Literal question
3. Type of building with regard to construction:
[] Detached individual house
[] Semi-detached house
[] Row house
[] House with agricultural premises (under the same roof or in a row)
[] Multi-dwelling building (block of flats, skyscraper, older style urban house)
[] Other type of building (office building, school, kindergarten, factory, various homes, etc.)
[] Other (hut, container, trailer or other, provisional structure)
Interviewer instructions
3 Type of building with regard to construction:
Detached individual house is marked by the enumerator for a building that stands alone on the land and is by its original method of construction not a multi-dwelling building (e.g. block of flats, skyscraper, villa-block) even though there may be more than one dwelling in it (e.g. children and parents each have their own dwelling in the house which was built as a one-family house). This answer is also selected by the enumerator for vineyard cottages with dwellings.
Semi-detached house is marked by the enumerator when two houses are joined together on house fronting or have a common wall.
Row house is marked by the enumerator for the type of building constructed in a row. A row house has its entrance, its house number and two (or at least one) common walls or a common roof. Row houses can be single storey or multi storey, chain or atrium, built in a straight row, shifted row or terraced row. Multi-dwelling building (blocks of flats) that are built in a row are taken into account in the category of multi-dwelling buildings.
House with agricultural premises is marked by the enumerator for a building which in addition to residential area has agricultural premises (e.g. stable, hay barn, granary, etc.).
Multi-dwelling building is marked by the enumerator for blocks of flats, skyscrapers and older urban multi-dwelling buildings (e.g. buildings in city centres that were built close one to another and they do not look like modern multi-dwelling buildings). Multi-dwelling buildings have common staircases from with entrances lead into individual dwellings. In addition to dwellings, they can have business areas and other non-residential premises, which, however must not account for more than half of the building's total area.
Other type of building is marked by the enumerator for a building that can not be classified into any of the mentioned answers but has at least one dwelling or another occupied premise (e.g., various business buildings, schools, hospitals, hotels, old people's homes, upper secondary school and student residence, etc.)
Other is marked by the enumerator for various kinds of provisional premises which are not intended for permanent residence and do not meet the definition of a dwelling but were used by people at the time of the 2002 Census for residence (huts, containers, trailers, tents, wagons and other provisional premises). The enumerator enumerates these premises only if they are occupied.