A
duplex house is a dwelling comprising two units
on two different floors.
By contrast, a building comprising two units either side-by-side is
typically considered as being two distinct
semi-detached or
twin homes (and
thus usually, separate property) sharing a wall. Confusingly, some
areas also call this a
duplex.
The term "duplex" can also be extended to three-unit and four-unit
buildings, or they can be referred to with specific terms such as
triplex and
fourplex or
quadplex.
Because of the flexibility of the term, the line between an
apartment building and a duplex
is somewhat blurred, with apartment buildings tending to be bigger,
while duplexes are usually the size of a normal house.
Especially
in dense areas like Manhattan
, a duplex apartment refers to a
maisonette, a single dwelling unit spread over two floors connected
by an indoor staircase. Similarly, a triplex apartment
refers to an apartment spread out over three floors.
These properties can
be quite expensive, and include the most expensive property in
Manhattan as of 2006 (according to Forbes
Magazine), a triplex atop The Pierre Hotel
.
Urban planning
In
urban planning, the term duplex is
used more specifically. Major Canadian cities sometimes use the
term duplex to refer specifically to a building with
one unit
built above another.
Edmonton
defines
Duplex Housing as "development consisting of a
building containing only two Dwellings, with one Dwelling placed
over the other in whole or in part with individual and separate
access to each Dwelling". Calgary
defines
Duplex Dwelling as "a building which contains two
Dwelling Units, one located above the other, with each having a
separate entrance". Toronto
proposes in
their new Zoning Bylaw to define Duplex Building
as a building that has only two dwelling units, and one dwelling
unit is entirely or partially on top of the other dwelling
unit. Halifax
defines Duplex Dwelling as "the
whole of a dwelling that is divided horizontally into two separate
dwelling units, each of which has an independent
entrance".
Other major cities use the term duplex, but do not specify the
physical relationship between the two dwelling units.
Dallas
defines the
term duplex as "two dwelling units located on a lot".
Philadelphia
defines a duplex dwelling as "a
dwelling occupied as the home or residence of two (2) families,
under one (1) roof, each family occupying a single
unit".
Other major cities do not use the term duplex in their zoning or
Land Use bylaws.
San Francisco
and Vancouver
use the term Two-family
dwelling. Winnipeg uses the term
Dwelling,
two-family. The definitions of these terms do not specify
the physical relationship between the two dwelling units in the
building.
Detroit
and Chicago
uses the term Two-flat and defines
it as a "residential building that contains 2 dwelling units
located on a single lot. The dwelling units must share a
common wall or common floor/ceiling."
Where cities do not define the relationship of the dwelling units
to one another, units may be built one on top of the other, or one
beside the other. The latter arrangement is more specifically
referred to as a
semi-detached
building.
See also
References
- Merriam Webster Online: definition of fourplex
- Edmonton Zoning Bylaw
- Calgary Land Use Bylaw
- Proposed Toronto Zoning Bylaw
- Halifax Mainland Land Use Bylaw
- Dallas Zoning Code
- Philadelphia Code
- Vancouver Zoning and Development Bylaw
- San Francisco Planning Code
- Winnipeg Zoning Bylaw
- Chicago Zoning Ordinance