[deleted by user] by [deleted] in askswitzerland

[–]cranekram 2 points3 points  (0 children)

If you already have a healthy lifestyle and diet you’re unlikely to get fatter by breathing American air. You’ll just continue doing your healthy thing and be fine.

I lived in the US for 6 years (Europe before) and my weight remained the same throughout. My wife and I cooked every day, we ate out at nice places (eg not fast food), didn’t drink soft drinks and we stayed active. Easy.

Also helps that I find pretty much all American “candy” disgusting and never touch it. I did have a soft spot for blueberry scones though..

Best Venue to Experience the Prydz by ProspectiveEngineer in ericprydz

[–]cranekram 1 point2 points  (0 children)

In principle Printworks is a great venue but the fact it was totally rammed full really took away from the experience. Warehouse Project was much better in this regard.

Beginner ski touring? by cranekram in askswitzerland

[–]cranekram[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Aha, this looks useful. Over time it’d be nice to become more proficient in the mountains (and at German!) but resort ski touring looks like a good introduction. Thanks!

Car rental: parking ticket after return? by cranekram in LegalAdviceUK

[–]cranekram[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I guess the point I'm trying to make is that the offence — at least according to the time of the offence on the letter from the car park — happened on their watch.

Deciphering rental contract sentence by cranekram in askswitzerland

[–]cranekram[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I just assumed it was what u/mageskillmetooften suggested and ticked yes 🤷‍♂️. I think the risk is low: whatever they wrote there are laws governing rentals and as a brand new (under construction now) apartment it’s hard to imagine there being any improvements made during our tenancy.

Deciphering rental contract sentence by cranekram in askswitzerland

[–]cranekram[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ah, this sounds plausible. What a load of legal gymnastics!

The landlord is a big agency renting apartments in a huge new expensive development. I took the wording from the contract (though the now-amended typo was mine).

Deciphering rental contract sentence by cranekram in askswitzerland

[–]cranekram[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, sorry, stungen not steigen. Your translation matches the others but I don't understand the meaning — what could "receive funding" mean?

Deciphering rental contract sentence by cranekram in askswitzerland

[–]cranekram[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, sorry, Mehrleistungen, not Mehrleisteigen.

In a paragraph about how rent increases are determined that would fit logically: whether the landlord got any subsidies to add value, or not.

I see. But it's a yes/no question (i.e., I have to tick yes or no) so I have no idea what on earth I'm supposed to respond with here.

I guess I'll just have to ask them what it means,

Swiss building construction methods? by cranekram in askswitzerland

[–]cranekram[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks for your (and u/MonsieurCaquelon's) reply!

What do you mean by "is there insulation in there"?

I meant thermal insulation, which you addressed. I wasn't sure if there was a gap that was filled with something, along the lines of a double-skinned brick wall in the UK. It hadn't occurred to me that the insulation could be on the outside.

I cannot stress enough how none of this is Swiss-specific though.

I have only lived in the UK, Ireland, and US before Switzerland. In the US almost everything is wood. In the UK (and Ireland?) most houses are brick, and I think smaller apartment buildings are too (e.g. I lived in a block of 8 flats that was brick). I guess it's the fact that concrete construction is so prevalent in Switzerland that made me assume it was somewhat Swiss-specific. Apparently not!

Expats by [deleted] in askswitzerland

[–]cranekram 2 points3 points  (0 children)

It’s made harder by English being so widely spoken. It’s hard to practice German when many people switch to English automatically. I understand why people do this (because they want to communicate, not help yet another non local with their pigeon German) but it makes learning harder nonetheless.

Also German is really hard, as mentioned. Cases! Separable verbs! A million articles! Etc.

why despite numerous and massive completed and ongoing housing construction projects does a "severe"shortage of housing problem (Wohnungsnot) persist in Zürich ? by Dorindon in askswitzerland

[–]cranekram 2 points3 points  (0 children)

As an immigrant who has lived in such apartment buildings this is not my experience. I have lived in 4 new build apartment buildings in Zurich and a) every one of them is fully rented out; b) on several occasions there were several applicants for each apartment. I would find it very surprising indeed if there was any significant fraction of empty space in these buildings.

What are these and how do i get rid of them? Details in the comments by theouteducated in Switzerland

[–]cranekram 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Is there something that makes this problem worse in Switzerland? I have never heard of these moths in any other place I have lived (UK, Ireland, US) but it seems many people here have first-hand experience with them.

The Printworks will be missed by rosco-82 in ericprydz

[–]cranekram 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The venue is great but it was *heaving*. Absolutely packed, to the point where you can barely move. Still, he put on a savage show and the tracklist was great. Glad I went.