Linked house

A linked house is a type of home whereby the homes above ground appear to be detached, but they share a common wall in the basement or foundation.[1] In terms of value, a linked house would be generally more expensive than a semi-detached house but less expensive than a truly detached house.

The linked house style was popular in the 1970s and 1980s in the Greater Toronto Area, where builders could "construct what looked like detached houses on lots which were designated for semi-detached models".[2] A linked house, however, is not a semi-detached house since no above-ground walls are shared. A subset of semi-detached house where a pair of homes share basement and garage walls are called linked semi-detached but these are not considered linked houses.

Compared to neighboring pair of true detached houses, a pair of linked homes will be extremely close together with a narrow unusable alley. However this difference may not be necessarily noticeable unless measured or checking municipal zoning, and real estate agents have often unscrupulously advertised a link house as a detached house on the resale market.[3] Today builders will opt to built true detached homes today because it can sell for much more than linked houses, enough to offset the savings of a common foundation in linked houses.[4]

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