The reporter learned today from the Ministry of Housing, Urban-Rural Development that the “Good House” Construction Guidelines, which were publicly solicited for comments from the public in March of this year, have recently been publicly solicited for comments from the public once again after making relevant revisions. The revised “Good House” construction guide is divided into five major parts: “good house” connotation and implementation path, safe and durable, comfortable and healthy, green and low carbon, smart and convenient. The system defines the four core connotations of “good house” safety, comfort, green, and smart in the new era, covering the whole process of housing planning, design, construction, operation and maintenance, and clearly improving standards, careful design, selected materials, precision construction, and long-term operation and maintenance. According to information, the revised “Guidelines” focus on people's living pain points, refining technical requirements from the dimensions of site structural safety, indoor health environment, energy saving and carbon reduction technology, smart communities and smart homes, taking into account user-friendly designs such as age-appropriate and child-friendly, separate pipelines, and variable space, and focuses on solving people's livelihood problems of leakage, poor sound insulation, bad smell blockage, and high energy consumption.

Zhitongcaijing · 1d ago
The reporter learned today from the Ministry of Housing, Urban-Rural Development that the “Good House” Construction Guidelines, which were publicly solicited for comments from the public in March of this year, have recently been publicly solicited for comments from the public once again after making relevant revisions. The revised “Good House” construction guide is divided into five major parts: “good house” connotation and implementation path, safe and durable, comfortable and healthy, green and low carbon, smart and convenient. The system defines the four core connotations of “good house” safety, comfort, green, and smart in the new era, covering the whole process of housing planning, design, construction, operation and maintenance, and clearly improving standards, careful design, selected materials, precision construction, and long-term operation and maintenance. According to information, the revised “Guidelines” focus on people's living pain points, refining technical requirements from the dimensions of site structural safety, indoor health environment, energy saving and carbon reduction technology, smart communities and smart homes, taking into account user-friendly designs such as age-appropriate and child-friendly, separate pipelines, and variable space, and focuses on solving people's livelihood problems of leakage, poor sound insulation, bad smell blockage, and high energy consumption.
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