Many of the buildings in ghettos were multi-family apartments or small homes. These buildings were often made from poured concrete or concrete block.
When the Nazis enforced them, they tried to get all of them to live in large, crowded areas called Ghettos.
they were existing buildings, only walls at the ends of certain streets were added. Though the buildings were not as well maintained as they had been,
most household items, people were allowed to take many posessions into the ghettos with them.
they would live in the streets or some of the old buildings they could find.
Monika A. Murzyn has written: 'Kazimierz' -- subject(s): Buildings, structures, Conservation and restoration, Economic conditions, Historic buildings, Jewish ghettos, Urban renewal
They have alot of different kinds of buildings.
ghettos that are not closed, they were ghettos that did not restrict access, to either Jew or gentile.
they were not allowed to wear clothes they had to cut their toe nails they had to make their beds
There are no 'houses' in the classic sense on the Antarctic continent. There are work buildings, dorm buildings, service buildings, mess buildings and out buildings.
Real Buildings are classified as 'real estate' property.
open and closed ghettos.
no