nekhlyudov’s mother (“Resurrection” by L. Tolstoy) “received about 10 thousand dessiatines as a dowry.”
Prince Ligovsky has a lawsuit with the treasury over 20 thousand acres of forest (“Princess Ligovskaya” by Lermontov).
There is a lot of such data in Russian literature.
After the peasant reform of 1861, landowners' lands began to pass into the hands of enterprising and resourceful kulaks. In Gorky’s story “Foma Gordeev,” the millionaire Shchurov says: “... in my youth I was a man, and I had two and a quarter (Yu.F.) dessiatines of land, and in my old age I accumulated eleven thousand dessiatines, all under forest.”
It is also useful to imagine the size of the manor gardens in which the action of Russian classical works takes place. The garden surrounding Fyodor Karamazov's house "was the size of a tithe or a little more." But the Shelestovs (“My Life” by Chekhov) “had a large garden, on four acres.”
However, the tithe was not always equal to 2400 square fathoms. In the old days there was also a HOUSING TITH, more than 3200 or 3600 square fathoms. This is what Judas dreams of in Saltykov-Shchedrin’s “The Golovlev Lords”: “Then there was economic tithe, compared to today it was one and a half times more.”
If we were not talking about agricultural land, then the area was usually calculated not in tithes, but in square versts. In Kuprin’s “Moloch” we read: “... a huge panorama of the plant opened up, stretching over fifty square miles.”
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To find out how many hectares there are in a hectare, you need to use a simple web calculator.
In the left field, enter the number of hectares you want to change. In the field on the right you will see the calculation result. To convert hectares or give tens to other units of measurement, simply click the appropriate link.