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How would you describe your home and it’s layout?

akindheart · 61-69, F
3 bedroom house, 2 bathrooms, not enough storage. small kitchen but huge garage. zero lot lilne but i have to still mow
JustNik · 51-55, F
I bet in 1955 it was ahead of its time! 😂 I like that it’s backward from what I grew up with - the living room is facing the back yard with a big horizontal window. In the 70s, an attached garage was added and the basement was set up like its own little apartment so there’s a fireplace and bathroom and kitchen down there. One wall was built in bunk beds, but we took one out for bookshelves and lights to make a reading nook. It has always been cozy without feeling too cramped.
Love2know · 36-40, M
@JustNik Book not nook.
DeWayfarer · 61-69, M
An organized chaos of a small typical apartment for this area. Perfect for one person and one cat. But not much more for any length of time.

It's surprisingly packed with stuff though for 740 square feet.

Don't know how the neighbor manages with two small kids and the rest of her family visiting all the time.

I do hear them banging on the walls from time to time. The kids that is. Both under seven years old.
WhateverWorks · 36-40
1950’s, 2 level starter home built into a hillside. Whoever last owned the house put care into building clever storage solutions. Many cupboards and shelves. We’re still unpacking, but I love all the warm wood colors and that we get [i]lots[/i] of light. My old place was a cave. We’ll have a cozy fire going this winter. Our living room has a beautiful view of both the sunrise and sunset. The back window looks over the backyard, which has a lot of lovely, fruit trees. The kitchen is small, which might bug some people, but I’m content. We gave the bedrooms to the kids and use the basement as our bedroom/art studio.
Eddiesolds · 61-69, M
3 befrooms upstair with two.bathrooms The maiin floor is open with another bathroom. The mainfloor is.cozy
ArishMell · 70-79, M
Compact and ordinary. (Edwardian end-of-terrace, 2-up, 2-down plus extension for the kitchen and bathroom).
robb65 · 56-60, M
Picture a 150y/o four room house with a wide hall running front to back. Picture additional rooms added by on by people who weren't carpenters (probably 75-100 years ago), some of which were built using whatever used lumber they had laying around. When I bought the place there were four doors opening onto the back porch.
dancingtongue · 80-89, M
@robb65 Our first house in Oakland was somewhat like that. Not quite as old, but almost 100 today, and somone had tacked on a large room in back extending the length of the house. Turned out it originally must have been intended as a sunroom/greenhouse for plants because it had no electricity, no insulation. The realtor had dressed it up with some cheap paneling to look like more than it was to maintain it was an additional bedroom or family room. But it was in our very low price range, and accepted a Veterans' mortgage -- most did not in those days. When we got to the point of being able to afford it, we had that room torn off and built a legitimate two-story addition.
robb65 · 56-60, M
@dancingtongue It's fairly common to find what was once a porch become walled in. A dead giveaway is a floor that slops noticeably towards the outside wall. This was a common way to add a bathroom to a house built before indoor plumbing.

My kitchen wasn't part of the original house. The floor joist start out as 2x12's up against the original but the farther back you go they get smaller as they ran out of usable 1x12's. One wall of my kitchen was covered in horizontal layer of 1/2" tongue and groove, then a layer of paper bags from the cleaners (with a three digit phone number) in the next town south, and then a second vertical layer of 1/2" T&G. This was nailed up with cut nails.
There was once a second house on my property that must have been torn down in the late 20's or early 30's, I suspect some of the lumber in the additions to my house came from there, I'm just not sure if it was done long enough ago that cut nails were still being used or if they salvaged and reused the nails as well.
The house and almost 5 acres sold for less than 25,000. Needless to say I couldn't have rented a place as cheap as the house payments were.
dancingtongue · 80-89, M
@robb65 The layer of paper bags reminds me of the first property my parents ever bought -- 20 acres of cotton land with an old shack on it. The interior "walls" of the shack were sheets of the brown paper that they used in the vineyards to lay out the grapes to dry into raisins. The exterior had never been painted, so the wood had shrunk from the sun exposure, leaving gaps, so at night you could lay in bed and listen to the breezes rustle the paper walls.
Comfy and cluttered. I need to do some year end purging.
calicuz · 51-55, M
Pretty basic, with newer furniture. Not fancy but comfortable
Jenny1234 · 51-55, F
Main floor has livingroom, dining room, sunken family room, kitchen and washroom. Upstairs has four bedrooms and washroom. Basement has laundry room, livingroom, bathroom, finished bedroom and unfinished bedroom which I use for storage. One car garage and good size backyard and front yard
Small - basic - utilitarian.
Crazywaterspring · 61-69, M
Oversized four bedroom house. All bedrooms are up stairs. Huge backyard to accomodate gas pipelines for a power station. Nice kitchen. I can hear the interstate that is a mile away. Plenty of nice antiques. Only two of us live here.
4meAndyou · F
Small one bedroom apartment, tiny kitchen, 1 crowded bathroom, very little storage. Dining room and living room are actually one large, long room, leading to a set of sliding doors.
Eclectic I guess, I'm into interesting placement of art work, wall hangings etc. Very kitty friendly spaces and fun stuff for them. A bit eccentric, organized chaos.
dancingtongue · 80-89, M
Eichler. Californians of my generation need know no more. Although the original interior has been gutted and opened up, with a great room and open kitchen.
JimboSaturn · 51-55, M
typical 1970's bungalow. Quasi open living room dining room partially divided by a big fireplace
CestManan · 46-50, F
About as basic as they come and boring. "Functional".

If this house were a car it would be a Honda.
meJess · F
It’s wide enough for me to layout
Longpatrol · 31-35, M
Compact and covered in fur
DearAmbellina2113 · 41-45, F
A tidy little colorful apartment.
A flat in an Edwardian built in 1915 that was converted from a rooming house to apartments after WWII. I’m on the top floor in front, with picture windows overlooking the neighborhood.
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