Grave land

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The German Federal Allotment Garden Act refers to land that is contractually only allowed to be cultivated with annual plants ( Section 1 (2) No. 5 BKleingG). Grabeland is not an allotment garden within the meaning of this law.

Grabeland is land used as a hobby gardener, which is often given out for temporary use by municipalities or the Deutsche Bahn in plots and for a limited period of time and can be used by the lessee for a relatively low annual lease .

The use of allotment gardens, on the other hand, is for an indefinite period. Types of use and scope of use are regulated in municipal allotment garden regulations and go beyond the use permitted on Grabeland, in particular with regard to planting and the construction of structures and communal facilities such as paths, play areas and club houses. The users are also organized in an allotment garden association. The possibility of use requires a membership in the association.

Contracts on Grabeland, on the other hand, are concluded directly between property owner and user and can often be terminated annually according to their purpose.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Lease of Grabeland website of the city of Bielefeld
  2. ^ Matthias Heinzel: Inquiry from the Greens: Grabel land for housing? Göttinger Tageblatt , January 26, 2016
  3. ↑ Allotment garden regulations of the state capital Düsseldorf for city-owned allotment gardens from June 30, 2005 (Ddf. Official Journal No. 32/33 from August 20, 2005) Status: March 2006
  4. The last illegal grabel land houses are being demolished WAZ , March 12, 2013