Since there are no specified building dimensions any answer is correct. However 7000 square meters is roughly 1.73 acres. A typical suburban lot is .14 acres giving you a total of 12 residential lots. This includes no space for roads.
Good answer, a house may occupy 1/8th of an acre giving a total of 11 in all and including an access
In reality, this depends on the land use bylaw for the city/town/municpality that governs the land. Assuming this is a "standard" lot of 15m x 30m and is zoned as "residential", you can probably only have one house on the lot. Legal stuff aside, I guess it depends on how big the house(s) would be. You could come up with an average size of a few houses (based on Real Estate Listings) and then just use division: 420m2 / ???m2 = # of houses that could fit
If you mean a building lot, there is no standardized size for all towns. If you mean the unit of measure called a township, one township is 93,239,571.97 square meters.
An acre is any area that measures 4840 squareyards which is approximately 4046.86 square meters.So a rectangle 1 meter wide and about 4046.86 meters long is one acre;a rectangle 2 meters wide and about 2023.43 meters long is also one acre;a rectangle 10 meters wide and about 404.69 meters long is also one acre.An acre of 4840 sq yds is also calculable as a rectangle 22yds wide by 220yds long, which would be one chain wide and one furlong long - it is most likely that this was the rectangle that was originally used to define the acre.In meters one chain by one furlong would be 20.1168 meters wide by 201.168 meters long.(1 inch is defined to be exactly 2.54cm.)
This depends on the area you live in and how much area there is. If you lived in the US, you would more likely measure by hectares, acres, and other units of area. However, if you live in Great Britain, Asia or Australia and other parts of the world, you would more likely use square meters and centimeters. Now to your question. Which unit would you use to measure area: square centimeters or square meters? If I were to draw a square on a piece of paper, it would not match up to a single meter in length so I would measure by square centimeters (GB) or square inches (US). But if I were to measure larger areas such as land, I would measure in square meters (GB) or square feet and hectares (US).
In real estate, lot area is the size of a plot of land, usually rendered in square feet or meters. This is contrasted with floor area, which is the size of the footprints of any buildings on the lot.
In reality, this depends on the land use bylaw for the city/town/municpality that governs the land. Assuming this is a "standard" lot of 15m x 30m and is zoned as "residential", you can probably only have one house on the lot. Legal stuff aside, I guess it depends on how big the house(s) would be. You could come up with an average size of a few houses (based on Real Estate Listings) and then just use division: 420m2 / ???m2 = # of houses that could fit
64 x 64 = 4096 sq. metres.
Iceland's land area covers 100,250,000,000 square meters.
There are 36,400 square meters in nine acres of land.
About 615.5 square meters.
The land area of Turkey is approximately 783,562 square kilometers, which is equivalent to 783,562,000,000 square meters.
10x10=100. So there are 100 square meters in a 10x10 meter plot of land.
10,000 square meters
Five acres equates to about 20,234.3 square meters.
619,745,000,000 square meters.
Tasmania has a land area of approximately 68,401 square kilometers, which is equivalent to 68,401,000,000 square meters.
The answer would be 210 square meters.