There is for example the quality of houses, or rather the quality of the materials houses are made of and how well these are put together. (English houses could use some quality “German engineering” :P ) The house I live in now, for example, has extremely thin walls and floors. I can hear every step anyone takes anywhere in the house. Having two levels in the apartment doesn’t help either. Even though there is thick carpet on the stairs and on the corridor of the upper level, it’s still noisy every time someone goes up or down the stairs. I feel a little bad for the couple living in the downstairs bedroom, it must be even louder there. :/ But then again, I’m glad I’m in one of the upstairs rooms.


One thing I really like here is electric showers. Both bathrooms here have a tankless water heater, which basically means that we always have hot water in the shower. This is very useful, if not a necessity, seeing as there are 7 people living in one apartment. And since we all pay a fixed price for rent, no extra utilities, we don't have to worry about creating extra costs for everyone if one person takes longer than the other. I especially like this because I was afraid I might end up paying a lot more for heating during the winter due to bad isolation. Luckily this won't be a problem now.

In general, people seem to be very polite and friendly here. I noticed this the first time when I was at my local supermarket. When I came around a shelf and someone else came from the other side, we were standing in each other’s way. The other person just said “sorry” and walked around. The first time this happened, I was a little confused, because in Germany people would just see that there’s room to walk around, maybe exchange a look and walk on. You’d only say “sorry” if you know that you did something wrong; if there was something to feel bad for. Maybe it was your fault for blocking the way, so the other person couldn’t pass. Not here, though. It’s not a matter of being right or wrong, of faults and errors. It’s just a way of being friendly and polite. And I like it ;)
Another example for friendly people I already met here is a guy from the local gym. Matthias and I showed up there last week to look at the facility and maybe sign up for a membership, but we didn’t know that we showed up just at closing time. We were prepared to go back home and come back the next day, as any German gym staff member would have told us. But this man just told us to wait a minute for him to fetch his keys, so he could unlock the doors again to show us around. We were both surprised and happy that this man was so nice to take these few minutes out of his own time, when he was supposed to be heading out already.
And there is one more thing I have to mention when talking about first impressions and differences between England and Germany. Traffic lights. Basically, traffic lights for pedestrians are completely redundant. They are simply ignored. Just look if there’s a car coming and walk whenever you think it’s safe. Even policemen do it. Since I saw that, I at least don’t have to feel guilty any more crossing the street at a red light myself. A UK student told me “they are only for children. At least that’s what I tell myself.”
But enough for now... I’m sure I will soon notice more differences between German and British customs that I can tell you about.