Hi Michelle. Yep, all houses. The tan/yellow house on the right is actually the police constable's house. Not the police station. That's green. Buildings - non residential - are colour coded in Greenland with green for the police, yellow (sometimes red) for hospitals, red for shops, blue for utilities, and a few other colours just to mix it up a little. ;-)
A bit more colour than beige. But, in a crazy twist, houses are numbered not in order, but according to the date they were built. It can get VERY confusing when visiting someone for the first time. You literally can't imagine where they might live without a physical point of reference. :-)
(psssst! --- That was 'Snow White'!) 😊
Do you know, that was my first thought. But there is no way, no waaaay I'm going to challenge an insider such as yourself, sir. :-) Thanks. :-)
Love the colorful houses…at least I’m assuming they are houses? All the houses on my street except mine are a version of beige. No joke.
Hi Michelle. Yep, all houses. The tan/yellow house on the right is actually the police constable's house. Not the police station. That's green. Buildings - non residential - are colour coded in Greenland with green for the police, yellow (sometimes red) for hospitals, red for shops, blue for utilities, and a few other colours just to mix it up a little. ;-)
A bit more colour than beige. But, in a crazy twist, houses are numbered not in order, but according to the date they were built. It can get VERY confusing when visiting someone for the first time. You literally can't imagine where they might live without a physical point of reference. :-)
Wow, that is really interesting…thank you for the additional ‘color’ so to speak!