
Before design starts, check the plot, function, required area, height, docks, access, utilities and formal constraints. These decisions affect cost more than a generic technology label.
Indicative hall cost depends on area, height, function, structure, envelope, slab, installations, support areas, access and site preparation. A price per square metre alone is not enough because it ignores plot and infrastructure constraints.
The plot must fit more than the building footprint. It needs manoeuvring areas, parking, docks, truck access, office and welfare areas, fire access, retention and room for future expansion.
Planning rules, plot geometry, utilities, fire requirements, retention, entrance layout, neighbours and phasing decide whether a hall variant is realistic. Early analysis helps reject assumptions that only work on paper.
In the configurator you select a plot, choose the hall type, set basic dimensions and receive indicative cost. The result does not replace design or a contractor offer, but it gives a better basis for talking to an architect, contractor or bank.
The report may include indicative cost, hall parameters, area, plot placement variant, risks to verify and the recommended next step. The goal is not just to see a price screen, but to receive material for a real decision.
Before buying land, before planning conditions, before talking to a contractor, before design decisions and whenever you need to know whether the investment makes sense.
Cost depends on function, area, height, structure, envelope, slab, installations, plot and infrastructure. HALA System gives an indicative range, not a binding contractor quote.
Yes. The configurator helps test a hall variant, basic dimensions and indicative cost at an early decision stage.
No. It supports the early investment decision. Building and execution design require further professional design work.
Yes. The starting point can be a location or plot outline plus basic hall parameters.
Function, height, spans, docks, support areas, slab, installations, fire requirements, utilities, retention and site preparation all affect cost.
No. It is indicative and helps structure decisions before design, tendering or land purchase.
It may include indicative cost, hall parameters, plot placement variant, risks and a recommended next step.
Planning rules determine what can be built and under what conditions. They should be checked before design or land purchase.