American Reacts to a Typical GERMAN APARTMENT

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Ryan Wass

Ryan Wass

Күн бұрын

Thank you for watching me, a humble American, react to German Apartment vs American Apartments. This was very interesting! Thanks for subscribing!
source: • Typical German Apartme...

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@myeramimclerie7869
@myeramimclerie7869 4 ай бұрын
locks on doors are great for several reasons: - lock yourself in the bathroom if guests are over - lock yourself in your room when you have annoying little siblings - lock little kids out of the pantry or storage rooms to keep them safe
@Keksemann666
@Keksemann666 4 ай бұрын
Lock yourself in from the Finanzamt and the GEZ guys...
@l3p3
@l3p3 4 ай бұрын
- lock in a kid in a really bad mood is also something i witnessed at several places
@Roberternst72
@Roberternst72 4 ай бұрын
@@Keksemann666 NOBODY EXPECTS THE GERMAN FINANZAMT!!! 🤡
@LoFiAxolotl
@LoFiAxolotl 4 ай бұрын
@@Keksemann666 you DO NOT have to open the door for GEZ (or whatever they're called these days) nor for the FInanzamt or really anyone (except the police in emergencies) the "Unverletzlichkeit der Wohnung" inviolability of the apartment... is one of the most important rights in germany Art 13 GG
@Keksemann666
@Keksemann666 4 ай бұрын
@@LoFiAxolotl when they come with the Gerichtsvollzieher you have to at least technically. You can leave the country before they arrive...
@Rivetlicker
@Rivetlicker 4 ай бұрын
The fact that are houses, somewhere, that don't have a hallway, and you walk directly into the living room, is even weirder to me...
@amyloriley
@amyloriley 4 ай бұрын
If you've ever seen The Simpsons, that's an example of a house without hallway. If I read correctly, in the ancient past the hallway was the most important room of the house. It was where the fireplace was, where you ate and where you slept. Look up "Hall House" at Wikipedia for more info. Then over time, the hallway reduced in size as other rooms became more important. Houses without a hallway, houses that directly access the living room; you could either say the hallway just disappeared entirely as a natural progression. Or you could say the Americans went back to the past and you could call their living room the hallway-the most important room of a house-once again.
@Tudas
@Tudas 4 ай бұрын
Tbh. im looking for a apartment, where I open the door and I'm instantly in a big living room (kinda like HIMYM), but its kinda rare to find in germany.
@Rivetlicker
@Rivetlicker 4 ай бұрын
@@Tudas Yeah, I don't think houses are built like that in Germany... nor in The Netherlands (where I'm from)
@Dadadin
@Dadadin 4 ай бұрын
@@amyloriley the simpsons have a hallway, even two
@dharkbizkit
@dharkbizkit 4 ай бұрын
same for me. but it guess alot of it comes down to "what you grew up with". i need a sperate room with a door for anything. i hate having an open door behind my back and i dont wanna hear what other people in the house/apartment are doing, nor have them hearing what iam doing. and i could never be friends with an living room kitchen, those 2 rooms have to be seperate, with a door and a hallway between them. when iam on the sofa, watching tv, the thought of seeing the kitchen makes me feel, that iam living cheap and cant have seperation. and yes i know, even houses build new from the ground up nowadays here in germany, have a open living kitchen. its just not my style. i could never live in a loft
@CodeNascher_
@CodeNascher_ 4 ай бұрын
biggest advantage for separate mattresses is you can pick your individual hardness
@nin5058
@nin5058 4 ай бұрын
Plus if your partner moves a lot at night you feel it less when they're on a separate mattress. 👍 On the other hand I have vivid memories of crawling into my parents bed at night after I had a nightmare and then getting swallowed by the crack in the middle of the mattresses. 🤣
@eaglevision993
@eaglevision993 4 ай бұрын
He said "hardness" huh huh huh
@poldinho93
@poldinho93 4 ай бұрын
​@@eaglevision993come on he's a TODDLER!
@ryanwass
@ryanwass 4 ай бұрын
that's cool
@starstencahl8985
@starstencahl8985 4 ай бұрын
@@eaglevision993 Alright, the advantage is an individual resistance to localized plastic deformation then
@Maisiewuppp
@Maisiewuppp 4 ай бұрын
An apartment or house where you walk straight into a room would be a no no for me.
@daphnelovesL
@daphnelovesL 4 ай бұрын
Door open and there goes the heath in the winter
@jorgs.2797
@jorgs.2797 4 ай бұрын
Most of the time even the living romm...☹
@jorgs.2797
@jorgs.2797 4 ай бұрын
@@daphnelovesL Americans don't care.
@grievousminded7517
@grievousminded7517 4 ай бұрын
Yeah, I appreciate the personal space. I do not need everyone in my living room.
@daphnelovesL
@daphnelovesL 4 ай бұрын
Heating and airco are free in the US?@@jorgs.2797
@HerrFinster
@HerrFinster 4 ай бұрын
There are locks on every door because they are made with a lock. Buying a door without a lock ist more expensive. 😂
@reinhard8053
@reinhard8053 4 ай бұрын
For most doors I put the key away because I don't need to lock them, but the option remains.
@Elkarlo77
@Elkarlo77 4 ай бұрын
Thats the reason for the simple Keys in lot of locks. Nearly every Door in Germany comes with the Cutts for the Handle and Key hole. You can either buy a long Face plate which covers the Keyhole or is open. The difference is literally nothin in price having one with or without Keyhole, same goes for the Locks so most have them for "just in case." Getting a Door without the Cutts is lot more expensive. Industrial Scaling simply.
@corncutter
@corncutter 4 ай бұрын
"The door knob looks like it's industrially made." - Uhm, of course it does. Because it is. How are American door knobs produced? Carved manually? Cut from paper? I guess I have to find a video of a typical American apartment^^. Or maybe you, Ryan, can give us a little room tour and show us all the differences in your house?
@katrincarstens5125
@katrincarstens5125 4 ай бұрын
I was laughing, too. Industrial made. Not crocheted. 😂 I like German doorhandles because the door can be opened with slippery hands (cream) or even with an elbow. This is very nice when opening the door of a public toilet. Nobody needs to really touch them. And they can be turned downwards so that cats cannot jump on it. And they are very easy to fix when they get loose with the years. These knobs are always annoying me.
@lethfuil
@lethfuil 4 ай бұрын
Oh thank god someone made that comment. xD I heard him say tzazand went straight to looking for this. 😂
@reinhard8053
@reinhard8053 3 ай бұрын
@@katrincarstens5125 I also used a foot (when I was younger), the shoulder and even the hips to open a door, when I had my hands full.
@vitamenecavit
@vitamenecavit 4 ай бұрын
- 2 switches outside: one is for light in the houses hallway, NOT the inside. So when you leave the flat you don't have to walk in the dark :D the other one is the bell for this specific flat. On the entrance of the house you will find a a bell system just like in america (sometimes, but not always, connected to an intercom - that's the phone thingy the guy showed), but if someone is already inside (because the houses front door was open, or because they live in the same building) they can ring the bell standing in front of the flat. Usually the "outside bell" and the "inside bell" will sound differently, so the person living there will know where the visitor is right now - switches in the hallway (inside): it's common to have switches for the halway light close to all rooms (for the same reason as above: being able to leave the room and immediately reach a lightswitch). but some of those doors are close enough together that I wouldn't expect each of them having their own switch. If it can be easily reached, usually they'd just share one. The only room that - for some reason - often has a lightswitch on the outside instead of in the room itself will be the bathroom / toilet (edit: storage room as well - if it has light at all) - that is a pretty big hallway indeed, I wouldn't say that's common. I am more familiar with much longer hallways that are relatively narrow, but of course there is a huge variety - sometimes doors in a flat have some glass (or other see-through) elements, they give the space a brighter vibe, but I personally prefer the fully wooden ones, they are much better at soundproofing. (just realized they are mentioned later in the video). It is absolutely normal to have keyholes for every single room. Usually the key will just be left in the hole on the inside of that room. The germans are big on privacy :D Only room that usually won't have a key will be the living room, but since most doors are standardized and can just be bought of the shelf, they will have the keyhole as well (remember: it's not predefined, which room is gonna be a living room and which one a bedroom, and that might change when new people rent the space. So they might want the key anyway) - not leaving the lamp-thingy: it's pretty normal for germans to move comparatively often. But they still want the places to feel like their own. So they will buy the lamp they like and take that with them. If it won't fit their new flat (or house) they can well talk to the people who will rent their old flat after them and ask, if they want to buy the lamp (and what ever else they want to leave behind) from them, so they don't have to get rid of it, and the new people don't have to get new stuff (if they don't bring their own). But generally speaking you should not expect to get any furniture but the toilet, bathroom sink and shower or bathtub (depending on the flat), when moving to a new flat, if not otherwise specified. - the vent: because of how many flats or structured, there often is not enough ventilation in bathrooms (some have no windows at all). In order to prevent mold because of damp walls n stuff (that happens when you have an unventilated bathroom^^) those will have a vent to "suck" the damp air our of the room. Some kitchens will have that too (for cooking steams) It's also beneficial for the smell - not all flats have bathroom and toilet fully separated, but it's absolutely normal. - bathtub "drain" thing: it is in fact connected to the drain. The normal drain is on the bottom of the tub (duh :D), the one up there is an "over flow protection". sinks will usually have that too. Is that not a thing in america? If there is too much water in the tub/sink instead of overflowing and ruining the room it will just go in their and run down the drain, even if the drain in the bottom is plugged (so you can fill the thing). But yeah, in there is the plug you would then use to plug the lower drain (was that understandable? my brain doesn't language rn xD) - vanity storage: just like any other furniture. It's individuals choice :shrug: - "you've got to haul your kitchen...." yes. for that exact reason (and because they so often are specifically tailored for the kitchen space) they often DO stay in the flat, but you will have to pay for it. Flats are hard to come by, and if the previous renters want to sell theirs you'll basically have to take it (and pay for it) if you want it or not. At the same time, if they don't leave one: not much you can do about that but buy our own. But that usually only happens when people bought a fancy oven or a REALLY fancy fridge. In flats usually that stuff stays behind (not the dishwashers, washing machines though, those usually get taken. Idk man, just be like that^^) - since you compared it to taking the toilet: the toilet, shower and bathroom sink belong to the owner of the flat, they get placed there when the place is built/renovated. All the (other) furniture (usually) belongs to the tenants, so they can keep/sell it. Sometimes the owners will also own the kitchen, in that case you might either have to pay extra in the rent, or you give an extra deposit for it (because those things have a higher risk of being broken) or you buy it from the owner and then the cycle begins from there - not all flats here have dishwashers, it really depends on the size of the space - having fridges in "cabinets" so they fit it with the style of the rest of the kitchen is not a must, but pretty common - the "pantry": well, it is just a "storage room". It's really up to you if you use it for a hoover and cleaning utensils or for food. As always with german spaces: the room is the thing you get, what you do with it is absolutely up to you. I have a friend who built a tiny recording studio in theirs (they are a voice actor). But yeah, most commonly it's used for storage (and as for the lock: same as above.) - "hanging stuff": those magnets are probably glued. as for shelves and the likes: you drill into the wall and use dowels and screws. Just keep in mind that for most walls you need to use concrete/stone drill bits instead of wood drill bits. especially in older buildings it's not too uncommon to have really stubborn walls (and ceilings), so I've had to use an actual hammer drill a couple of times. - gamingroom switch above the outlet: not for the outlet, it's a lightswitch. Our outlets usually don't have switches, but it's common to have power strips with them. As the lightswitches for the hallway usually is next to the doors on the outside, once you enter a room you will usually have a light switch next to the door on the inside for the main light of the room. The reason you often have outlets next to the lightswitches: in order to get the cables through the walls you need to have some "cable tunnels" (I don't know the terminology) and while light and electricity use different cables and can be placed independently from each other, it is way easier to have just one tunnel for both of them. So it makes sense to access them at the same place I am so amused by your fascination with the doors xD my flat is not big at all (370 sqft / 35m² roughly) I have 3 doors in the flat (tiniest hallway, bedroom/office to the right, tiny bathroom/toilet to the front, kitchen/living room to the left). Including the main door you can stand in that "hallway", turn any direction and see a door :D - universal keys?: They might work with multiple doors an a flat (I can use the same key for my bedroom and my kitchen), I have a different one for the bathroom. It is normal that they can be used from either side of the door, but they are usually left on the inside or just taken out entirely and thrown in the key-drawer everybody seems to have xD These are not nearly as "secure" as our house/flat keys though. My younger sibling locked themselves in when they were a kid and I could pretty easily pick the lock with stuff I had at hand. Its not to prevent theft or anything, it's just to keep people from walking in unanounced. - there are wallhangers for bikes, no Idea why they don't use them. - that basement is extremely typical. The wooden "prison"-like bars are to separate the compartments for the different tenants and somewhat a barrier for casual theft, but they won't stop anybody with serious criminal intent. - the trash pick up mechanism is not common at all. Usually the tenants share the responsibility to take out the trash bins (they might have a calendar and everyone is responsible for a week or smth like that), in these cases they usually share the cleaning duties for the buildings hallway as well. or there might be a person paid by the owner of the building to do those things. The garbage collectors are employed by the city and the landlord might have a contract with them and give them an extra key for the front door (only the houses door, they won't be able to get into the flats) so they can get the bins themselves. Or, as in my case, they just ring all the bells every time they come, so somebody will let them in :'D gee, this must be the longes yt comment I ever wrote. well, anyway. cheers
@riakatharina8344
@riakatharina8344 4 ай бұрын
Also the fridge doesn't have to be as huge as an american one, because the supermarkets are more accessible. So it's pretty common to shop in smaller amounts and more offen, also to avoid food waist. In more rural areas it gets more common to shop in bigger amounts, because the smaller shops in villages are vanishing, but in cities you can reach supermarkets in 5-15 minutes by foot.
@tobiasagdrupdrager5583
@tobiasagdrupdrager5583 2 ай бұрын
@@riakatharina8344 I am from Denmark, so my experiences may differ, but that fridge seemed a little smaller than usual. We typically have the fridge/freezer combination which is about the hight of a high cupboard (Closet in the kitchen). Also, the trash situation has changed a lot in my lifetime. When I was little it was common for apartments to have a trash chute. Right outside my door the old one is still there. But, I believe they were first phased out because they usually collected in the basement and that meant trash collectors had to haul the trash up, so to spare their backs trash was moved to ground level and the chute got dropped. Now, we have to sort our trash and the chute is even less feasible. In Denmark, and this is different around the country, we have to sort in Food waste Plastics Metals Cardboard Paper Glass And a trashcan for everything that doesn't fit those categories Some have less than these and sometimes things can be put in the same bin. I once saw metal/plastic in the same bin which was weird.
@markeisley299
@markeisley299 Ай бұрын
TLDR ;D i read it anyway
@Westerschwelle
@Westerschwelle 4 ай бұрын
The numbers on the heater knob mean the following: 1: around 12 degrees C (53,6 F) 2: around 16 degrees C (60,8 F) 3: around 20 degrees C (68 F) 4: around 24 degrees C (75,2 F) 5: around 28 degrees C (82,4 F) Each little line between the numbers stands for 1 degree C.
@albundy7718
@albundy7718 4 ай бұрын
There might be other symbols on it for Nightmode or a setting a little above turning it off, so water inside pipes doesnt freeze in that room, which can be dangerous. Also you can replace these control knobs with (expensive) electronic versions that can be controlled wireless with an app, in a homesystem or your internet router if its the right one.
@sunday87
@sunday87 4 ай бұрын
Exactly, but since those mechanical thermostats are not calibrated the actual temperature that you get can be a few degrees off either way, so a little experimentation is required to get to a comfortably setting. That's why they have this arbitrary scale instead of just putting the temperatures on the knob.
@TheRedNaxela
@TheRedNaxela 4 ай бұрын
Actually something a lot of germans don't know and the way these regulators work is so fascinating (i've done greenery inside the offices of heimeier for a long time so ive seen the details and the science where perfection gets done or rather got done in the past)
@voyance4elle
@voyance4elle 4 ай бұрын
@@TheRedNaxela Yes I didn't know this and I am german :D
@aphextwin5712
@aphextwin5712 4 ай бұрын
Reality differs so much much from this theory that this scale is de facto meaningless. This starts with the fact that semi-modern heating boilers allow you to set a target temperature for the whole building, that alone contradicts the idea that those knobs allow you to pick a specific temperature based on the labelled numbers. Then there are external temperature sensors that modulate how hot the water flowing through the heating system is. I have also yet to see a house or apartment where the same position on those regulators would result in the same temperature in every room. Or any building you can actually heat above 24 °C. The best you can hope for is that setting those regulators to one value results in the temperature staying about the same as the weather changes.
@eaglevision993
@eaglevision993 4 ай бұрын
Carpet was a thing of the 70/80s in Germany. Even BATHROOMS had carpet. Today the norm is either laminate or hardwood floor, as well as tiles.
@andreash3132
@andreash3132 4 ай бұрын
I'm Gen X and I'll always have carpet in my living, working and bedroom.
@grievousminded7517
@grievousminded7517 4 ай бұрын
Carpet is so disgusting. You can clean it all you want, you'll never get everything out. Also cleaning is way more complicated. I prefer just mopping the floor. With concentrated vinnegar and chlorine detergents.
@voyance4elle
@voyance4elle 4 ай бұрын
Even bathrooms? Oh god..
@aphextwin5712
@aphextwin5712 4 ай бұрын
@@voyance4elleI also know a house where the kitchen has a carpeted floor.
@eaglevision993
@eaglevision993 4 ай бұрын
@@grievousminded7517 Exactly, you can NEVER get carpet clean after 2 weeks when it was new. Never. How someone can even get the idea of "Hm...lets have carpet in the bathroom" is beyond any reason.
@McGhinch
@McGhinch 4 ай бұрын
Bathroom: The _vent_ hides an extractor fan to _suck_ odors and steam out of the room. The thingy above in the bathtub allows for air to assist the water drain. The chain is attached to a plug that closes the drain. This is an older system, newer system mostly have a turning knob to open and close the drain.
@LoFiAxolotl
@LoFiAxolotl 4 ай бұрын
it's actually neither steam nor odor it's gases, when you poop the methan gas accumulates... if you don't have a window that you can open you NEED a vent, lots of farmer have died in their fertiliser silos because the methane gas is really really toxic for living beings
@theKiwii
@theKiwii 4 ай бұрын
The extra hole in the bathtub also prevents the water from overflowing if left unattended with the main drain plugged.
@Tudas
@Tudas 4 ай бұрын
​@theKiwii Doesn't really help tho if you don't have it running kinda slow.
@19ghost73
@19ghost73 4 ай бұрын
@@Tudas No, not true. That extra hole is designed to let through at least as much as the typical tap can deliver, which is 15-20l/min if it was designed and installed according to the German technical code for residential plumbing. And this is true since at least the late 1920s.
@samyagdrsti
@samyagdrsti 4 ай бұрын
I'm not German, but it's the same in other countries. It's not just about money, you shape your home to your taste, from fixtures to furniture to your own clothing, and take it all with you because it's yours. That simple. If there's anything you don't need anymore, it's on you to get rid of it. Why would you leave your trash behind for someone else to clean up? Rude. Anyway, here it's usually stipulated in the contract to return the place to the owner just as you received it - nothing inside that doesn't belong to them - before it's rented to someone else who will decorate as they see fit.
@studiopawn
@studiopawn 3 ай бұрын
just imagine, having a 10 years used carpet left from some dirty people... disgusting. Kitchen the same. On the one hand it could just not fit your style and even worse, imagine the previous tenant never cared about to clean it.
@patrickfischer3349
@patrickfischer3349 4 ай бұрын
Light switches: They are typically next to a door (depending on how many there are, e.g. very large house) and in the room they work in. So you enter the room and just have to slap your hand on the wall to make light ^^ but it is common that multiple switches can light one lamp so that you can light up the room regardless from where you're coming in. And the one outside the main door is for the light in the stairwell of the building. Sometimes you can have another light switch for the outside next to where ever the buzzer to open the house entrance is.
@hypatian9093
@hypatian9093 4 ай бұрын
And bathrooms often have the lightswitch on the outside - something with electricity and moisture I think.
@patrickfischer3349
@patrickfischer3349 4 ай бұрын
@@hypatian9093 Yeah, sometines you want to go to the bathroom and hit the switch first, only to hear an angry/shocked "Besetzt!" xD
@CornedBee
@CornedBee 4 ай бұрын
@@hypatian9093 Switches and outlets in "wet rooms" (Feuchträume) are considerably more expensive, since they have to comply with additional regulations. So it's just cheaper to put the light switches on the outside.
@JOKERLE21
@JOKERLE21 4 ай бұрын
Sometimes the switch outside of bathrooms or toilets have a red or amber LED in the center to indicate if the light in room is lit and the room is occupied.
@reinhard8053
@reinhard8053 4 ай бұрын
And the switch above the outlet is just for the light. Switched outlets are very rare. I don't know if I saw one at all around here.
@Herzschreiber
@Herzschreiber 4 ай бұрын
Ryan, when you keep in mind that most Germans (even families) are living in rentals instead of houses you will understand why "an apartment" doesn't necessarily mean "a one room thing". And yes, of course we have hallways. It is the place to hang up the guests coats and jackets, the place to have a "Schuhschrank" ( a little cabinet to store your shoes in, because you know that Germans do not wear the shoes at home which they wear outside. We have house-shoes, means simple slippers only worn inside or maybe Birkenstocks.) And a family with two or three kids living in a rental apartment for sure needs a lot of space, so yes, there are apartmens even bigger than the one shown here.
@grievousminded7517
@grievousminded7517 4 ай бұрын
I have met exactly one family in almost 40 years where I had to take off my shoes. I really think this is just a myth.
@nodiiak
@nodiiak 4 ай бұрын
@@grievousminded7517 I am a German and I have never in my life met any German who wears shoes inside their home. Some people tell guests they're fine if they leave their shoes on but apart from that ... Maybe it depends on the area you live in but it's definitly not a myth at all
@mats7492
@mats7492 4 ай бұрын
@@grievousminded7517 youve not been to many places then.. 90% of people i meet take of their shoes in the appartment
@TheJohnnycab5
@TheJohnnycab5 4 ай бұрын
@@grievousminded7517 Every one I know has the no-street-shoes-in-the-house policy.
@ritabrinkmann6704
@ritabrinkmann6704 4 ай бұрын
⁠@@grievousminded7517Same with me. I‘m over 60 now and live in a large City in northwest Germany. No one I know takes their shoes of.
@Vince-gf7xr
@Vince-gf7xr 4 ай бұрын
It's not Ebay that's popular here it's Ebay Kleinanzeigen, now only called Kleinanzeigen. It's totally different than Ebay 😅
@13Daniel11
@13Daniel11 4 ай бұрын
it's the german equivalent to craigslist in the US
@Keksemann666
@Keksemann666 4 ай бұрын
Ebay itself gets more popular again
@LoFiAxolotl
@LoFiAxolotl 4 ай бұрын
Kleinanzeigen is nothing like Craigslist... there's very little chance you will get murdered buying something off Kleinanzeigen... it's missing the thrill
@NeverMind439
@NeverMind439 4 ай бұрын
@@LoFiAxolotl Jesus Christ 😅
@mathildewesendonck7225
@mathildewesendonck7225 4 ай бұрын
It’s very easy actually to find an apartment in Germany with a kitchen. Either you can buy it from the previous tenant, or the landlord installed it. But that makes the apartment usually more expensive
@joachimschwabe3301
@joachimschwabe3301 4 ай бұрын
For Europeans, North-american door knobs are "strange"... ;)
@arnolsi
@arnolsi 4 ай бұрын
And it's not possible to open the doors if you carry a bigger item with 2 hands. I don't know how many times I opend a door with the ellbow.
@Sam-ob4of
@Sam-ob4of 4 ай бұрын
​@@arnolsiyep, exactly
@sekritdokumint9326
@sekritdokumint9326 3 ай бұрын
They are like that not only because you can carry things and open them, but because in case of fire you can open them with something and dont need to grab and turn a red hot metal knob
@Simplicity4711
@Simplicity4711 3 ай бұрын
I hate door knobs with passion
@Herzschreiber
@Herzschreiber 4 ай бұрын
Having a separate toilet is for sure not the norm, but it is not THAT atypical! I've lived in 15 different rentals during my life, and 4 of them had either one separate toilet or a toilet in the bathroom PLUS a seperate one for guests, the so called "Gäste WC). I would not like the American way of renting a flat where everything is already furnished. What about my personal taste? Even if 80% of the existing stuff would meet my taste, I am sure I'd get nuts about the 20% annoying furnishings. When I rent a house or apartment or flat, I am "the boss of my castle". I wanna have control over each and every part and if it only was a simple lamp at the ceiling. And remember..... most Germans do not rent for short time periods but for long time. Some even for "lifelong", there are elderly people who have spent the last 40 or 50 years in the same apartment!
@gerdahessel2268
@gerdahessel2268 4 ай бұрын
And imagine the stained corners in a used kitchen! Disgusting!
@TheJohnnycab5
@TheJohnnycab5 4 ай бұрын
Well said!
@EvaCornelia
@EvaCornelia 4 ай бұрын
Almost all apartments I have ever lived in had a seperate toilet, so for me it's rather the norm.
@noefillon1749
@noefillon1749 4 ай бұрын
In France it's more the norm to have separate toilets. Not that toilets in the bathroom don't exist (my current appartment has toilets in the bathroom) but they are really rare.
@reinhard8053
@reinhard8053 4 ай бұрын
The last toilette in the bathroom I had was some decades ago when I was a child. Since then always separate. And always two toilettes except in my last apartment.
@wizardm
@wizardm 4 ай бұрын
Bringing your own kitchen has the advantage that the design, quality and the technical equipment match your personal preferences.
@ronparker73
@ronparker73 4 ай бұрын
This house is from around the 1960s. Very typical for that era. But every German appartment is typically for the era it has been built in. So you cannot draw conclusions on all other appartments only on the ones from the same decade.
@hobbyist6181
@hobbyist6181 Ай бұрын
Or even oder... You can see this from the model of the radiators for the central heating . I have to say: bikes in the appartement are an annoyance... every wall in the rooms and in the doorhouse shows the imprints from rubber tyres. A better solution is a bike room in the basement of the house.
@patrickfischer3349
@patrickfischer3349 4 ай бұрын
Haven't moved in a few years, but an appartement with 1 room plus kitchen and bath is NOT "three room". It is "one room" as kitchen and bath can practically only be used for cooking and bathing. Hence they do not get calculated as 'real' rooms. A "Zweiraumwohnung" for example has 2 rooms plus kitchen and bath.
@HappyBeezerStudios
@HappyBeezerStudios 4 ай бұрын
Yup, I live in a Zweiraumwohnung, which basically means bedroom and living room. Always surprises me that americans don't consider using a room for anything but sleeping. Or at least their way to advertise houses and apartments suggests that.
@McGhinch
@McGhinch 4 ай бұрын
Kitchen: Most kitchen furniture is modular. The standard depth is 60cm (a little more than 23 inches), the standard width is also 60 cm. But there are also 30, 45, 75, and 90 cm furniture available. Standard width: Almost all appliances are made to be built into a 60 cm "hole". With these measures you are able to fit the furniture into the available space. Then have your top custom made to cover it all. Edit: corrected number after stevenvanhulle7242's comment from 19 to 23. 60 cm are not quite 24 inches (= 60.96 cm).
@stevenvanhulle7242
@stevenvanhulle7242 4 ай бұрын
Small correction: 60 cm is 24 inches
@McGhinch
@McGhinch 4 ай бұрын
@@stevenvanhulle7242 Thanks. I have corrected my post.
@a.s.6748
@a.s.6748 4 ай бұрын
Everybody has their own stile, not only in lamps. They want industrial but economic style, the next one wants expensive style, and the 80 y old lady likes cozy " Schwarzwälder -wooden-style" , do everybody choses what they like and can afford.
@voyance4elle
@voyance4elle 4 ай бұрын
very true :)I have a very expencive taste in lamps and it took me years to get all the lamps and in the end built many myself :D
@reinhard8053
@reinhard8053 4 ай бұрын
I bought a house and removed most of the lamps which were not my style. I still have lamps from my mother's house which I wouldn't use myself (need to sell them eventually). I took several lamps from my old apartment which I really like. Some are also nice but I just don't need them anymore 🙂.
@HappyBeezerStudios
@HappyBeezerStudios 4 ай бұрын
And when you already bought a lamp to your liking, you obviously want to keep it. You invested money into it. Which reminds me that I'm living here for close to a decade anow and still haven't bought a fixture for my hallway. But then, I also still have the original 60W bulb in there. I simply never need light there.
@sandraankenbrand
@sandraankenbrand 4 ай бұрын
Glad we meanwhile often just see spots ... so no need to buy a lamp, only like that one special you also need for decoration
@reinhard8053
@reinhard8053 4 ай бұрын
@@sandraankenbrand But what if someone doesn't like spots ? Or if the spots are not well positioned ? Maybe the next tenant wants do place the furniture in a different way and the spots don't fit for that. My appartment had a light outlet at the ceiling which I needed to lay a meter to where I needed it. The remaining of the living room had none at all.
@Keksemann666
@Keksemann666 4 ай бұрын
The keys are door specific and usually used from inside unless you want to lock a storage room or kitchen from children or guest.
@steemlenn8797
@steemlenn8797 4 ай бұрын
But they are also very generic, probably all apartments build in a certain decade have the same set.
@Keksemann666
@Keksemann666 4 ай бұрын
@@steemlenn8797 i mean nobody actually cares, they are just internal locks, the outside door has usually a very secure lock and its changed every time there is a new renter in most places, and its generally allowed for people to change them themselves. But yes, they are very generic and there are definitely many dublicates, also they are super easy to pick.
@opfipip3711
@opfipip3711 4 ай бұрын
@@steemlenn8797 in our house all doors within each apartment have non-compatible keys, but every apartment has the same set of 5 Keys. So, if your child manages to lock themselves in your kitchen, you can ask your neighbor for the Kitchen key and open it with his.
@mabus4910
@mabus4910 4 ай бұрын
@@steemlenn8797 You can open these doors with a piece of wire. It's just to keep the kids out of a room or to signal that the bathroom is occupied.
@HappyBeezerStudios
@HappyBeezerStudios 4 ай бұрын
@@steemlenn8797 I've lost by basement key at some point and just used a piece of wire to open it. They aren't pick proof at all. It's more about the slight hindrance.
@HerrFinster
@HerrFinster 4 ай бұрын
The light fixture thing is more like a legal issue than a cultural one. Normally the landord owns the apartment but not one single thing of the interieur, so everyone rents the flat in the same condition. So the rent is only based on the price per m². That makes different rent-contracts more compareable and the landlord does not have any liabilities if some interieur is not in proper condition. Also the renter has the right to see every part of the flat. So the kitchen can be included in the contract but the renter can claim to dismount it to see the walls behind it. Thats necessary because some appartment buildings are 100+ years old, some are from the sowiet era of the GDR and some are built new. These buildings are made differently (brick-build, pre manufactured concrete elements or steel reinforced concrete) and different types of insulation. Since air conditioning is not a big thing, mould can be a problem. So you might want to see the external walls of your appartement, before you sign a contract.
@cg909
@cg909 4 ай бұрын
9:09 This dangling lightbulb thing is called a "Malerfassung" (painter's socket/fixture) or "Baustellenfassung" (construction site socket/fixture). We use it instead of a normal light fixture when renovating or painting the ceilings to have light without damaging or dirtying our lamps. They are usually left in apartments by the previous tenants.
@ThePixel1983
@ThePixel1983 4 ай бұрын
I know it as a Russian chandelier 😁
@irasan77
@irasan77 4 ай бұрын
In Austria you have to buy everything too (lights, vanity, kitchen, etc). I think people just don't move as often and like to decorate to their individual taste. Apartments or rooms that are meant to be temporary may very well come with furniture. Also "Kippfenster", detachable shower heads and "Vorzimmer" (the room after you enter that leads to several others) are common, as well as the individual heating.
@LoFiAxolotl
@LoFiAxolotl 4 ай бұрын
someone who just moved from Berlin to Vienna and back to Berlin... SOOOOOOOOOO many appartments these days are furnished for some reason.... it's super annoying to me because i had to sell furniture twice which is a huge hassle...
@klaus4040
@klaus4040 4 ай бұрын
My current apartment in Vienna had a (small) kitchen already in. But yes, it's not very common. as per usual: depends ;)
@Tudas
@Tudas 4 ай бұрын
​@LoFiAxolotl But Berlin is a rare exception here, probably because of many young people moving there and moving out after a few years anyway.
@CornedBee
@CornedBee 4 ай бұрын
One particular requirement in Austria: every room of the rental (or for-sale) has to have at least one light actually installed, probably so that you can see something even before installing your own lights. So when we bought an apartment in 2018, each room had a single old-style bulb (glowing filament, not energy-saver) installed. This is funny, because those cannot be sold anymore since (depending on power) 2009-2012. So apparently the construction company has a large stash of old, cheap bulbs still around to put in newly built apartments.
@McGhinch
@McGhinch 4 ай бұрын
Beds: We usually have two beds pushed together or constructed into a single frame. The benefit is that you have your individual sleeping space. You may select your mattress to your individual taste and needs. Also separate feather beds keeps you from fighting for the cover for the night. There are foam material wedges available to soften the gap between the two mattresses.
@rebecadiezm
@rebecadiezm 4 ай бұрын
And separate feather beds allows you to have two smaller ones that you can wash at home. My first duvet was huge and I had to paid laundry service for it.
@bognagruba7653
@bognagruba7653 4 ай бұрын
I once rented a short-term apartment in Hannover with one large duvet and a 10-centimeter gap between the mattresses. I was the first renter and I gave the owner friendly feedback about this and a few other things like barely warm water.
@Tudas
@Tudas 4 ай бұрын
We for sure don't usually have 2 beds pushed together wtf. That's for sure a rare case.
@McGhinch
@McGhinch 4 ай бұрын
@@Tudas Maybe you should spend the night in some smaller family operated hotels in Germany... In private homes, I agree, there is usually a single bedframe with two matresses.
@foamheart
@foamheart 4 ай бұрын
I can assure you that the barbed wire in the cellar is actually not typically German.
@JensFrank
@JensFrank 4 ай бұрын
In most cases, the fence goes up to the ceiling. In basements where this is not the case, I've seen this before. Not typical, but also not unheard of.
@olafborkner
@olafborkner 4 ай бұрын
This is an uncommonly tiny bathroom and the tub is a very dangerous apparatus if you want to take a shower.
@theKiwii
@theKiwii 4 ай бұрын
@@JensFrank I've never seen fences in a basement in the first place. All the basements I've been to (in NRW) just had rooms made with regular brick walls and heavy steel doors.
@voyance4elle
@voyance4elle 4 ай бұрын
@@theKiwii Most of the appartments I lived in in Cologne had these type of basements :) always in Altbauten (old buildings)
@MufuLP
@MufuLP 4 ай бұрын
@@theKiwii most I've seen in NRW are propper walls too, but when I helped a friend move both his old and new place had these wooden ones
@PizzaMineKing
@PizzaMineKing 4 ай бұрын
1:29 that's most likely the light in the stairwell.
@McGhinch
@McGhinch 4 ай бұрын
... and the doorbell.
@PizzaMineKing
@PizzaMineKing 4 ай бұрын
@@McGhinch of course, but he recognised that one.
@matzefuch930
@matzefuch930 4 ай бұрын
I´m a electrician in Germany. The Switch (10:55) ist outside, because it´s not allowed to install the switch near the Bathtub. It´s not the best place, but the safest. :)
@gtvgranberg
@gtvgranberg 4 ай бұрын
Germany dont have water safe swithes? How about switches out side the house? Ip67?
@IsaakHunt
@IsaakHunt 4 ай бұрын
@@gtvgranberg Not indoor.
@highks496
@highks496 4 ай бұрын
@@gtvgranberg It's possible today to install switches inside bathrooms, but most apartment buildings are older and already have the wiring on the outside. And usually nobody changes the whole wiring because people are used to light switches being on the outside of bathrooms. Even for new houses it's probably still cheaper to install the switch on the outside because you don't have to follow so many safety regulations. And why spend more money when absolutely nobody is going to appreciate it.
@matzefuch930
@matzefuch930 4 ай бұрын
@@gtvgranberg Oh yes we have IP67 .. but only for outside or near the sink. We have Zones near the Shower/Bathtub.. 60cm (23,5 inch) around the bathtube it´s forbidden to install a 230V switch or other thinks.
@ankapabu2834
@ankapabu2834 4 ай бұрын
USA: 110 Volts, Germany: 230 Volts. I would not want lightswitches inside my bath.
@LemmyD_from_Germany
@LemmyD_from_Germany 4 ай бұрын
9:25: Whenever I move (and I move A LOT) I always want to put MY lamps back on the ceiling. I don't want to have a lamp from the 50s or 60s in the living room from an old lady who may have lived here for 40 years. It wouldn't fit my furniture at all. New lamps can be quite expensive! Kleinanzeigen /Classifieds (formerly eBay Kleinanzeigen) are very popular in Germany. Furniture or larger things such as sports equipment are often offered locally and you look at them on site and buy the things, as it can be seen in the video with the sofa for only €100, which was certainly a good price for it. Greetings from northern Germany ♥️🇩🇪
@patrickfischer3349
@patrickfischer3349 4 ай бұрын
22:50 well, there is this thing called a drill. It comes with a cable to plug into an outlet and then you can spend all your free saturday trying to find the point, where there are no steel beams in the ceiling (I had a VERY bad experience with a lamp rail...). No seriously, wall are very stable and you just drill holes. Most landlords ask to plaster the holes when moving out.
@reinhard8053
@reinhard8053 4 ай бұрын
There are also nails which can be hammered in walls. At least if they are not pure concrete.
@HappyBeezerStudios
@HappyBeezerStudios 4 ай бұрын
I have the feeling my walls are 5 cm dust over a solid block of steel. The first bit is soft enough to push nails in with your finger, but after that you don't just need a drill, you need a proper Schlagbohrmaschine.
@patrickfischer3349
@patrickfischer3349 4 ай бұрын
@@HappyBeezerStudios Yeah, luckily I didn't have to contend with that yet. My mom has plastered walls and I am always careful not to bump into them with something and leave a deep scratch. It's also not easy to properly apply that stuff and cheap options get worse if you don't know what you're doing.
@Nimili-ts5tx
@Nimili-ts5tx 4 ай бұрын
Locks on every door come pretty handy, when you have visitors and don’t want them in your office or bedroom. I also locked all important doors, when there had been construction workers in the building including my apartment to change the main pipes in all hallways. I was at work and my neighbor had to let them in and the apartment door stood open for half of the day, several days.
@amrimi8371
@amrimi8371 4 ай бұрын
Also in Germany you will find Apartments that will come with a build in kitchen. I moved about 10 times during my adult life and I never had to buy a kitchen. The downside is that the already existing kitchens are pretty crappy most of the times. My current one is from sometime in the 80s but at least it came with a dishwasher. There ist a lock on the pantry because all the doors come with a lock. It's the industry standard.
@Keksemann666
@Keksemann666 4 ай бұрын
It depends, new ones are usually without and the first owner puts it in and leaves it as its usually unfit at the new place. If you ask your vermieter you can totally replace it 99% of the time.
@LoFiAxolotl
@LoFiAxolotl 4 ай бұрын
my first apartment in east Berlin had an oven&stove combo from 1929... oven went up to 500°C which was great for making pizza... stove took about 3 weeks to boil water though
@aixtom979
@aixtom979 4 ай бұрын
I also moved a couple of times. The way I have experienced it, if it's a *new* apartment it usually doesn't have a kitchen installed, but when someone was living there before he will have had a kitchen installed that he can't use in his new place, so you can get it from the previous renter for a few thousand Euros, a few hundred Euros, or even for free so that he doesn't have to pay for it to be removed, depending on how old it is. But it never had any link to the landlord, it became my personal property do do with as I pleased.
@willguggn2
@willguggn2 4 ай бұрын
Probably a century ago that chute into the basement was used for coal delivery. There'd either be the central heating unit or the tenants would take the coal to their apartment ovens. Nowadays we heat with gas and apartments without central heating are quite the exception.
@yinduyun
@yinduyun 4 ай бұрын
Switches next to the door are for door bell and for hallway light Panel on the wall above the shoe rack is the fuse/breaker box Vent in the bathroom is an air exhaust - that bathroom doesn't have a window so the vent is there to get rid of moisture in the air Thing in the bathtub is indeed a holder for the drain plug, but there is also an overflow drain hole behind it so you don't flood your bathroom if you turn on the water and forget about it
@mathildewesendonck7225
@mathildewesendonck7225 4 ай бұрын
In Germany most people don’t need such a huge fridge because we like to cook from scratch. And many cooking items don’t need a fridge, like flour, rice, pasta, etc. And you are right, we probably go shopping more often. Many people go grocery shopping by bike or walk there, so you can’t carry so much stuff.
@AndreasPeters-r3e
@AndreasPeters-r3e 4 ай бұрын
In germany, the next supermarket is around the corner, walkable distance. In america it´s kilometers away, only reachable by car. That´s why going shopping is a much bigger deal and storage must last longer in Amiland.
@leDespicable
@leDespicable 4 ай бұрын
@@AndreasPeters-r3e Rural Germany is very American in that regard, there are many parts of rural Germany where supermarkets sadly aren't just around the corner. Maybe not as far away as in many American cities, but still too far to walk or bike
@hw2508
@hw2508 4 ай бұрын
Also, it is a question of space. Many kitchens are not very big and a big fridge would fill the whole room. Some people have a second fridge somewhere else, like in the basement.
@HappyBeezerStudios
@HappyBeezerStudios 4 ай бұрын
@@leDespicable But in those places it's also more common to have a full house and a car. So no problem to do the weekly or fortnightly shopping trip followed by storing things in a pantry and the big extra freezer.
@leDespicable
@leDespicable 4 ай бұрын
@@HappyBeezerStudios True, it only becomes a problem when you get old and can’t drive anymore
@W0Ndr3y
@W0Ndr3y 4 ай бұрын
I like how they have blackout curtains everywhere, EXCEPT the bedroom 😂
@schmidtchristian1401
@schmidtchristian1401 4 ай бұрын
😮 😂😂😂😂😂😂 📸📸📸📸
@steemlenn8797
@steemlenn8797 4 ай бұрын
You don't need to block out the sun at night duh!
@pieceofbread5686
@pieceofbread5686 4 ай бұрын
Also, they chose the room with the semi see-through door for their bedroom.
@steemlenn8797
@steemlenn8797 4 ай бұрын
@@pieceofbread5686 That is actually quite common. My guess is that this is meant for you to see if someone is there getting clothes on/off (but not see details) so you don't go in at that time.
@W0Ndr3y
@W0Ndr3y 4 ай бұрын
@@pieceofbread5686 yeah I wouldn't like that either, but there are more things to consider. The living room looks like the biggest room and the mancave is the smallest, so that leaves this one for bedroom.
@AdamMPick
@AdamMPick 4 ай бұрын
This was not a typical apartement. It was more of a typical "Wohngemeinschaft" apartement. Which, I checked, does not have an adequate translation into English. It seems to be an older apartement which housed students at some point, which occupied the same shared flat, but had their own rooms. That is why the layout is a bit weird and the indvidial rooms are small. Imagine a frat house, but it is a flat and there is no weird frat (something that exists only in the US). Some people are still in university, some are working for a TV station some are doing something that no one understands, but they share the costs of living in a big city, by renting a flat together. PS. The kitchen thing, you would understand, if you cooked more yourself. I don't leave behind my 5k € stove in hope to get a 300€ stove in the new appartement.
@PS-iq9fb
@PS-iq9fb 4 ай бұрын
28:49 in Germany we don't say: turn off the lights please. We say: Licht AUS!!!! And I think that's beautiful
@autarchprinceps
@autarchprinceps 4 ай бұрын
Having a small storage furniture under the sink is quite common in Germany, it’s just not left in the apartment, but taken with you like the other furniture. So if they don’t have one, that’s their choice.
@HappyBeezerStudios
@HappyBeezerStudios 4 ай бұрын
Yeah, it depend,s but is surely not uncommon. In my current place I din't have a cupboard under it, but a shelf at the top, my old place hat a little Schränkchen. My mother didn't had one either, but about 60% of my friends and colleagues have them.
@Flamebeard0815
@Flamebeard0815 4 ай бұрын
About the inside doors having key holes: The standard german locks always have the normal latch AND a dead bolt. So every standard door comes with a cutout for handle and key hole. And unless you have plates that cover the holes, it's easier to just roll with it. Also, at times it's really practical to lock one of the rooms, especially if you want to keep people out of them (like locking your bedroom when you have a party or family function).
@HappyBeezerStudios
@HappyBeezerStudios 4 ай бұрын
Or when you have a cat that really doesn't like the plumber working on your kitchen drain. The biesties are smart and will learn to open doors.
@autarchprinceps
@autarchprinceps 4 ай бұрын
Not having a dishwasher is extremely rare. I wouldn’t call it a luxury. Even all the student apartments I’ve been to had one.
@アンドレーエフ貝
@アンドレーエフ貝 4 ай бұрын
Then you were lucky. Even in many bigger WGs there are no dishwashers (mostly because the kitchen is an assembly project by people with a very limited amount of money). And most student apartments (except of those where mum and dad payed for (mostly)) didn't have space for a dishwasher as the kitchens are often horribly small. Let's say it's common at a certain stage in life that you have a dishwasher. When you're a student in your 20s though, not so much. Also single room apartments mostly don't come with a dishwasher (again not enough space available). It's definitely not extremely rare. I wouldn't even say that it's rare in Germany, when you're younger it's definitely common.
@Foersom_
@Foersom_ 4 ай бұрын
EU citizen here, lived in multi EU countries. I have not had a had a dishwasher for >30 years. In many apartments there is no kitchen space for a dishwasher.
@MichaEl-rh1kv
@MichaEl-rh1kv 4 ай бұрын
9:30 Imho one reason for renting out without light fixtures may be that most people rent on a long-term basis, and if you live for years in an apartment, you want it to be in your own style. Sometimes people don't remove their fixtures if moving out, but more often the next tenant will want to change it after a few weeks. Therefore professional landlords / housing companies will not provide fixtures, because sooner or later they will only clutter some storage room. 10:03 Carpeted floors did totally come out of fashion since the 1970s. Sometimes there will a single rug under the coffee table or at the eating place or a runner in the hallway, but mostly you'll see wooden floors in moderner or renovated apartments, sometimes mixed with tiled floors e.g. for the kitchen area, the bath or the hallway (or in floor-heated parts). 11:13 The bathroom is rather small, but that is not unusual in rental apartments. Washing machines are put where the piping for them exists - which is mostly either the bath or the kitchen. Many apartments have a toilet separately from the bathroom (for Germans it is only a bathroom, if it has a tube or at least a shower in it), but most toilets (except in some older buildings, where the toilet was placed on the end of a long corridor-like room, because they did not trust yet the syphon system to block odor nuisance) are not big enough to hold also a washing machine. 13:02 That is part of the drain, it holds the plug while not used, but is also connected to the drain in the bottom, so if somebody lets the water running, it will drain through this security drain. The so-called vanity storage (in German called "Unterschrank" = lower cabinet) comes usually not with the apartment, but is brought by the tenant, if they want one. In many apartments the light switches are outside of the "wet" rooms (for somewhat outdated security reasons), and most bathrooms come with a key, sometimes also with a latch, to be closed from the inside for privacy reasons. (So they could even be used as panic rooms, if you are very quiet while panicking. 😁) 15:58 Since many tenants want to have their own kitchen style, landlords often only provide only a removable kitchenette (in a cupboard about a meter or a meter and a half wide) for a transition period, if any. Such a kitchenette could then be easily stored in the basement, while not in use. Kitchen studios providing customized kitchens are big in Germany, while furniture retailers often provide cheaper standard solutions (kitchen space is prepared for standard measures - dishwashers come mostly with either 45cm or 60cm width, frigerators, stoves and baking ovens usually with 60 cm width; depth is usually also 60cm. All measures are a multiple of 15cm). Sometimes tenants leave their kitchen behind, if you pay a "Abschlag" (more or less symbolic payment) for it. Most fridges are "camouflaged" with the same fronts as other cupboards.
@Justforvisit
@Justforvisit 3 ай бұрын
25:04 That proud smile on Ryan's face when he FINALLY got it in the right order... 🤣
@stepankoor
@stepankoor 4 ай бұрын
The light switch on the outside is used to turn all the lights in the stairwell for some time. It is pretty hard for me to explain this, so I will make an example: > House, 3 floors + basement > each floor has about 3 apartments with the same layout as in the video > on the outside, there is a door that cannot be opened from the outside. Near the door are buttons with names and the apartment nunber. Theese are the doorbells for every apartment > The phone is used to talk to people near the outside door, and the button with the lock unlocks the door > to get to your apartment, you have to use the stairs. Every apartment door has a switch that drops back after you press it. It is the light switch, and it activates every single light in the stairwell (exept for the basement) for about a minute, then the lights turn back off Hope that helped :D
@MyRegardsToTheDodo
@MyRegardsToTheDodo 4 ай бұрын
The two switches on the outside of the apartment are doorbell and outer hallway switch. When you leave the apartment you can switch on the lights in the hallway outside of the apartment so you don't have to walk to the front door completely in the dark. Those hallway lights are on a timer so they switch off after a short while and don't stay on all the time. 4:03 That's the fuse box. Every apartment has a separate fuse box and a separate water mains. The fuse box isn't neccessarily in the apartment itself, often it's somewhere in the cellar near the power measuring tool (the one that measures how much you have to pay to the power company), I once had an apartment where it was in the outer hallway. I once had a discussion with some people from the US where I learned (very much to my surprise) that in the US it's quite normal that apartments don't have a separate water mains, so if you have to work on something connected to the water system (like a bathroom faucet or something like that) you have to switch off water for the entire apartment building.
@Mamaki1987
@Mamaki1987 4 ай бұрын
Germans and Austrians and Swiss love compartmented appartements. That is pretty normal. You can find some American style appartments (newer ones) from time to time, but generall speaking we like to be able to close the doors of all the rooms and a stranger entering our appartements not seeing at first glance what we own. Don't have American doors keys for every room?
@LoFiAxolotl
@LoFiAxolotl 4 ай бұрын
in the US it's more common to have doors that use the door knob as a lock
@aphextwin5712
@aphextwin5712 4 ай бұрын
@@LoFiAxolotl In the U.S.there often is a kind of lever or button on the knob to lock it from the inside.
@LoFiAxolotl
@LoFiAxolotl 4 ай бұрын
@@aphextwin5712 did not know youtube comments had an echo
@aphextwin5712
@aphextwin5712 4 ай бұрын
@@LoFiAxolotl Bad phrasing on my part, I just wanted to make clear that “using the door knob to lock the door” meant that there is a button or lever on the knob, not that you for example rotate the door knob in the opposite direction (compared to when you turn the knob when opening the door).
@mickypescatore9656
@mickypescatore9656 4 ай бұрын
Hi, Ryan! The mini-door on the wall in the "Flur" (Entrance area) is the fuse box! The heating system with the thermostat uses the numbers to regulate the room temperature. It starts with a frost symbol (6 degrees Celsius), then 1 (= ?), then night mode (14 degrees Celsius) (if you want), and any higher number means warmer. At 3 you have 20 degrees. A number higher means 4 degrees Celsius more. Carpets across the entire room are a bit out of fashion in Germany. Most of the time you have laminate and/or tiles. It`s better to clean. People only sometimes put smaller rugs under the living room table or wherever for decoration. At the entrance area you find mostly small carpets. Bathroom: Ventilation shaft/chimney. (If there is no window in the bathroom). Sometimes there are electrical triggers and sometimes just the slots. The kitchen: Well, it can be comfortable to move into an appartement with an existing kitchen. But do you really always want a used (maybe dirty) kitchen that you don`t even like? You can be lucky, but you also maybe can be unlucky.
@caroline6544
@caroline6544 4 ай бұрын
"Why would you take your ceiling lamp with you? It's not that expensive"?! 😅Is it really that confusing? I don't know what it's like in America, but don't tell me that you don't have people who build and sell ceiling lights in different designs. And people with different interior styles. Why should I give my lamp to the person who rents my apartment after me? I might have chosen it to match my furniture with a lot of thought and time in the furniture store...and possibly spent a lot of money on it. As far as I know, some designer lights are available for around 3 to 5 thousand euros. and even if I have one from Ikea, it still costs 60 euros. I really don't understand why this is such a big surprise. Do Americans give away their furniture when they move out?
@franconianbike
@franconianbike 4 ай бұрын
@13:02: it's the overflow drain. It normally contains the holder for the plug, which is connected to it with a chain. The regular drain is of course on the bottom side of the tub.
@sunday87
@sunday87 4 ай бұрын
About the numbers on the heater setting knob (8:15): These are simple mechanical thermostats, which means they are not calibrated to exact temperatures. Setting "3" is supposed to be targeting around 20°C, but depending on the situation it may get more or less than that (17°C or 23°). With a little experimentation it is easy to find a comfortable setting (typically in the 2-4 range). It is supposed to give roughly 4°C difference per division, so at "1" it is meant to roughly target 12°C, at "5" it should roughly target 28°C, but again, it is not calibrated. That's why there are no temperature labels on the thermostat and instead it is an arbitrary scale of numbers. The "moon" indicates a typical setting for a bedroom or for night time.
@HappyBeezerStudios
@HappyBeezerStudios 4 ай бұрын
It's a bit like with toasters. Those aren't minutes, but just a relative scale. You need to figure out your toaster yourself.
@lilycev179
@lilycev179 4 ай бұрын
I love how he keeps saying with our type of fridges we only last a few days. Actually we always do one grocery run a week and we last with that for the entire week. We have to buy bread more than once a week but we do not have to rebuy refrigerated stuff (we’re a household of three adults)
@HappyBeezerStudios
@HappyBeezerStudios 4 ай бұрын
Refrigerated stuff lasts ages. I think I still have Grünkohl from last year and fries from last summer. But there is also more of a focus on fresh cooking. So less ready-made stuff that needs refrigeration and more dry and canned things with longer shelf life.
@Latenight927
@Latenight927 4 ай бұрын
@ryan the difference between the kitchen and the toilet and bathtub is that the toilet and bathtub are installed on or into the wall the kitchen stuff is normally just standing there and not that hard attached to the walls so it is possible to relatively easy move a kitchen. My parents for example brought the old kitchen with them wenn we build the house we are living in so we have theoretically two kitchen furniture things the old and the new one witch was bought as the kitchen room in the house was ready for it. It's nice it means sometimes if you have many guests over we can use a second oven. And regarding your carpet question in our house all rooms on the first and second floor have carpet only the bathroom not. And on the ground level we also have just moveable rugs a few.
@TheMeleas
@TheMeleas 4 ай бұрын
Ich kann es geradezu hören: "da8s Bild hängt schief" 😂😂😂😂
@franhunne8929
@franhunne8929 4 ай бұрын
Why do we take our lamps with us? Because so we can change them as we see fit, if we redecorate. We can adjust to the style of the room ´- and if we move we also take the furniture with us - the light fixture is just another part of that.
@franhunne8929
@franhunne8929 4 ай бұрын
Carpets - well, carpets are a hassle to clean, collect dust and dirt and - DUST MITES. Those buggers are getting on the nerves of a lot of allergic people (like me) - and hence I do only have floors which I can wipe easily. Also - since I have a cat I am very happy that his hairballs go on floor that can be wiped ... you would not want that in the fabric of the carpet.
@HappyBeezerStudios
@HappyBeezerStudios 4 ай бұрын
If I buy a lamp, I buy one that I like. And if I move, I don't suddenly stop liking my lamp. So I keep it and put it in my new place.
@highks496
@highks496 4 ай бұрын
@@HappyBeezerStudios I'd probably leave my lamps in the old apartment and use the opportunity to get new ones in the new apartment. But I don't buy expensive designer pieces, I just like trying out new types of light fixtures once in a while.
@Luce2710
@Luce2710 4 ай бұрын
The light in front of the door isn't for one family, it's for the hole housekorridor
@MufuLP
@MufuLP 4 ай бұрын
carpet floors are a thing in germany too, but i feel they are getting out of fashion, newer apartments tend to not have them and rather give the tennants the choice to put a rag or carpet ontop of their wooden floor.
@HappyBeezerStudios
@HappyBeezerStudios 4 ай бұрын
Pretty much the best solution. You don't have to deal with the muck from the previous tenant, and can decide what you want yourself. I've put carpet in my place, because every room is tiled and that gets cold on the feet, but at my mother's place we even took the carpet out to enjoy the wood flor.
@charlesbabbage6725
@charlesbabbage6725 4 ай бұрын
Our apartments are usually slightly larger. My rented apartment has 63 square meters. And I live there alone. No, not alone. I'm my cat's lodger! 😅
@HappyBeezerStudios
@HappyBeezerStudios 4 ай бұрын
last time I checked 63 m² was smaller than 75 m² I currently live in a 43 m² place, and when I lived together with my mother we shared 56 m²
@DaxRaider
@DaxRaider 4 ай бұрын
the light is of course for the staircase xD its not on automaticly its a waste of energy
@lutzj74
@lutzj74 4 ай бұрын
I have 2 motion detectors for the light in the hallway and stairwell. Otherwise I would have had to install 8 light switches.
@silkespenrath375
@silkespenrath375 3 ай бұрын
That face on the lock-topic is amazing! 🤣🤣🤣🤣
@thorstenhaul6866
@thorstenhaul6866 4 ай бұрын
It makes so much fun to see Ryan how fascinated he is about regular german stuff 👍🏻 But Ryan: dont think about the kitchen so much, mostly you buy the kitchen from the former resident
@lanamack1558
@lanamack1558 4 ай бұрын
What annoys me though that Ryan, just as most US-Americans seem to think US-standards are the world default and everything else is weird. Different does not equal weird; otherwise, you wouldn't need the word different. I find a lot of Anglo-Saxon standards illogical, not to say weird.
@DisturbedFox137
@DisturbedFox137 4 ай бұрын
the thing with build in kitchen in germany is that they are paid via rent. it's like leasing but when you live there for a few years it would have been a lot cheaper to have bought your own kitchen... also if something brakes you have to pay, if you want to change something you have to have permission and if the kitchen can/needs to/will be replaced it depends on what kind of a landlord you have if they buy a new one or if they leave you with the decision to live with the old one or buy a new one yourself...
@videoponder4673
@videoponder4673 4 ай бұрын
It is the light for the staircase 😉
@JohnDoe-us5rq
@JohnDoe-us5rq 4 ай бұрын
Carpet was a thing, but I think like with the late 90s almost everyone started removing the carpet and replacing it with hardboard floors. And that's what's common now for the best of the last 30yrs. I think, carpet is the same as with the closets and kitchens. It opens up more options for design and style choices.
@lanamack1558
@lanamack1558 4 ай бұрын
Carpets are the most unhygienic floor coverings.
@gedoensful
@gedoensful 4 ай бұрын
The "bring your own kitchen" thing in germany must be a huge pain in the ass. Not even we are doing that in Switzerland.
@voyance4elle
@voyance4elle 4 ай бұрын
I think it's because Germans are more stingy :D
@grievousminded7517
@grievousminded7517 4 ай бұрын
Building a kitchen to your standarts and taste can be fun as well. And way more comfortable in the long run.
@gedoensful
@gedoensful 4 ай бұрын
Yeah, i just imagine during my student and young professional years i was changing flats all the time, that would have been terrible in germany
@HrLBolle
@HrLBolle 4 ай бұрын
28:40 That Basement layout predates WW1 meaning the house must have been built before 1914 and It most likely has had walls knocked down during that unfortunate time from 1939 - 45 to act as an improvised air-raid shelter
@Attirbful
@Attirbful 4 ай бұрын
the kitchen thing is mostly, because everybody has a different taste and different needs. I am in several Facebook groups on American real estate and some of the kitchen you see there, I would NOT want even if you gave me money! I have also lived in a number of American houses and apartments, and, yes, while being a foreign student there for a year each it was really useful to have a kitchen, but they were all so ugly, often with chipped corners and broken hinges etc. If I were to live in my own lice apartment, I would definitely want o have a kitchen customized for me, functional, and to my taste!
@InedibleSushi
@InedibleSushi 3 ай бұрын
22:26 we attach things to the wall by drilling a hole, putting a rawl plug in the hole followed by a screw. sometimes, for lighter stuff like picture frames, we just use a nail. for posters there's also sticky solutions. just because it's not drywall doesn't mean you cannot penetrate it. most commonly the wall material is sand-lime bricks, which are fairly easy to drill into.
@Thor3661
@Thor3661 4 ай бұрын
what does a carpet under the living room table have to do with her liking to eat there? For me that would even be a reason not to put one there Ofcourse i take my kitchen with me when something costs 30.000€ i dont leave it behinde or do you guys leave your Cars for the next Person?
@angelikaeder6391
@angelikaeder6391 4 ай бұрын
Of course we are taking our light fixtures with us! We choose them deliberately to tie in with the room's design and our personal taste. I have inherited antique ones no way I 'd leave them when I move out.
@PurpleSoulstice
@PurpleSoulstice 4 ай бұрын
This apartment is a typical example of an average German apartment with a crappy room layout and a shabby basement. You can find a better apartment with less square meters that looks bigger and more spacious.
@アンドレーエフ貝
@アンドレーエフ貝 4 ай бұрын
This is by far not a crappy apartment, the basement is average I would say (the barbed wire is off-putting). I don't know if you had luck in your search or you're just in a region with a high rate of quality apartments but (except for the windowless baths, which I hate) this is an averagely well maintained apartment and the basement is ... well just old but not unusual for a house of this age. If the walls are dry there is no real problem with it. To find an apartment you want to live in at all (depending on where you live, but well more true today) is often a challenge in itself, next to affording it when you would want to live in it. Monthly rates are hell of a problem in Germany especially in the south and there even in rural areas. One thing you have hard times accusing Germany for is having a sufficient supply of average quality AND affordable living space.
@HappyBeezerStudios
@HappyBeezerStudios 4 ай бұрын
I might only have two rooms, and my kitchen is connected to the living room, but I have a proper basement with proper door and a hallway that truly deserves the name. It's a short corridor. With doors leading to the room. But it's intresting to imagine what the designers had in mind with the building. A large entrance room, a pantry room, separate toilet despite the other bathroom being big enough if they had a shower instead of a tub. And those extremely tiny rooms (like the computer room) but a rather large kitchen. Probably for a typical 1960s family with multiple children. For that it makes sense to split toilet and bathroom (so that one can take a leak or wash their hands while someone else is taking a shower) and small children's bedrooms.
@PurpleSoulstice
@PurpleSoulstice 4 ай бұрын
Come on...the hallway is way too big. takes up square meters from other rooms. split bathroom?! never seen and somehow strange. You can hardly move in both rooms. no window in the bathroom: never! A mold paradise... the gaming/office room is too small and long. But everything is a matter of taste.
@アンドレーエフ貝
@アンドレーエフ貝 4 ай бұрын
@@PurpleSoulstice I didn't say that it's without issues. It's just by far not a crappy apartment. And I agree windowless bathrooms are a no go. It depends on how much they have to pay for it, but I have seen (and also lived in) worse and this appartement is average or slightly above. From my experience the market is really deteriorated and supply is below average quality-wise for a monthly rates that are Abzocke. It might depend on the region but in the south of Germany this it's far beyond funny if you are "only" middle-class.
@SeleneSalvatore
@SeleneSalvatore Ай бұрын
Mostly toilets in Europe don't have window or very very tiny one.
@steemlenn8797
@steemlenn8797 4 ай бұрын
Unfortuately at 28:56 you missed the very German writing on the left wall: Licht AUS! (light OFF!) Might still be from Adolf's time to prevent allied bombers to find the city. 😂
@blackangel9594
@blackangel9594 4 ай бұрын
When guests come to my house and I don't want them to just go into all the rooms and open my cupboards and rummage through them, I lock the door, or when a cleaning lady comes and steals something, I lock the doors where she is not allowed in! That's what the room keys are for
@houserhythm
@houserhythm 2 ай бұрын
We don't buy weeks worth of groceries, because pretty much everywhere there's a shop on your way home from wherever you're coming from. You just jump in, get what you need fore 2-4 days and that's it. Grocery shopping is rarely an activity of its own. The light switch outside, next to the doorbell is for turning on the lights in the stairwell, when you go out. And the ones next to the doors in the hallway are for bathroom lights. Older buildings didn't have grounding for electricity, so there are no switches or outlets in bathrooms, due to the very high humidity/steam. Sometimes there aren't any in kitchens either. But that is not the case in newer buildings anymore. Having handles (not knobs) and locks on every door in the house is very tipical. And the rooms aren't that big. Being filmed with a very wide angle lens makes them look larger. But just look how little space there is around the bed in the bedroom, for example.
@philippk736
@philippk736 28 күн бұрын
In most places I know, you generally sell the kitchen to the tenant that moves in after you.
@wyred
@wyred 3 ай бұрын
About the switches: They are normally to control the main ceiling light in the room they are in. You have them at every door so you can put on the light when you enter through one and turn it off when you leave through another door, without having to move through the room. About the keys: Yes they are normally keyed so you can only open the room with one specific key, but they are simple keys and cheap because they are keys for the inside, not to keep people out of your house, they are mostly used for when you need privacy. About the trash: The different kinds of trash are getting fetched on different days of the week, so you only need to put the one they are collecting for that day out.
@HrLBolle
@HrLBolle 4 ай бұрын
1:22 others may have given the answer already but that is a combination switch: 1. containing doorbell switch on the floor of the house, so neighbours don't have go all the way downstairs to ring ones doorbell 2. a light-switch for the hallway sometimes stairwell is connected to that circuit but in big houses, 10+ flats the stairwell will usually come with an independent light circuit, also those are equipped with a none adjustable timer to auto shut them of after some minutes.
@moppels.6589
@moppels.6589 4 ай бұрын
The switches next to the doors in the hallway are all for the hallway lighting, so no matter which room you enter the hallway from, you can turn on the lights in the hallway. The light switch outside the apartment above the bell button is not for the apartment, but for the hallway lighting outside the apartment, so that you can turn on the hallway light/light in the hallway in front of the apartment when you leave it. As far as the kitchen is concerned, no one wants to have a shabby kitchen that has already been used by countless previous tenants and, in most cases, does not suit their own taste at all.
@nayriacadera6048
@nayriacadera6048 4 ай бұрын
The light switch outside is for the hallway. We do NOT have the common hallway and staircase on light all the time. Instead you press that switch and then it runs on a timer and will shine for a time until it goes out again automatically. The vent in the bathroom is to get the moisture from bathing out and prevent mold. And with the thick, solid walls here we need heating in the rooms separately. Also more convenient in my opinion, that was I have no heating on in my bedroom, cause I prefer a cool one, but have a REALLY warm bathroom for when I'm butt naked! There are numerous advantages to have two mattresses. Once, your own side doesn't shake as much if your partner shifts around in their sleep. You can also have VERY different mattresses. My father is heavily overweight so he needs a VERY hard mattress, while my mother has problems with her back and needs a specific one. So each person can get what they need for themselves. You also CAN have the possibility to lift part of the mattress and that too individually. It's also convenient that everyone has their own blanket and not one person manages to roll themselves so much in the blanket that there's none left for your partner.
@LeoFieTv
@LeoFieTv 3 ай бұрын
Most Germans do have that little closet under the sink in the bathroom, but we also have mirror cabinets above the sink. A small cabinet, about 15cm deep, with 3 doors that all have a mirror in them. So it's your bathroom mirror and where you keep your toothbrush at the same time. And with those 3 mirrors you can arrange them in a way so you can see the back of your own head when you do your hair. Very useful. Also those switches outside the apartment door are a doorbell and the lights for the stairs. Those lights often have a timer and you have to use the switch multiple times while climing up. Many older apartment buildings like this one (looks like late 70s) don't have elevators.
@JohnDoe-rm1kw
@JohnDoe-rm1kw 4 ай бұрын
You take your light fixtures with you to the new home, because they match to the furnitures of the room, which you also take with you. (remember in germany you move everything with you). As others may have already stated, light switch (next to the doorbell switch nearby entrance door of your appartment) is for the staircase lighting, hint : folks may want to leave/enter their homes before or after sunlight. One obviously needs to see the stairs since Elevators are pretty rare (or say 99.95% non-existant) in typical pre 1990s appartments.The one shown in vid might be rather from 60s-70s. The light switches then off automatically. (typical 30 secs to several minutes, depends on the building). Since there is no one-style-fits-it-all kitchen in Germany, you take your kitchen with you when moving out (or sell it), because the value of kitchen ranges somewhere between 350 bux (used and 2 figures years old) and 20k handmade real wood kitchen. It would lead to endless negotiations between old and new tenants and homeowners if one had to leave the kitchen there. 🤣🤣
@rhysodunloe2463
@rhysodunloe2463 4 ай бұрын
9:59 Carpets were popular in the 60s up unto the 90s. Nowadays most apartments have laminate or vinyl floors. With no built-in closets there's no predetermined usage of rooms, therefore no default bedroom. Although the biggest room or the one connected to the balcony (if the apartment has one) gets used as living room and the other(s) as bedroom.
@DiegoKawasaka
@DiegoKawasaka 4 ай бұрын
-for that little door , behind this is the breaker-box for the apartment -the vent in the bathroom is for air-circulation, you have this most time when there is no window in the room -yes that is the plug for the drain, its also a an overflow so the water won´t rise past this point, if you forgot you had the water running for example ) -the switch do not control the outlet, its for the light in the room -thous are older keys, you still find them but not on modern apartments ..unless you want them and buy them in a hardware store
@dzudemlow
@dzudemlow 4 ай бұрын
The thing about the kitchens missing in apartments over here is you could really screw yourself over like my neighbour did. So my rent is 350€ and I had to buy and move my own kitchen into the third floor. BUT I only paid 700€ for it on ebay Kleinanzeigen even though the nice lady that sold it to me only used it for 2 years and it was way over 2000€. It's super nice and brand new, almost luxurious you could say lol. Now, my neighbour pays 400€ (same apartment basically but +50€ every month for a pre-installed kitchen) and I'm not even exaggerating in the slightest by saying it's LITERAL dog water. Everything is old/outdated and broken, looks super cheap and scuffed, which it is. The dishwasher doesn't even work anymore and welp, he pays 50€ extra every single month for that garbage. It basically looks like an old kitchen that someone should've thrown out two decades ago and my neighbour is so pissed about that. He literally pays 600€ a year for that useless kitchen which basically you could get for free by going to a recycling centre.
@nodwick4231
@nodwick4231 29 күн бұрын
Light switches are usually not watertight, so they are required to be outside of "wet" rooms (bathroom, toilets) to prevent people getting shocked.
@patrickfischer3349
@patrickfischer3349 4 ай бұрын
26:10 What? never heard about that. Maybe in a hotel where the room does not have a double bed and you are with someone else? I have a 140 mattress and everyone in my family has something above 120, too afaik. the 90cm mattresses are usually for chidren or 'normal size' small beds(single person). It's the smallest you can get but most grown ups I know want more space.
@guittoplex
@guittoplex 4 ай бұрын
Carpets were state of the art like 20-30 years ago. So happy that has changed.
@highks496
@highks496 4 ай бұрын
More like 30-40 years ago. Affordable laminate flooring that looks nice has changed everything. I mean before nice looking laminate floors, you either had really expensive hard wood floors, expensive tiles or more affordable carpets and linoleum in kitchens (the most horrible flooring that has ever been invented).
@Nikioko
@Nikioko 4 ай бұрын
Today, you have tiling in the kitchen and bathroom and laminate in the other rooms.
@Obi023
@Obi023 4 ай бұрын
It is also similar in austria. We have also a hallway with a lot of doors which is connect to every single room. Also it is really common that there are no carpets maybe rugs. In the bathrooms there are tiles on the floor. You saw the light switch outside of the room. In Austria there are the switch for the bathroom and for the toilet outside of the rooms and this is really typical. The other switches are for the hallway lights. So when you came out of one of this room you can switch the hallway lights on or off and this is the reason why there are so many light switch in the hallway room. The numbers on the radiators are to adjust the temperature of a single radiator. A smaller number is colder and a higher means hotter. In Austria and also Germany it is not common to have a central venting system to heat the rooms like in the U.S.. Newer flats has a floor heating system, where central hot water flows throw the pipes in the floor to heating the whole rooms.
@Observerl
@Observerl 7 күн бұрын
Since the early 80s, carpets have hardly been found in rented apartments here. Many landlords have switched to laminate because the stuff is simply cheap. Replacing a carpet when the tenant moves out and has messed up the carpet, which has recently become more and more common due to disregard for other people's property, is then an expensive affair in comparison. In Germany/Europe, too, it is more and more about money. In private houses, on the other hand, outside the kitchen, carpet is still common. Unless the owners are too lazy to vacuum the carpet regularly and prefer to just sweep it through. If you own a private house and are self-respecting, you have nothing to do with the cheap laminate garbage. There is either a wooden parquet or carpet, the kitchen and bathroom are tiled and carpets are also laid out over the tiles in the bathroom.
@kutcheks3804
@kutcheks3804 4 ай бұрын
Almost every door has a keyhole, even inside the apartment, which is why doors without are the exception. There is a thermostat on the radiator. 0, Frost-free and 1-5 can be selected normally. 5 is the warmest. The thermostat then automatically controls the radiator and closes when the appropriate temperature is reached. And yes, it is an apartment. There is an overflow at the top of the bathtub. In Germany, most apartments have no furniture and the kitchen is also purchased separately. There are kitchen studios where you can get the kitchen you want, or you can order a system kitchen and build it yourself. The refrigerators in Germany are normally small. A lot is cooked fresh and potatoes, rice, pasta and vegetables don't need to be in the fridge. That's why you almost only put sausage, cheese, butter and meat cold. Der Schlüssel ist gebogen und oft sind unten zähne oder Rillen, damit gibt es auch eine variation an schlüssel. Cellar doors are often open as grilles so that ventilation in the cellar works better and moisture does not stagnate.
@Enny2307
@Enny2307 4 ай бұрын
I like the 'question marks' in Ryan's eyes.. Immer wieder herrlich :)
@Mega_Lama
@Mega_Lama 4 ай бұрын
5:38 One of the light switches from the outside is for the light in the hallway (not for any of the lights inside the appartment) and the other one is the bell 😂
@meinnase
@meinnase 3 ай бұрын
The keys are "creepy" because theyre incredibly simple/oldschool on purpose, not necessarily because its cheaper, but because they arent meant to securely lock a door. Its just for privacy, wether its older kids or flatmates. With a locked door people cant just burst in while youre jacking it or whatever, but if you faint inside the door can be easily picked/sometimes the locks are all the same. The locks are on every door because its much easier to decide to use/not use the key, then to replace or switch the doors when someone new moves in and wants to use different rooms for different things.
@martinhuhn7813
@martinhuhn7813 4 ай бұрын
1:22 It´s the light swich for the hallway. Typically those lights are on a timer and you might find yourself in the dark, before you reached the appartment you want to go to. Therefore there are often light swiches nearby everywhere. Doorbell and lightswich on one panel can be quite inconvenient, because people tend to accidentally hit the doorbell, when they only want to swich the lights back on. Big swiches, which you cannot easily miss are common in Germany. 1:56 It´s common that the front door of the appartment leads to the internal hallway with doors to living room, kitchen, the bedrooms, a bathroom/toilet and sometimes a clauset. 5:47 Lightswhiches can be inside or outside of a room. Typically, they are outside for bathrooms (so that you do not have to use them in a humid environment or with wet hands) and inside in other rooms. 6:22 It´s a very typical interior door handle here, especially in older apartments. They can be locked with old non secure keys (which rarely still exist and are even more rarely used, if they do exist). 8:17 The numbers are thermostat settings. About 3 is typical room temperature for most people. The little star is the minimal setting to keep the pipes from freezing in the winter, the moon indicates a setting, which you might want to choose for nighttime, when you don´t use the room (or if it is a bedroom, most people like lower temperatures for sleeping). 9:31 The cultural implication? Renting is the permanent life situation for many many people here. You do not just rent, until you can afford your own house. But that means, that an appartment is something, that you (typically) completely individualize. Some appartment come with furniture, in some cases you can make arrangements with the next renter, but other then that, landlords typically do not want you to leave anything behind. And you might want to take your favourite lamp with you to your next appartment, because you might have invested a lot of money or time to get the one you really like. 10:04 Carpet has become less common, there is a trend towards hard floors. But it did not disappear. 11:35 The vent is for ventilation. ;-) It is an indoor bathroom without windows, without a vent, it might get moldy in there. 13:05 The lower hole is the drain, the upper one is an overflow. And, yes, there rubber plug for the drain is attached to the overflow with a chain. 14:34 Separate toilets and bathrooms are neither typical nor atypical, you find both. It depends a lot on the period in which the appartment was designed (or redesigned). A lot of houses were built in times, in which indoor toilets were not yet a thing (and the same holds true for electrical washing machines, dishwashers etc.). Therefore you find very different solutions for fitting everything (with plumbing) needed today. 22:35 You use a nail or drill a hole for heavy duty attachments. 23:06 Nope,. the swich most likely does not controll the outlet, that is allways on. It is almost certainly a light swich. 24:07 Yes, especially older appartments tend to come with doors for every room (which is good for individual heating). It is quite common, that renters remove some of the doors and store them in the basement storage unit to get a little more open concept. 26:33 The matresses can have different softnes and can be chosen to fit the individual needs (for comfort as well as healthy sleeping posture). 28:54 Those are wooden bars. It´s quite typical, because that allows landlords to cheaply separate storage units for different renters. It can be changed, if appartments are combined or separated and quite possibly, the building wasn´t an appartment building, when it was first built. 30:44 Was this a typical appartment? Nope, THE typical german appartment does not exist. Our oldest appartment buildings were originally built in medieval times and there have been different styles and different modes of renovation and remodeling ever since. The common feature is, that houses are built to last for centuries - but that does also mean, that appartments were designed or redesigned in different periods. However, nothing about that appartment was particularly untypical, there was nothing there, that I have never seen like that.
@fxrras
@fxrras 4 ай бұрын
Dieser Kommentarbereich ist nun Deutsches Eigentum 🇩🇪
@stephangruhne3958
@stephangruhne3958 4 ай бұрын
The idea of a almost neverending circle of passing kitchens sounds funny. There would be so much communication, stories about the microwave, hidden easter eggs from 3 tenants before... Next time i'll try to start it. And the last in the neverending circle will end up with two kitchens.
@mulciber7428
@mulciber7428 4 ай бұрын
The numbers on the Thermostat are just numbers. On most Vendors they are as follow: 1 -> around 15°C, 2 -> 18°C, 3 -> 20°C, 4 -> 23°C or in the near of it. In many Apartments is nothing except the Bathroom. There is blank concrete Floor and maybe there are floortiles in the kitchen. Thats it. So you have to lay out your own Flooring, your own Lights, your own furniture. The good thing on this is, it is your own style. You want Carpet? then buy carpet and put it in there. The Vent in the Bathroom is for ventilation. If you take a hot shower or poop you have to get the moisture or the stink out. Otherwise it would build mold or the stink would spread throughout the whole apartment. The Switch in Phils room is controling the overhead lighting. We nearly never have a switch controling an outlet. It may exist, but its a extream rare thing in Germany. The Keys are different. There are dozents of different ones and every door has a different key.
@dharkbizkit
@dharkbizkit 4 ай бұрын
the problem with the kitchen is: if there is none, you have to buy one. so lets say you spend 5000€ in that kitchen, live there for 5 years and then move, you now have 3 options: sell the kitchen to the next tenant, if he doesnt wanna buy it, you can take it with in your next apart or sell it on ebay. and the last option is: gift them the kitchen, which might still be worth 3000 bucks.. would you gift the next tenant that 3000€ buck kitchen, if you need to buy a new one for the next apartment, if that doesnt have a kitchen? also, i think that the hallway is way to big in that particular apartment. its like its own room. the design of the overall apartment doesnt allow it, but i think, a hallway should be smaler and give the gained space to the other rooms or one of them. but overall, from my experience in the northen german region, this apartment is 80% typical. toilet and bathroom beeing seperate is unusual for this "smal" apartment, you usally only have a toilet seperate in big 4+ room apartments and then its mostly a guest toilet, but id say: 98 out of 100 apartments dont have a seperate toilet room in this apartment size. other thing is the hallway, for most apartment, its just a straight, narrow corridor, not a full sized room you could put a dining table in and sit on it with 6 people
@MeruLix85
@MeruLix85 4 ай бұрын
In the hallway, there are two switches. One is the doorbell the other one turns on the light in the hallway.
@IsaakHunt
@IsaakHunt 4 ай бұрын
Carpets used to be a thing in the 70ies and 80ies, mainly. Since the 90ies, more and more people use click-laminate or vinyl-laminate flooring. I think it's cheaper and easier to clean than carpet flooring. When I grew up in the 70ies and 80ies, we had carpet flooring in almost every single room😄
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