Used to live in an old house that was already in official documents since the revolution. So not too bad. Walls were so thick...
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A house from 1867, although a suburb has a house from 1853. Both are still lived in.
The town I live in burned down almost completely in 1787, so most historic buildings in the city were built after that. The city wall is probably the oldest structure, but it's unknown when it was originally built. The oldest building with a known year of construction is most likely the church that was built in 1246.
An old church going back to the early 1800s, though that's misleading.
The old part of the church is still there, but it's been updated and expanded over the years so that the foundation under one part is all that's original now.
The oldest building would be the cathedral built between 1628 and 1633 although the city walls were built between 1613-1618 and are still standing and complete
My home town has a building built originally in 1220. It is still in use by a pub. That's over 800 years old!
is it called "Seáns Bar" by any chance? 😁
We've got a pub from 1552 still standing and operating as a pub
We've got Roman ruins from 79AD too, but obviously they're not still a building really
Gamle Aker Kirke, church from 1150 (Oslo).
Our old town hall was originally built in the 15th century but it is kind of a ship of Theseus situation as the oldest parts were destroyed in WWII.
Proper building was built at the end of 19th century. There is an old well that is a few hundred years old and the ruins of a Roman villa from about 2000 years ago.
A castle built in 1526. It’s still in use, but it’s a museum and restaurant now.
I'm not sure if it's THE oldest one, but Aarhus Cathedral is quite old, having elements from all the way back from the 1100s.
Still young compared to the city itself, though: Aarhus was originally founded in the 700s
Build in 1723.
I'm in a California suburb, and the oldest building we have is an old adobe barn from 1852, which is pretty old for California. We actually have a lot of historical buildings, too.
1310 it's a small house (max. 10m wide) in the town centre. Today it's part of the library of the University hosting different exhibitions. It's called Günter Grass Archiv in Göttingen, Germany.
That will probably be the church that was built in 1190s
A church from 1845(ish),
Apparently there was one building from the 1830s but it was knocked down for a hospital, which ironically was also knocked down.
The Old Tower from around 1300. It was part of a church that was destroyed in 1880.
I figured it'd at least be a little older than 1859, but the Four Mile House in Denver is apparently our oldest structure.
1626, three-storied house.
- s&d spinning mill - 1847
- grass hill school - one room school house, 1861
- asa waters mansion - 1826-1832
Early 1800s is the best guess. It's a log house that is maintained as a sort of museum these days.
Late 1800’s is when the town was established. Lots of houses from then are still standing, but a good number of them have had additions built, so they’re not 100% original.
1887 Grissom House
1870 to 1871 Government house was built in Darwin Australia.
Luckily survived the Japanese bombing raids and still stands today.
Don't know about the oldest home, but I'm living in a house built 10 years before the US State I was born in became a US state.
1842, before the city was incorporated. A house. First big building I know of was built in 1888.
St. Augustine has buildings from around 1700, those would be the oldest in my state.
I remember going to London and being amazed by the old buildings, most of what is around here is from the 1920s or newer.