Do these types of homes have a name? They're found throughout southeast Asia and are typically side by side (fully attached) with gate in front and sometimes a patio/veranda on top.
Also for anyone living in India, are these common there as well? This picture is from Malaysia.
>>68040605
looks like camdon or new orleans
>>68041210
In my exploration of Google Maps I've noticed these types of houses EVERYWHERE in southeast Asia. Particularly Thailand, Cambodia, Malaysia, Indonesia, Philippines, etc. They're very nice. The benefits of suburban and urban living all in one.
>>68041210
Another pic of what I'm talking about.
>>68040605
look like typical mexican house in not so poor but not centric areas.
>>68040605
Middle class people live like this here.
Eastearn Europe looks kind of like that but with more serious walls, older,and less mass produced.
>>68041655
>>68041606
>cages
I've noticed South American homes have cages around them or even bars over the windows. I assume it's so you can open the doors and windows to cool down without getting robbed and murdered?
>>68040605
I think it's just their style of what we might call townhouses
We call them pichoneras
They only have front yard and a small backyard, usually lower class people live in them
>>68042766
The ones I've seen in the Philippines are very cheap (for a Canadian) and are actually quite nice. I'm considering retiring there with a lakefront property considering how cheap they are.
>>68042693
You were right. I looked it up and all the real estate sites tend to call them townhouses.
>>68040605
Yeah.
They are called 'Rowhouses' here.
>>68040605
comfy
>>68040605
It's a terrace house. Originated from British.
>>68040605
typical shitty third world street in argentina, at least in patagonia where I grew up with destroyed streets and shitty african infraestructure.
people have fences between their houses and the street because like almost all homes have at least one or two dogs and they let them out in the front yard and with the fence they won't escape of attack anybody.
>>68040605
I always thought of them as regular houses. (Grew up in Singapore) I guess the closest stylistic term would be shophouse.