Things I Wish Home Builders Would Stop Doing

  Рет қаралды 252,531

Nick Lewis

Nick Lewis

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 2 300
@rtallgal6871
@rtallgal6871 Жыл бұрын
My number one deal breaker is the open bathroom in the primary suite. Why would anyone want no door between the bedroom and the bathroom? What if the sleeping partner doesn’t want to be woken up by the light? What if I want to take a bath without a cold draft blowing in? What if I’m having a particularly messy “situation” in there? What if I want to pick my nose in private? I see this way too often. So bad.
@rtallgal6871
@rtallgal6871 Жыл бұрын
@@serena.kunstwerk Same! We have been together 39 years and I still don’t want to see what goes on in there. Let’s keep some mystery, ok?
@roioi7856
@roioi7856 Жыл бұрын
I knew a couple who put the bath tub in the bedroom. I don't know if it's relevant but their relationship didn't last very long..
@adhc8560
@adhc8560 Жыл бұрын
Seriously, what is WITH that? Yeah, maybe in photo shoots of honeymoon suites it looks romantic. In real life? Do you really want your partner lying in bed watching you pee, awkwardly climbing into the tub, and see you shaving your pits and washing your bits? I'm a great believer in privacy, especially in a bathroom!
@dianeosgood6594
@dianeosgood6594 Жыл бұрын
Builder had open doorway to master bath, but a separate room and door to toilet. Builder did let me ADD door to main part of master bath for $800. I paid it because the bedroom has a great view of the golf course and mountains, but why would I want to require blinds to be closed to use my master bath even midday? Also, the person sleeping also doesn't want to be woken up by the person who needs to get to work early? Most people want some privacy in the shower and tub as well. Open bath with no door is so impractical.
@Durmomo0
@Durmomo0 Жыл бұрын
an open bathroom is horrifying
@danielledriver469
@danielledriver469 Жыл бұрын
Not having a coat closet (not a open cubby) or a linen closet seems to be a thing in newer homes. I don't think buyers notice it's not part of the plan until it's too late.
@Nick_Lewis
@Nick_Lewis Жыл бұрын
Oh yes, great addition to the list.
@melissawritesalot1270
@melissawritesalot1270 Жыл бұрын
When we bought our house, the linen closet and coat closet was a must! If there wasn't those two storage options, we passed on the house.
@user-iz2nt1tr7r
@user-iz2nt1tr7r Жыл бұрын
Our house does not have any linen closet unfortunately so the sheets are all corralled in one of the bedroom closets. I hate it! There is also nowhere to store the vacuum so it has just become another member of the family, moving from room to room, silently observing all our activities, just resting in a corner somewhere. The coat closet we believe was literally an afterthought. It is not even 2'×2' in size, placed in a hallway that is so narrow, we can put our elbows out and touch each wall simultaneously 🙄.
@whiterock2815
@whiterock2815 Жыл бұрын
Yes! I've noticed this too. I'm more willing to give up a coat closet than a linen closet but would prefer to have both. Living in the South, we can keep our few coats in our bedroom closets and guests' coats can be draped over a chair in the living room or bench in the entry. But storing the linens for each bedroom in that bedroom's closet just takes up too much space.
@lanaj1107
@lanaj1107 Жыл бұрын
My master didn't have a linen closet, but I fixed it by adding custom shelving in my walk in closet which is part of the bed/bath. Not optimal, but workable.
@lagribbs2693
@lagribbs2693 Жыл бұрын
Why, WHY do they put light switches, thermostats, entry systems, etc in the middle of walls? In every place I've ever lived they have put the functional-but-ugly things in the middle of blank walls as though they were features. Please stop! That was my prime space for art and you ruined it!
@kbs7583
@kbs7583 Жыл бұрын
I hung pictures, and also put a frame around a miserable looking thermostat.
@pj-fx7gx
@pj-fx7gx 4 ай бұрын
I WISH the builder had only done a light switch as it would pale by comparison to the mini splits that were put on the feature walls. They look like tumors
@colleenporcina2303
@colleenporcina2303 3 ай бұрын
I’ll take a barn door over a bifold door any day of the week!
@ARomashchenko
@ARomashchenko Жыл бұрын
I am a builder. I've taken notes. Thank you for reaching out. I wish we (and architechts) had more feedback like this. Please make more if you think of any.(And also: yeah yuck popcorn ceilings are totally gross)
@Doc30jj
@Doc30jj Жыл бұрын
Here's one for you. Quit putting toilets in closets. It's a nightmare for Paramedics.
@ARomashchenko
@ARomashchenko Жыл бұрын
@@Doc30jj yeah I try to design everything to be ADA compliant even if it's not for a disabled client. You never know what can happen later either, with more people choosing to "age in place"
@rustyoak8860
@rustyoak8860 Жыл бұрын
I'm in the process of building a home and have 4 bedrooms on the upper level and 2 sets of Jack and Jill bathrooms. This is an awesome idea with 4 kids. I have no idea why anyone would make a powder bath, or main bath a J and J, but for kids, and the upper bedrooms, they are fantastic.
@lynn6799
@lynn6799 Жыл бұрын
tubs that aren't designed for adults to actually bathe in are deal breakers for me. I might as well have a walk in shower if it's too small to use for actual bathing. Also, fireplaces should be wood burning, not just for decoration. They come in handy if a storm takes out the power and it's cold weather.
@member888lb
@member888lb Жыл бұрын
No more accessing the laundry via kitchen or having laundry room near the kitchen. Yuk!
@princecharon
@princecharon Жыл бұрын
I am now trying to imagine a Jack and Jill bathroom with barn doors, a fireplace in the corner (dangerously close to one of the barn doors), and a popcorn ceiling covered in potlights, because I've seen enough weird real building designs on the internet to think that someone would have done this.
@robinbirdj743
@robinbirdj743 Жыл бұрын
Add in : a bathroom door close to or IN the kitchen!
@princecharon
@princecharon Жыл бұрын
@@robinbirdj743 I remember some like that in 'bad interior design decisions' videos - there were stairs up to a closet, and the toilet was inside, in at least two different houses. Probably neither was a Jack and Jill, but you had to wash your hands in the kitchen sink.
@ladycactus110
@ladycactus110 Жыл бұрын
You’ve just sent shivers of horror down my spine 😱😱😱
@scofieldvictoria
@scofieldvictoria Жыл бұрын
I think you've just described Nick's version of Hell
@Travelin_Gal
@Travelin_Gal 3 ай бұрын
I’m choking laughing! I started picturing how MetaAI would create that image. 😂
@briza2022
@briza2022 Жыл бұрын
Something I would have always like is to place - noise with noise. Noisy kitchen and noisy living room should be at the side of noisy street. Why place bedrooms and office at the side of the noisy street.
@wolfe6220
@wolfe6220 Жыл бұрын
Best comment!!!
@veronicawest1586
@veronicawest1586 Жыл бұрын
I also think orientation to sun and wind patterns should be considered if possible
@Brevislux112
@Brevislux112 Жыл бұрын
Yes! Also no bedroom should share a wall with the neighbor's bedroom. I don't need my neighbor's sex moans at 2 am thanks
@allydea
@allydea Жыл бұрын
@@Brevislux112 especially kids bedroom 😞
@catherinemoon3003
@catherinemoon3003 Жыл бұрын
Amen. And when the bedrooms are at the front, that means the "front" door is way to the back along the side of the house. My neighbor has a much larger house than I and their "front" door overlooks my back yard. We both hate it.
@StitchingWithLove
@StitchingWithLove Жыл бұрын
Please stop putting doorbell boxes and thermostats in the middle of a wall where no art can be hung.
@farmers_wife
@farmers_wife Жыл бұрын
Yes!!!!
@Caliabra
@Caliabra 9 ай бұрын
Yup ..,why is this every home!
@annes7926
@annes7926 Жыл бұрын
The former owners of our house put nine can/pot lights in the formal dining room! Our realtor called it the “interrogation room”. Fortunately, I wanted to use it as an art studio, so it worked out perfectly. I just have to keep the lights dimmed a bit 😎.
@lsharon2175
@lsharon2175 Жыл бұрын
My kitchen has those and our bedroom is just off the kitchen (condo). My husband called them the "interrogation lights" when lying in bed. Had to turn them off all the time when he was in the bedroom trying to watch TV.
@Jmike12345
@Jmike12345 Жыл бұрын
It’s a whole thing….😂😂😂😂
@NoiseDay
@NoiseDay Жыл бұрын
My mom had 27 lights installed in the basement with the brightest bulbs. She wanted proper task lighting for her craft room. My sister and I, who live in the basement, quickly discovered we have light sensitivity. My sister gets migraines from these lights.
@kaasmeester5903
@kaasmeester5903 Жыл бұрын
9, that's amateur hour :) When my parents bought their current apartment, the ceiling was pockmarked with pot lights. Big ones, small ones, there must have been 40 or so of them, in weird patterns. Looking up at that ceiling was like looking down at an airport. We got rid of the lot.
@maxineallen5673
@maxineallen5673 Жыл бұрын
we have a house on our street with similar lighting issues. Blinding from the street. the neighbours call it 'the morgue'!
@marylut6077
@marylut6077 Жыл бұрын
I tried to convince my son to pack 2 floor lamps when he moved into his 1st apt 5 hours away, saying many apts do not have overhead lights. 2 weeks later, he asked if he could have them. Sometimes your Mom knows more than you do.
@ckee8437
@ckee8437 Жыл бұрын
Yes! I hacked overhead lighting with hanging drum lamps attached to a wall mounted are because guess what else apartments love... popcorn ceilings.
@elyssatruman1292
@elyssatruman1292 15 күн бұрын
even if they do have overhead lights it's nice to have lamps for the evening
@timothymbess
@timothymbess Жыл бұрын
One additional point for the can lights is to install the ones which are dimmable. That allows the home builder or architect to potentially "over-light" a room slightly, but with the dimmer a homeowner can select the exact level of lighting they wish. If you're going to be installing lots of cans, make sure you have dimmables.
@pysq8
@pysq8 Жыл бұрын
Yeah! And where are all the skylights?
@jerrykinnin7941
@jerrykinnin7941 Жыл бұрын
@@pysq8 skylights like sunroofs in cars SUCK. they're just another possible roof leak and what about haul storms Sky lights are a DEAL BRAKER. as are HOAs
@pysq8
@pysq8 Жыл бұрын
@@jerrykinnin7941 I love my sunroof, loved my convertible. Have had trouble with them tho, so I feel ya!
@writerinfact1768
@writerinfact1768 10 ай бұрын
You might even put that plethora of can lights on a split circuit. Just a thought.
@cs4849
@cs4849 Жыл бұрын
We had a house built last year and fortunately none of the things you mentioned or done. In fact, our builder advised against a corner fireplace. Also, when I stress that we did not want popcorn ceilings he laughed and said that no one does that anymore. I think my most hated builder thing is split foyer houses. Why in the world would you want to walk into the house between floors and have to go up or downstairs immediately?
@Kayla_P99
@Kayla_P99 Жыл бұрын
I grew up in one of those and it was really difficult when my dad was using crutches. Basically he lost access to half the house and the outside world.
@j.m.7056
@j.m.7056 Жыл бұрын
Yes! They are all over East TN! Horrible design, neither attractive nor practical.
@cs4849
@cs4849 Жыл бұрын
@@j.m.7056 I’m in East TN, too, and my old neighborhood had loads of split flyers. Such an unfriendly design!
@mangos2888
@mangos2888 Жыл бұрын
I worked with a builder in 2021 and we looked at split [foyer] entry because it is a lot cheaper to build than single-story + basement or two-story. This was during the lumber price gouging rage, but the contract was $40,000 less, in USDA rural America, to have split-entry vs one-story + basement. Two-story was even more expensive. I ended up walking away since I couldn't get what I wanted without the price-gouging.
@candicesummers5427
@candicesummers5427 Жыл бұрын
Amen. Split entrances are an immediate no. I won’t even look at the rest of the house.
@pman2916
@pman2916 Жыл бұрын
Gotta a feeling Nick suffered through his own experience with the "Jake and Jill bathroom" incident😅 My problem with this type of bathroom is when the other person doesn't unlock your side of the door after using it, so you have to go through their room to unlock it.
@ell040
@ell040 Жыл бұрын
i kept a post it note on how many times my brother would do that to me last winter break when we were both home from college. was home for 4 weeks, my door was locked 18 times
@voscra
@voscra Жыл бұрын
In my college dorm jack and jill bathroom. There are no locks. This solves the problem, but also obviously creates another one. There is littearly no locks in the bathroom, so you have to knock to use it every time.
@writerinfact1768
@writerinfact1768 10 ай бұрын
He's a brother. You have to lower expectations for them. @@ell040
@amythomas6410
@amythomas6410 Жыл бұрын
I work in residential remodeling and one of my biggest pet peeves is when builders (or anyone, actually!) install the Pinterest-type Mudroom bench/cubby/hooks situation… especially if it’s in a public area of the home- or visible from public areas. Basically NOBODY keeps their stuff looking staged and perfect… and kids coats, backpacks, etc never look good. We install closed locker cabinet’s instead… if people insist on a version of this set up. But we tear out more “open cubbies” out of brand new houses than you would believe- because everyone thinks it’s a great idea until they actually live with it.
@jonasholzem2909
@jonasholzem2909 Жыл бұрын
Open storage is never a good idea. Doors are there for a reason, and the reason is that they are great!
@mothbythesea
@mothbythesea Жыл бұрын
I scream interally when I see these. Same with open shoe storage that only fits flats or sneakers. You know that thing is going to be jammed with folded up boots, scarves, mittens, HATE THEM
@kathiemihindukulasuriya1538
@kathiemihindukulasuriya1538 Жыл бұрын
My husband installed hooks on the wall leading into the 1st floor bathroom (close to the garage entrance, between the kitchen and laundry room for coats in use. The rest of the coats are in the coat closet - very convenient and not the first thing you see when entering the house.
@MyFocusVaries
@MyFocusVaries Жыл бұрын
Coat hooks are a great idea INSIDE a coat closet, not in an open plan.
@Lovesapuzzle
@Lovesapuzzle Жыл бұрын
Yes. They work if you have a dedicated mud room where the mess is out of sight but, people are never as neat and organized as they think those units will make them.
@cynthiajohnston424
@cynthiajohnston424 Жыл бұрын
Mirrored closet doors in the bedroom , as seen on many tv home makeover shows , are scary ! I rarely want to see my reflection on a good day when I'm reasonably well dressed , let alone first thing each am w/ bedhead & rumpled jammies ! 😂
@today7518
@today7518 Жыл бұрын
Yes, mirrored closet doors were in my house when bought it. Gone, and replaced with wood bypass doors.
@llamasugar5478
@llamasugar5478 Жыл бұрын
I would scare myself in the night at least twice a week.
@jerrykinnin7941
@jerrykinnin7941 Жыл бұрын
We got rid of ours and they didn't slide right either.
@cynthiajohnston424
@cynthiajohnston424 Жыл бұрын
@@llamasugar5478 🤣🤣🤣
@cynthiajohnston424
@cynthiajohnston424 Жыл бұрын
@@jerrykinnin7941 You are a very wise person & conscientious home owner ! 😂
@kh628
@kh628 Жыл бұрын
A friend recently renovated, and found another option for those narrow spaces to replace an obligatory barn-door besides a pocket door: a bi-fold door! While these might bring to mind apartment laundry cubbies and closets for some, they DO offer an option which doesn't swing as wide as a solid door and which isn't such a beast to install as a pocket door.
@labachaterairlandesa
@labachaterairlandesa Жыл бұрын
But they still offer no sound dampening benefits, I fear. Do they made them without the slats or whatever they’re called?
@MailleGrace
@MailleGrace Жыл бұрын
There are some bifold doors made without slats, so that there is more privacy. @@labachaterairlandesa
@jaz8935
@jaz8935 Жыл бұрын
Yes. They make solid bi-fold doors. I have them in my house. I hate them.
@gracieofgod8899
@gracieofgod8899 9 ай бұрын
I had some without slats. They muffle sound, but not enough for the privacy most of us would want while in a bathroom.
@sheila3936
@sheila3936 Жыл бұрын
I wish more homes were designed with practicality and longevity in mind. Like having the dining room on the opposite side of the house from the kitchen is a pain in the …, or the “mudroom” with no closets and too narrow to take off your shoes, or narrow doorframes so you can’t age into your house as nothing will be mobility device accessible. There’s a lot of layout plans I see and can immediately tell they were designed by someone who does not do the domestic work at home.
@Whistlewalk
@Whistlewalk Жыл бұрын
Oh, ya!
@sheila3936
@sheila3936 Жыл бұрын
@@serena.kunstwerk the stairs has been an eye opener for me too. Family have been putting in chair lifts. A straight staircase costs under $4,000. But a U staircase with a landing halfway down? $12,000! No fancy stairways in my future.
@Abby_Liu
@Abby_Liu Жыл бұрын
@@serena.kunstwerk I recently holidayed in a rental house with the strangest layout. that house will be a holiday rental for as long as it stays that way because it's not liveable for more than a week. it's U shaped around a pool, there's 2 steps of stairs in the middle, and the kitchen/living area #1 is off to one side of the U while living area #2 and 2 bedrooms are on the other side. none of it made any sense. edit: oh and the main entrance opens up to a corridor with laundry/bathroom to one side at the corner of the U. terrific.
@joylox
@joylox Жыл бұрын
My place was built by my great grandparents later in their lives, and specifically for their desires. The best part being that the two floors can be accessed without stairs, just by walking down the driveway to the back to get into the bottom level if you want to bypass the stairs inside. But it's very odd. I found the original plans and there were 4 variations on what we'd call a living room (others being front room, sitting room, and rumpus room) and some odd storage places for vegetables and wood. I use the cold room for food, but we took out the wood storage as the fireplace had been replaced with a propane one by my great uncle who lived there, and some things had been changed a few times. I'm still trying to figure it out, and what I want where. I'm sure the changes would make it sell much better in the future, but it's still really weird, especially the two kitchens, as most people don't need a canning kitchen.
@kck9742
@kck9742 Жыл бұрын
I've never seem the dining room across the house from the kitchen, that's strange. MY pet peeve is the open kitchen-dining concept. If I have guests, I DON'T want them seeing into the kitchen, thanks.
@jd9351
@jd9351 Жыл бұрын
I wish builders would put in moldings. Even plain, unadulterated moldings. Something to make floors and ceilings interesting.
@denisedorsey2889
@denisedorsey2889 Жыл бұрын
But that is something that can easily be added by the homeowner. This video focuses on things that are limiting updates or renovations.
@wandaherbert9681
@wandaherbert9681 Жыл бұрын
@ JD - I agree! Depending on the market you live in, moldings are not easy to get properly installed. Trust, you will recognize poor installations and the bad DIY versions too.
@angelastevenson252
@angelastevenson252 5 ай бұрын
House are build as a box to put your stuff in. A plain boring set of boxes. *sigh.
@j.m.7056
@j.m.7056 Жыл бұрын
How about prohibiting outside water faucets being installed WAY to low on the exterior wall. Do people really need to crouch down or kneel in order to fasten a hose???
@briza2022
@briza2022 Жыл бұрын
Agree, our backs is more important than buying a bit longer hose.
@laurah5758
@laurah5758 Жыл бұрын
Amen!
@kaw8473
@kaw8473 Жыл бұрын
I actually worked at a retirement community and all of the faucets were about 4 inches off the ground. A retirement community! Their solution was to pay to install extensions on all the houses. The stupidity doesn't end at the faucets, they planted oak trees, that shed tiny acorns that caused severe slipping hazards directly on sidewalks. I'm not done, whatever company installed the original sprinkler system, installed the sprinklers so close to the house the sprinklers were popping up into the house siding and literally filling the outside wall with water.
@Whistlewalk
@Whistlewalk Жыл бұрын
@@kaw8473 Jeeez!!1
@Nick_Lewis
@Nick_Lewis Жыл бұрын
Yes!
@es3359
@es3359 Жыл бұрын
My biggest gripe in new homes are these totally ‘seamless’ kitchens where drawers are hidden behind panels and cupboards are so high above the counters that you can barely reach anything without a stool (and I’m almost 6’ tall). Also, everything built in is both expensive to do and makes it crazy difficult to replace! I don’t know what makes builders and designers think these custom super sleek kitchens are what people want. Totally impractical!
@maiyahtucker6576
@maiyahtucker6576 Жыл бұрын
We like the built in corner fireplace in our home, because it saves wall space and we do like the way it looks in the corner anyway. We also don’t care for TVs above the fireplace. On Jack & Jill bathrooms, I once lived in a 1942 home where guests would have to walk through a bedroom to get to the bathroom. That was awkward enough. With the 2nd bedroom on the other side of the Jack & Jill bathroom, I kept that door always locked & blocked off. I used that as my extra closet/sewing room :) As a child, I was embarrassed having to share a bathroom with the strangers in the room adjoining ours… and always having to “hurry up” in the bathroom.
@arachnid33
@arachnid33 Жыл бұрын
Builders now make everything so cheap and minimalist. Alley kitchens and no linen and broom closets. Bathrooms across from kitchens. Cheap thin composite materials for floors, baseboards and cabinets. I love my older home because it has so much storage, a huge kitchen and solid wood everywhere. Also I hate open concept. I like walls, doors, privacy haha.
@StealAwayTheStars
@StealAwayTheStars Жыл бұрын
I can't wait to have more space! More storage and closets and solid wood doors with nice handles. To be fair, the first place my husband and I lived in was a dirt cheap TINY one bedroom apartment and the current place is a house converted into a duplex. Our hobbies also take up a ton of closet space. As a result the spare room is basically a closet for us out of necessity. But the thing I really can't wait for when we finally buy a house is a real built in food pantry. I can only fit so much into the cabinets and I thought about getting a stand alone cabinet but again, there's just nowhere to fit it.
@hshawn00
@hshawn00 Жыл бұрын
I also hate open concept house. Give me walls and doors
@tamarastone141
@tamarastone141 Жыл бұрын
Yes! So true! I ended up buying a home built in th 60s, my ONLY issue is that it has 9 ft ceilings 😩 I was willing to accept it because I have a solid built home with lots of storage, a nice sized kitchen, real hard wood floors,etc. It's also brick, can't beat that!
@jennamann195
@jennamann195 Жыл бұрын
I'd love to see a video on what prospective buyers should look for when shopping around--i.e. poor workmanship indicators or water damage!
@TracyLeaOgden
@TracyLeaOgden Жыл бұрын
This is a great idea.
@nancyneyedly4587
@nancyneyedly4587 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, like a home inspector and interior re-designer, discussing their different views on potential problems.
@mangos2888
@mangos2888 Жыл бұрын
Idk if this is the channel for that...
@orioleaszme3415
@orioleaszme3415 Жыл бұрын
Test the water pressure. Flush the toilets. My dad hated squeaky floors so he would jump around. He also would take a marble to check the floors were flat in the main rooms and to check that water would flow into the drains in the wet rooms.
@Caliabra
@Caliabra 9 ай бұрын
Great idea
@karens107
@karens107 Жыл бұрын
Omg thank you for addressing the fear factor of a jack and jill bathroom… the horrors…
@sheila3936
@sheila3936 Жыл бұрын
And getting locked out of them because the last user forgot to unlock both doors!
@Nick_Lewis
@Nick_Lewis Жыл бұрын
You don't know fear until you've used one.
@Erin-tk5jw
@Erin-tk5jw Жыл бұрын
Yes! Jack-and-Jill was on my "absolutely not" list.
@tollcollectorsquirrel342
@tollcollectorsquirrel342 Жыл бұрын
I’ve lived in a house that had a Jack and Jill bathroom, but designed in a way that mitigated the worst part. The room was T-shaped, with a door at each end of the top of the T. That area had the sinks. The vertical part of the T had the toilet and tub/shower…and most importantly, there was ONE LOCKABLE DOOR where the 2 parts of the T meet.
@Chelseabee55
@Chelseabee55 Жыл бұрын
My anxiety could never
@JonesJones-np2kq
@JonesJones-np2kq Жыл бұрын
9:46 for lighting please partner with a lighting specialist. They have and know the exact lighting equations. And they will make sure that you have all three different types of lighting per room. Task lighting, accent lighting overhead lighting. Depending on your budget, they can create some of the most sexiest mood lighting yet still safe to move around in your space.
@writerinfact1768
@writerinfact1768 10 ай бұрын
One assumes that a lighting specialist will consider the home owner's dislike of center-of-the-ceiling artificial daylight with multiple 100-watt light bulbs. I would rather the light switch just inside the front door turned on an outlet - where a gentle lamp is plugged in.
@belindagoertzen8071
@belindagoertzen8071 Жыл бұрын
Definitely overdid it on the pot lights in our house 😬 but we put all of them on dimmers luckily. I had no idea how many would be appropriate and I was terrified of it being too dark!
@jeanvignes
@jeanvignes Жыл бұрын
I wonder why people stopped installing the kind of pivot doors that could swing out or in? My grandmother had one into her kitchen that you could back through while carrying a heavy clothes basket or a couple of bags of groceries, and it was very convenient. The sides of the swinging doors could be propped open, but if you wanted them closed (e.g. to prevent steam or kitchen smells from filling the rest of the house) then you could just leave them closed but pass through them "hands free" at will.
@fisheyenomiko
@fisheyenomiko Жыл бұрын
Hey, yeah! My grandparents farm house had one of those between the kitchen and dining room*, and it was great. I also really liked the layout of their bathroom. (-: *There was a table in the kitchen; the dining room was mostly used for fancy dinners, or when there was a lot of people.
@Sarah-re7cg
@Sarah-re7cg Жыл бұрын
Omg dude why doesn’t every kitchen have these doors?!
@DuhLikeTotally
@DuhLikeTotally Жыл бұрын
My grandma's house has this too! You're right, I never noticed that I haven't ever been in a house that had the same thing
@repatch43
@repatch43 Жыл бұрын
Simple: people don't like things that are in workplaces in their homes. It's the same reason we don't have fluorescent lighting in all of our living spaces, and only put (aside from kitchens) 'warm' colour temperature lighting in our homes.
@elaexplorer
@elaexplorer Жыл бұрын
Mostly because people would get banged in the face a lot resulting in more than one broken nose
@bethriddick36
@bethriddick36 Жыл бұрын
My husband took out a popcorn ceiling in our first house, in 1989. I can't believe they still exist. He found a good way to do it: use a sprayer, and we a 3x3 area of the ceiling. Then wet the next 3x3. That gives the first area enough time to soften, and you can go back and scrape it off. Still messy, but no dust. You keep alternating spraying and scraping this way, and eventually you have the whole thing done. Cheers.
@p.q.4497
@p.q.4497 Жыл бұрын
A lot of homes (at least in the US) have asbestos in the ceilings, so if thinking about DIY, carefully send samples to a lab first
@angspendlove
@angspendlove Жыл бұрын
Yep, my sister and I did this in her home using this exact technique. We bought a big pump sprayer (like you might use for pesticide) because it only took about 2 minutes of using a trigger-type water bottle to realize it was going to be slow and cramp-inducing and we were doing the ENTIRE house. It made a massive difference, felt so much cleaner and newer and fresher. As for asbestos, if the home is newer than mid-1970's it won't be an issue.
@caso6481
@caso6481 Жыл бұрын
I hope it didn't have asbestos, like mine does.
@kerriuttaro6153
@kerriuttaro6153 Жыл бұрын
Glad someone brought this up cause a lot of people don’t this!
@dianelouise3944
@dianelouise3944 Жыл бұрын
I find laundry rooms to be under-sized in large homes compared to the total square footage. Same with mud rooms. They are both such frequently used spaces that builders shouldn’t scrimp on them. Also, a mudroom that has a walkway from the outside to the inside without rubbing up against coats on hooks is so preferable to one where you have to walk the length of the mudroom to go in or out of the house.
@vaderladyl
@vaderladyl Жыл бұрын
Yes laundry spaces are so frequently under planned. They don't realize how inconvenient that is.
@Abby_Liu
@Abby_Liu Жыл бұрын
new apartments now don't even come with a full laundry room anymore, just a cupboard type deal where you open the doors, and it's washing machine under the wall mounted dryer, and then the sink to the side, if you're lucky maybe a bit of floor space for broom/mop. where are your unfolded/dirty clothes going where guests won't be subjected to them?
@joylox
@joylox Жыл бұрын
I don't have a mud room, but I can really tell that my place was built by the shortest of my ancestors. Everything is so small! My fiance tried getting from the laundry room into the somewhat hidden cold room to put some carrots away, and he could barely fit through the short door and narrow aisle. At least with laundry, I have a stacked unit and just put in a set tub, so I don't mind the smaller space. They were smart, in that they put a plug really high up on the wall compared to the rest, specifically so it would be for the iron without having to plug it in behind the ironing board. Best laundry room feature I never would have thought of!
@victoriaf.74
@victoriaf.74 Жыл бұрын
Exactky my two top complains about my house which is beautiful, BUT I live on the East coast, and a mudroom should be a give, si, my powder room (as you come into the house from the garage) serves as mudroom and two doors hide the washer and dryer!
@kck9742
@kck9742 Жыл бұрын
How big of a laundry room do you need, sheesh. As long as you can fit a washer, dryer, and laundry supplies, and maybe an ironing board, that's all I need.
@wwz1011
@wwz1011 Жыл бұрын
Agree 100% on barn doors. I hate how they gobble up wall space, which can make furniture placement more difficult.
@jess8189
@jess8189 Жыл бұрын
I was house hunting recently, and I DESPISED how many pantry/laundry room combos I saw. I had no idea builders even combined them until we went house hunting!
@ruthmeow4262
@ruthmeow4262 Жыл бұрын
Wow, that doesn't make a lick of sense. Last thing I want is my pantry in a high traffic, high humidity area with a lot of chemicals.
@LGW27
@LGW27 Жыл бұрын
Our laundry area is in the kitchen. I can't tell you how much fun it is to have the dryer next to the stove.
@sue2611
@sue2611 Жыл бұрын
I had to read your comment three times to make sure I wasn't misreading it. Dirty clothes in with food? Ummm... No. And don't make the hallway from the garage a laundry room, either.
@andywason3414
@andywason3414 Жыл бұрын
@@sue2611 I've got a fairly new build,and that works for me. (but then my garage is such a mess I seldom come in that way!)
@marilynndesilva7620
@marilynndesilva7620 Жыл бұрын
Our home, which I designed (nothing fancy but built for family living), was on the market recently and sold for just a little bit under our asking price. One of the things that prospective buyers loved was the separate laundry room on the first floor---not in the garage or basement and not in the kitchen or bathroom or wherever else washers & dryers get shoved as if they were an afterthought. "Oh, yeah. We're going to need to do laundry occasionally. Where should we put these things?"
@laurelkirkwood
@laurelkirkwood Жыл бұрын
At last! Someone who agrees with me about Jack and Jill bathrooms. I think an exhibitionist must have thought up that concept.
@emiliaescobar7652
@emiliaescobar7652 Жыл бұрын
Don't like them either, bathrooms should be private, just for "you" & only you!
@carylhalfwassen8555
@carylhalfwassen8555 Жыл бұрын
I built my vacation home with a jack and Jill bathroom with young grandchildren in mind. My daughter-in-law appreciated having easy access to the children. I also chose to enlarge the bedrooms because family are tall but I only had so much floor space so the jack and Jill was a sacrifice to have large guest rooms and closets.
@orangeleprachaun4723
@orangeleprachaun4723 Жыл бұрын
​@@emiliaescobar7652do you mean not sharing bathrooms or do you mean only one person at once
@Caliabra
@Caliabra Жыл бұрын
Speaking up for Jack and Jill’s. I had one that was in between me and my brother’s room growing up. The toilet part and shower part was locked further and then the sink and vanity was shared. It worked fine and it was never used as a guest bathroom. Obviously it’s situational and I see how it could be bad
@CynthiaS1951
@CynthiaS1951 Жыл бұрын
I agree with everything you have said, especially barn doors! I have a neighbor who has a very beautiful contemporary home, and she put in a barn door to her master bath. It doesn’t fit the decor, and I expect chickens or goats to walk out of her bathroom.
@nathalie_desrosiers
@nathalie_desrosiers Жыл бұрын
🤦
@merrywalsh2809
@merrywalsh2809 Жыл бұрын
Haha. We have chickens and goats AND a barn door in the house.
@kck9742
@kck9742 Жыл бұрын
LOL. I like barn doors in and of themselves, but dislike anything "trendy." I feel the same about shiplap... like it, but dislike that EVERYONE does it.
@NellyMacharia
@NellyMacharia Жыл бұрын
🤣🤣🤣
@Vera-kh8zj
@Vera-kh8zj Жыл бұрын
🤣🤣
@Lee-vn8xg
@Lee-vn8xg Жыл бұрын
Shared a Jack and Jill bathroom with my sister growing up, and it was a nightmare. Constantly being locked out or yelled at for being too noisy. And worst, having it purposefully used as a way to enter my room despite having my bedroom door locked for privacy, and absolutely no way to prevent it.
@j10001
@j10001 Жыл бұрын
The unwanted bedroom access is something I hadn’t thought of. Great point. That sounds miserable!
@JessieBanana
@JessieBanana Жыл бұрын
I just wrote a comment about the opposite experience. I liked ours and we wouldn't have had an en suite if we didn't. My sisters and I were always really respectful of each others stuff so I never felt like I had to lock anything.
@tedlovejesus
@tedlovejesus Жыл бұрын
Its a lose-lose situation, ideally you use the bathroom, has to think about protecting yourself and thus locking all doors, And you have to unlock all doors because you have to think about others TOO, or you are locking others out, and selfish people would definitely forget these steps for sure When you go to the bathroom has to think about protecting yourself, and others, is stress-inducing 😅 Not even talking about people forgetting to lock all doors so people spot the business going, unnecessary Even you do it all right, people would still get it wrong, get locked out or embarrassing situations
@kck9742
@kck9742 Жыл бұрын
I never thought of this before Nick mentioned it here... in the house I grew up in, my parents' master bath was a jack-and-jill... you could either enter through their room, or through the den/fourth bedroom (my room). So it when it was time to get up for school, my mom could just knock on the door to my room and poke her head in to wake me up. Kind of handy. My parents' side actually had a pocket door too, LOL. Actually love pocket doors, they're just cool.
@sarahnelson8836
@sarahnelson8836 Жыл бұрын
You should definitely be able to lock the doors from both sides…
@Greentrees60
@Greentrees60 Жыл бұрын
I would love to see you comment on alternative home designs (earthships etc). They are architecturally unique, but I think the interior design gets a lot less commentary.
@heatherqualy9143
@heatherqualy9143 Жыл бұрын
I clean houses and have a few houses with a Jack and Jill bathroom, but a couple of them are designed well. The tub/shower and toilet are separated from the rest of the bathroom, so even if someone walks into the sink area, anyone using the toilet or shower is behind a separate door.
@dawnsfields
@dawnsfields Жыл бұрын
Spot on! My pet peeve is the main sink in the island. Because everyone wants their dirty dishes right in the middle of the kitchen for all to see! That is exactly why in every magazine photo you see pretty vases or something trying to hide the damn sink.
@ewetoob137
@ewetoob137 Жыл бұрын
Agree! Open concept kitchens in general - blech
@suzannemartin4201
@suzannemartin4201 Жыл бұрын
I totally agree. I also don't like the cooktop on the island. For security reasons. Especially if the island is not very big.
@peggiescraftcafe7117
@peggiescraftcafe7117 Жыл бұрын
@@suzannemartin4201 Agree! My sister has the cooktop in her island in her vacation home in Florida with a lower countertop around it which means no counter space next to the stove. Awful. Hating cooking there. So inconvenient.
@LawMom6
@LawMom6 Жыл бұрын
My old house had a Jack and Jill bathroom where both bedrooms led to a space with a double vanity and in that room there was a single door to another space with a toilet and shower. Danger averted.
@nathalie_desrosiers
@nathalie_desrosiers Жыл бұрын
I like that idea. Thanks for sharing.
@Nick_Lewis
@Nick_Lewis Жыл бұрын
A sensible compromise!
@goosegirl941
@goosegirl941 Жыл бұрын
We just finished building our new house and we did Jack & Jill bathrooms and we love it
@DC-rd6oq
@DC-rd6oq Жыл бұрын
I had a house with a similar set-up and it worked great. The other important thing is that the Jack and Jill was on the second floor and not a guest bath. Jack and Jill bathrooms that also function as the guest bath/powder room are terrible.
@MT-un5xq
@MT-un5xq Жыл бұрын
Exactly!!! Jack and Jill's should only be an upstairs thing, with only the sink in the shared space... Sanitary stuff behind a single door!
@Q-.-Q
@Q-.-Q Жыл бұрын
Another problem with popcorn ceilings is that they sometimes contain asbestos! So diy removal is not recommended unless you can get them tested to be sure it's safe.
@EvelynM-vlogs
@EvelynM-vlogs Жыл бұрын
the best thing to do is check the year the textured ceiling went in. If it was before or after they used asbestos in such things, no need for a test. Some say 40s to mid 90s, others say 50s to 80s.
@ps4402
@ps4402 Жыл бұрын
Our living room has popcorn ceilings with asbestos. We couldn't afford to have it removed. It's safe as long as it's painted and sealed. Looks crappy, but oh well.
@sbffsbrarbrr
@sbffsbrarbrr Жыл бұрын
Someone in a previous comment said they just covered the ceiling with drywall. I wonder if that's a viable option? Not sure how it would work if you were to sell the home though.
@EvelynM-vlogs
@EvelynM-vlogs Жыл бұрын
@@sbffsbrarbrr It is, but it does lower the ceiling and is also very messy.
@user-nc7oh2rn7f
@user-nc7oh2rn7f Жыл бұрын
Asbestos was officially banned from ceiling coverings in 1973. If the house was built later than this, it could only have asbestos in pre-fab panels or planks that were made prior to 1973. Popcorn ceilings are sprayed on, not "installed", so there's really not a chance that a builder in the 1990s would have had access to a spray on product made 17+ years prior.
@sagisli
@sagisli Жыл бұрын
Absolutely agree with all your observations, I'd like to add a few huge deal breakers for me: accessing the primary closet through the bathroom. The idea of walking past the toilet to get to my clothes is not an option. I also hate the toilet closets. Build a half wall to hide the potty but don't place it in a dark cave. A narrow front entry is positively awful, especially if you have full walls on both sides of the door. Don't put a bathroom in the front portion of the house. That is probably the worst feng shui I can think of. I know people love these oversized large homes but there is such a thing as too big. Center island sinks are the absolute pits for water pooling up on the counter. It seems like homes are being built with only design in mind but little attention being paid to function, especially in the kitchen. Anyway, sorry for the long post but I love home tours and I'm immediately drawn to function first and design second.
@janetscott3385
@janetscott3385 Жыл бұрын
Nick, you are bang on correct, as usual. What drives me nuts is making it so you must walk through the bathroom to access the closet in the primary bedroom. Bathrooms get steamy - you don't want to store clothing in a damp environment. Also, if I am using the facilities, I don't want hubby coming through the bathroom to get a sweater. I know they try and solve this by putting the toilet in a little closet by itself inside the bathroom, but I hate this too. Maybe I would prefer to wash my hands BEFORE I have to touch a door handle.
@JNS865
@JNS865 Жыл бұрын
This! We’re on the same page. I commented on this too.
@nerdcave0
@nerdcave0 Жыл бұрын
Mine: Those bar-height countertops that are attached to kitchen countertops instead of it being a single, large, flat countertop. Good list though, potlights always make me feel like I'm under interrogation.
@j.m.7056
@j.m.7056 Жыл бұрын
Jay, I agree. One large flat space is so much more useful.
@LyndaCushman
@LyndaCushman Жыл бұрын
Yes! You nailed it!!
@angelbulldog4934
@angelbulldog4934 Жыл бұрын
Same here. I completely loathe overhead lights. I even have lamps in my kitchen! And if an overhead light fixture makes me look at the bulb, it's really out! That's very uncomfortable for my eyes.
@amac1153
@amac1153 Жыл бұрын
Oh and the double kitchen islands. They are so terrible
@ARomashchenko
@ARomashchenko Жыл бұрын
Omg what a good point! I'm laying out some houses right now that had this but I can totally see your point and I've never thought of it, so you just saved those people! (And it'll be cheaper to install so bonus for me)
@karenolson4000
@karenolson4000 Жыл бұрын
I wouldn't choose to install a popcorn ceiling, but already installed popcorn ceilings are incredibly good at muffling sound throughout the house (even if the popcorn is limited to the living room). Also, popcorn ceilings aren't time consuming to clean, because you simply do not attempt to clean them, ever, ever.
@yeuxdal
@yeuxdal Жыл бұрын
Omg people and their bathroom hangups. 😂😂😂😂 J&Js are super functional if they’re not the only bathroom. Learn about locking/ knocking.
@yeuxdal
@yeuxdal Жыл бұрын
PS Why are you in the kids’ bedrooms at a party anyway 😁
@Geronimo2Fly
@Geronimo2Fly Жыл бұрын
I have always detested Jack and Jill bathrooms. Not only because of the problem of forgetting to lock the other door, but also forgetting to unlock it. Then your sibling can't get into the bathroom, and they have to come through your room. Just -- no. Not ever. Barn doors into the bathroom are horrible, I feel like there's so little privacy that there almost might as well be no door. Speaking of which -- even worse than a barn door is no door at all. I've seen so many master bedroom suites like this. What were they thinking?? I don't mind corner fireplaces though, I think they look nice, and for small rooms they leave more space on the walls for furniture.
@SnarkyOne
@SnarkyOne Жыл бұрын
I know that everyone seems to love this idea, but I can't understand it - 2 sinks in the bathroom. Why? How much time do you really spend at the sink, and why do I want someone else in the bathroom when I'm in there?! I mean, why not have 2 toilets if you're going there? Going to the bathroom used to be a public social thing. I like privacy. I don't want you taking care of business alongside me, and I don't want you brushing your teeth or washing hands with me either. How long does it really take?! Why is that a desired feature?
@lissac67
@lissac67 Жыл бұрын
Yes, on everything! I don't HATE corner fireplaces, but I would not choose one. Everything else I hate as much as you do. lol The only other thing is entry ways not large enough to reasonably hang up coats and leave shoes and bags. If there is an issue with space in the entry, the coat closet seems to be the first thing to go.
@sheila3936
@sheila3936 Жыл бұрын
YES!!! In climates with four distinct seasons you need space for a plethora of outerwear and shoes. A single door closet 20 feet away doesn’t cut it.
@Whistlewalk
@Whistlewalk Жыл бұрын
Totally agree!!! Gets cold in the house when the door has to stay open for 10 minutes to let 4 people in, take off their boots and hang up their coats. Stupid planning.
@ginacirelli1581
@ginacirelli1581 Жыл бұрын
My 1939 house had the front door on backwards (yes, from the beginning -- I moved the cast iron hinges to the other side, filled the old doorknob hole, and it's good to go). They had a row of hooks just inside the entry for coats, but it was behind the door when you opened it. Yes, the hooks are also original because they are up with flat head screws.
@moocrazytn
@moocrazytn Жыл бұрын
Just keep in mind that old popcorn ceilings could have dangerous asbestos. So hire professionals in that case.
@alva6086
@alva6086 Жыл бұрын
Yes, came on here to say just this!! It’s really important to have your popcorn ceiling checked for asbestos before removing it yourself, and if it turns out to have asbestos in you should probably let professionals handle your ceiling :)
@engyolyonline4208
@engyolyonline4208 Жыл бұрын
I'm with you on the ceiling lights. My home was built in 1980 and it drives me crazy that there's no overhead light in our living room or primary bedroom (and there's a ceiling fan in the kitchen) so now we have to budget to have the lights added/updated. On the flip side if lights had been installed they likely wouldn't have been the newer, sleek LED lights so maybe I should feel lucky, lol. Thanks, Nick!
@sbffsbrarbrr
@sbffsbrarbrr Жыл бұрын
I had to laugh about the ceiling fan in the kitchen. We purchased an old home that had one. I immediately bought a light fixture and had the fan replaced. When is it a good idea to put a fan in the kitchen near a gas stove? SMH
@gwenj5419
@gwenj5419 Жыл бұрын
We had to add ceiling lights in all the bedrooms in this house. Annoying and expensive.
@ginacirelli1581
@ginacirelli1581 Жыл бұрын
My house was built in 1939 and I have the same issue in the living room. To be fair, though, that period was all about the table lamp. Thankfully there are ceiling lights in every other room, including the tiny closet!
@akiwiincanada
@akiwiincanada Жыл бұрын
I had this in my 1980's house too. It was definitely annoying.
@joylox
@joylox Жыл бұрын
I really like a lot of the LED lights. They're much lower maintenance and much brighter (or you can use a dimmer switch if bright isn't what you want). I have LED pot lights in a few places and while they're not fancy, they're useful. When I moved into my room built in 1973, there was one very dim square flush mount that was off centre, above a dresser, and one lamp on a chain in a corner. The closet doors being full mirrors helps with light, but I put in 2 pot lights, and a ceiling fan with lights, getting rid of that weird square thing, but keeping the lamp on a chain, just with a dimmer on the plug. Same with the room that's now my sewing room. The only ceiling light, was a pot light with a shade facing a cross stitch above the fireplace. The fireplace had to go as it was falling apart, so I did the same pot lights and ceiling fan arrangement there, just on a larger scale. It's so much easier, I don't have to worry about turning on 5 lamps just to be able to sew!
@QueenLiAnn
@QueenLiAnn Жыл бұрын
I removed the popcorn ceiling in my house myself. It's very doable for DIY, but it is a LOT of work. And always check for asbestos before removing. Popcorn ceiling is a terrible dust collector but it also dims light in a room because it creates shadows that suck up light. When I removed the popcorn my whole house became a lighter space.
@trixie042168
@trixie042168 Жыл бұрын
I agree with all these except the corner fireplace-which I personally like. I grew up in a 1920 Craftsman foursquare which had a linen closet. I have never been in another house with a true, dedicated linen closet. When we designed the home we're building now, I made sure to include a linen closet; along with a coat closet, a bathroom closet, a pantry, and a closet in the laundry room. The master bedroom has a huge walk-in closet and the 2nd bedroom has a large closet. One can never have enough closets IMO. Oh, and to touch on the lack of ceiling lights-we lived in a 1960 bungalow for a while that had no ceiling lights in the LR or the bedrooms. So annoying. I want a ceiling fan in my bedroom so living in that house was awful.
@amandamorgan7626
@amandamorgan7626 Жыл бұрын
One of my pet peeve’s is short walls, usually at a strange angle to the rest of the room. They tend to be so slim you can’t put up art or find a single piece of furniture to disguise them so they sit there blank and in your face.
@pysq8
@pysq8 Жыл бұрын
I used to crave a slanted ceiling, which would lead to a short wall. Idk why. Glad I got over it. 😅
@tombuck
@tombuck Жыл бұрын
My best friend growing up had a Jack and Jill bathroom that he had to share with two sisters. I was never more grateful to be an only child.
@elise85391
@elise85391 Жыл бұрын
But think about how much worse it could’ve been if it was just one regular bathroom? The screaming and shoving and fighting trying to get ready in the mornings?
@lael5327
@lael5327 Жыл бұрын
"Plant" shelves! Maybe they aren't as popular now, but for a long time, every new build I saw had vaulted ceilings with large built-in shelves at about 15 ft (4.5 meters). Designed for decorative items and fake plants ( because you can't reach them to water), they just collect dust and spider webs.
@gwenj5419
@gwenj5419 Жыл бұрын
Yep. Have those all over my 1992 house.
@vaderladyl
@vaderladyl Жыл бұрын
Yes that was a big feature in houses built from the early 90's to the early 2000's and it is not that common on new builds now. They are a pain to keep dust and grease free plus having all that space to fill is no fun sometimes.
@Marsydotes
@Marsydotes Жыл бұрын
Yes! In our primary bedroom, the only space we could put our bedroom had a plant shelf above it. We live in an area that gets earthquakes. Why would anyone want to have objects over their heads when they’re sleeping? Since we’ve moved in, we’ve had two earthquakes that were strong enough to shake the bed and rattle the doors.
@JJoy-bk8yr
@JJoy-bk8yr Жыл бұрын
Agree!! I helped a friend move into house that was 25 or 30 years old that had one of those plant shelves. She sent me up a ladder to pull down an old basket, fake plants and fake grapes. Good heavens, such grime and dust! They must have been placed when the house was brand new. Wish I had had a respirator mask on. She had said she wanted to keep the basket so I took it outside and blasted it with a garden hose - she came along and told me the hose would ruin it. I said it was already wrecked with decades of grime . . . fun times . . .
@gwenj5419
@gwenj5419 Жыл бұрын
@@JJoy-bk8yr Wow your friend needs to have some gratitude. I only have one item on my dining room shelf and just ignore the ones in the hallway (pointless, right?) and the master bedroom.
@DesignTimeWithPaula
@DesignTimeWithPaula Жыл бұрын
#3 Pet Peeve: (I'm on a roll now, lol) 😂. Hanging the dining room chandelier where it is easy construction vs. where the center of the table will be. Come ON! This is impossible to fix for most, and yes, you can tell. Thank you.
@kristinapreedy7069
@kristinapreedy7069 Жыл бұрын
Personal pet peeve (as a 5’1” woman) - shower heads that are set at like 6’6” because that was (I’m assuming) either “easy” for the builder (because it was above the enclosure) or because it was where they would want it. In our primary bath shower (house built for us 29 years ago) we have an unfortunate small corner shower and I could never get far enough away from the shower head to not get either blasted in the face or totally miss the stream, until we put in a hand held unit. Due to a recent house flood, we’re finally getting around to reconfiguring our bathroom for “aging in place” and specifying the height and design of the shower hardware is tops on my list! Great video, as always, Nick!
@themidcenturyzillennial
@themidcenturyzillennial Жыл бұрын
POV: sitting in my little 1930s tiny house with a super awkward floor plan wishing that my fireplace was in the corner instead of taking up prime real estate on an entire wall
@ginacirelli1581
@ginacirelli1581 Жыл бұрын
My 1200 sq ft 1939 house has a long narrow living room with the fireplace in the middle of the long wall. It is super hard to arrange furniture in it, but the last house I lived in had a fireplace in the corner and it was awful. You think you want it, but you really don't :)
@themidcenturyzillennial
@themidcenturyzillennial Жыл бұрын
@@ginacirelli1581 I truly think mine is the exception to the rule but I wouldn't choose this floor plan in general lol
@loes6839
@loes6839 Жыл бұрын
For the jack and jill bathrooms; in the Netherlands/Europe I often see them in apartments/homes build for elderly/disabled people. Often connected to the bedroom and the hallway. It not only makes it easier to access, but in case of a fall, the person in the bathroom if probably not blocking both doors, so you can safely come in and help them.
@diannt9583
@diannt9583 Жыл бұрын
Works if the person hasn't locked the door from their side. Which I would do....
@DavidCiani
@DavidCiani Жыл бұрын
@@diannt9583 all of the "locks" in this discussion are "privacy locks" that can be opened fairly quickly using a tool of some sort if needed.
@jessmtnz
@jessmtnz Жыл бұрын
@@DavidCiani anyone with a kiddo knows, it's a mini flathead screwdriver you keep easily accessible to the adults.
@dawnchesbro4189
@dawnchesbro4189 Жыл бұрын
@jessmtnz I mean I figured out the security privacy lock trick as a kid!
@jerrykinnin7941
@jerrykinnin7941 Жыл бұрын
@@jessmtnz the ones in my house use a Mini Philips head. Stick it in the hole and pop the button.
@carmenineztorres4779
@carmenineztorres4779 Жыл бұрын
I hate my popcorn ceiling so much that I stop eating popcorn 😂😂😂 No but for real.
@MaxfieldMini
@MaxfieldMini Жыл бұрын
Nick, I'm going to play the advocate here on behalf of my son-in-law. He is in his 30s and has been in a wheelchair since he was 17. His father who is a master Carpenter designed and built his custom home around his needs. As someone in a wheelchair, a barn door is the very best solution for his mobility needs. Personally I can't stand them, especially on furniture as I recently was searching for a coffee/ bar for my home. Everything had a freaking barn door on it! I am a lover of Arts & Crafts/ Mission Style till the day I die. Thank you so much for what you do, Gail- Ashville, Alabama
@laurenslaughter2440
@laurenslaughter2440 Жыл бұрын
The craziest builder thing I’ve ever seen was at my grandmother’s 2-bath house and both bathrooms were Jack-and-Jills. But the kicker was, they each had an entrance door from a bedroom, then the second door was connecting the two bathrooms! What?! Do Jack and Jill need to hear each other pooping?
@TheStateofSicknezz
@TheStateofSicknezz Жыл бұрын
my first ever apartment had no ceiling light in the living room. the thing is, i never noticed when seeing the place twice because it got INCREDIBLE natural light during the day. it wasn't until the end of the my roomie tried to turn on the lights and we were like 'wait, there's no light in here! the other rooms had lights, just not the living room.
@user-nc7oh2rn7f
@user-nc7oh2rn7f Жыл бұрын
This is incredibly common in apartment units. I lived in several through the 1990s, in several different states, and not a single one had a ceiling light in the living room. I had one of those tacky reverse dome on a stick lamps that moved with me from apartment to apartment to light the living room. There was always one outlet in the room that would on/off operate with a wall switch. I hated the room design and the lamp, but since I moved about every year, I didn't want to buy an expensive lamp that would just get broken in a move.
@peztopher7297
@peztopher7297 Жыл бұрын
I've lived in southern California most of my life, and I don't remember ever having ceiling lights in the living room. In the bedrooms, yes, but not the main room. I don't really understand that.
@thatjillgirl
@thatjillgirl Жыл бұрын
Very, very common in apartments. I felt so luxurious when I moved into a complex that had ceiling lights in all the rooms. XD
@kck9742
@kck9742 Жыл бұрын
Accent lights/floor lamps. Overheat lighting, or at least ALL overhead lighting, is harsh and unflattering.
@zakosist
@zakosist Жыл бұрын
At first I read it as "no ceiling in the living room", that would be one of the worst designs Ive heard of so far (maybe not worse than combining bathroom and bedroom) since its gonna rain sometimes and you also get all sorts of animals/insects inside
@wendyrichards7458
@wendyrichards7458 Жыл бұрын
Totally agree with everything you just said ,although I never thought about J+J bathrooms before ,they aren't all that common in the Uk .What is common (For the last 15-20 yrs ) are dark tiles on bathroom walls ,I hate that .Builders have decided that a grungy brown or carbon grey bathroom is somehow appealing ,so they cover the walls and floor with big tiles in these colours .it's horrible ,it's not smart or sleek or whatever ,it's dingy ,depressing and makes a small room look even smaller .
@emryspaperart
@emryspaperart Жыл бұрын
god i feel this lmao, especially so when the tile is MASSIVE. big big brown tiles just make the tiny bathrooms feel so claustrophobic and cramped, and i say this as a fan of darker interior design colour choices. just slap a nice normal sized clean white tile in there man, u dont need to reinvent the wheel 😭
@kgrindon
@kgrindon Жыл бұрын
Yes! I just put in a barn door because it was my only option. I spent weeks brainstorming options, and I finally accepted the fact the barn door was my only option (pocket would have been very expensive because I would have had to move all kinds of HVAC ducts/vents). I hated doing it, but it was better than no door, so there ya go.
@Abby_Liu
@Abby_Liu Жыл бұрын
another comment mentioned bi-fold, was that still taking too much room in your case?
@betsydierlam1976
@betsydierlam1976 Жыл бұрын
I finally put up a curtain between my master bedroom and bathroom. It actually works! It was cheap, easy and quiet. Best part is that it is warmer!
@heatherfitzgibbon
@heatherfitzgibbon Жыл бұрын
@@Abby_Liu I think bi-fold doors are cheap looking.
@lynnbetts4332
@lynnbetts4332 Жыл бұрын
@@Abby_Liu The problem with bifold on bathrooms is that you lose door width. When the door is open, you have 2 door thicknesses folded up in the door casing. If you plan on using them, you need to plan on widening the door frame to make sure you still have good clearance to go through. Plus, they have a funky track attached to the top of the door frame for it to slide on. On our family home, our mother had a lot of bifold doors, mainly on closets. My sister just finished remodeling the house to move in, and she replaced all with regular doors.
@elise85391
@elise85391 Жыл бұрын
Barn doors also don’t block out sound as effectively as a regular door does
@karenryder6317
@karenryder6317 Жыл бұрын
No one has mentioned putting wood work around ALL openings. I didn't notice until I moved into my first new build that only the doors had woodwork. All the windows were just drywall corners and they look ragged and cheap if you choose blinds of some type instead of curtains. My other huge gripe is that wall to wall carpet throughout with tiled wet areas was the only option. I hate wall to wall carpet and my only option to the carpet was to enlarge the ceramic tile throughout. I wanted the softer, warmer vinyl planking and it was a horrendous cost ($10k in the pre-covid days) to change to that. I opted to accept the tile except for the bedrooms and now in the cold weather I'm so sorry I did. I should have found a more accommodating builder. The most dangerous part is that anything breakable has no chance of survival on ceramic tile, (e.g. glass Xmas ornaments), including my husband's poor head when he fell! At 80 I'm unlikely to ever have a new build again, let this be a lesson to do lots of research on what your deal breakers need to be before you commit, people.
@Thundergirl84
@Thundergirl84 Жыл бұрын
The barn door is excellent for closets, in very narrow areas, for old flats’ remodeling. My sister did an excellent job - it didn’t look like a barn, but has subtle details. The upper rail is not industrial-like but corresponds to the traditional/mid century-ish vibes. It conceals the washing machine and the dryer, which are situated in a niche, just in the middle of the hallway. So sometimes barn doors do good :)
@dennischiapello3879
@dennischiapello3879 Жыл бұрын
I was thinking this very thing. What I find objectionable is the rustic design in the hardware and/or the door. But a properly scaled sliding panel can be a valid solution.
@mortimerbrewster3671
@mortimerbrewster3671 Жыл бұрын
I just put in a barn door to the master bath but that was because I didn't want the actual door taking up space. Anyone who owns the house after me would be able to easily install a regular door. I liked the idea of not having space for furniture blocked due to the door swinging into the room and not having to close the door in order to get into a cabinet.
@DaveIngle1
@DaveIngle1 Жыл бұрын
@@mortimerbrewster3671 Question... What about the 2 to 3 feet of wall that you can't put anything against or need to leave 6 inches off the wall so the barn door can slide open? Just asking, not challenging.
@mortimerbrewster3671
@mortimerbrewster3671 Жыл бұрын
​@@DaveIngle1 I have a chair to lounge in that area of the room that I wouldn't put against the wall anyway (sits about a foot out). If the door opened into the room then it would hit the chair instead of the door sliding against the wall behind it. The sliding door is decor in itself so I don't mind not being able to hang anything on the wall and being a minimalist, I probably wouldn't have anyway. I've done things in my renovations and decor that works for me but is not so permanent that if I sell the house the next person can't change it to suit their design preferences.
@yzettasmith4194
@yzettasmith4194 Жыл бұрын
Particle board where there's going to be water! I hate it at any time, but in bathrooms or kitchens? Insane.
@PaintingandExercise
@PaintingandExercise Жыл бұрын
What also bothers me about a J&J bathroom is the number of doors needed. You need 2 doors to directly enter each bedroom. Then you need 2 doors to enter the bathroom from each bedroom, and then you need a door to enter the bathroom from the hallway (in some cases if needed for other people rooms nearby). That is 5 doors involved which is a lot of wasted space. Also, those bathrooms tend to burn through a lot of square footage by being mostly a hallway (vanity on one side and toilet/bath on other side). Then usually on the outside of the J&J bathroom is another hallway running parallel to the one inside the bathroom. Hallways can be a lot of wasted sq footage.
@kck9742
@kck9742 Жыл бұрын
I really don't like a lot of overhead lighting... it is frankly just cold, industrial, and unflattering. I think it's good in spaces that don't naturally get much light... can put in smart lights and have them on "daylight" to compensate for that when you're home during the day (I hate dark spaces), but otherwise, I just really prefer floor and accent lamps. Much prettier.
@PinCutSew
@PinCutSew Жыл бұрын
This is so good, and I could have added so much more, haha (military--we move a lot, have owned one house from every decade since the 50's). I hear what you're saying about fireplaces, BUT I hate it even more when the fireplace IS the focal point, but you're forced to mount a TV above it because there's nowhere else for it to go! I know there are frame tvs now, but they're expensive and my husband doesn't think they're big enough, AND mounting it above a fireplace is just too high, making it impractical for actual use. So, I'd rather have a corner fireplace than one with a TV looming over it. And about lights: The newest house we've owned, they did install lights, but they didn't really care where they were. The dining room light was off to one side, the entry light wasn't centered over the door, etc ... BUT in our current midcentury house, lights were perfectly centered in each room, but they're not centered over the living space of the room. So for example, our living room is rectangular, so part of it is more of an entry way and then the other side has a big picture window and our living room furniture, rug, etc ... The light is centered in the room, but I wish it were centered over the living space! It's the same in almost every room here, lol. I used to think that old houses had all the quirks because nothing is standard, but we learned with that newer house, they're just as quirky, mostly because they're thrown together without a lot of thought.
@jesseostone386
@jesseostone386 Жыл бұрын
In designing my barndominium recently, I added a powder room for guests so the two full bathrooms could be reserved for the two main occupants (though one bathroom is accessible from a hallway unlike the master bath). And I purposely did not include a “mud bench” inside the door coming from the attached garage. Didn’t want that focal point of clutter to annoy me coming and going. I also kept my kitchen island countertop sink free. Lots of good points here, Nick. Thank you!
@peggiescraftcafe7117
@peggiescraftcafe7117 Жыл бұрын
No sink in the island. I like an uninterrupted workspace. Plus a sink means everything around it gets wet.
@robinbirdj743
@robinbirdj743 Жыл бұрын
@@peggiescraftcafe7117 this was also my case against having the cooktop in the island. Essentially the island is rendered useless for its table/ countertop function.
@doloresleonard2227
@doloresleonard2227 Жыл бұрын
Great video, Nick. Two more of my builder pet peeves: 1) Second story bedroom doors dangerously close to stairs leading downstairs. Sometimes stairs are almost right across the hall or between a bedroom door and the bathroom. It's so easy to imagine a child or a guest (anyone, really) falling down the stairs when using the bathroom at night. 2) Overly large or poorly placed kitchen islands. Sometimes they block the path from the sink to the stove or sink to the refrigerator or stove to the refrigerator, making the homeowner take long treks around the island. Once I even saw (in an extraordinarily expensive new house) a kitchen island placed close enough to the oven that the oven door could be opened without hitting the island, but with no room left to stand between the open door and the island. How was the home owner going to reach into the oven?? How did that even happen?
@halliealmas879
@halliealmas879 Жыл бұрын
Nick you are SO RIGHT about the lack of lights. I live in a two bedroom apartment facing the southeast. Unfortunately, they designed the building to have a bunch of these little courtyards so I get no sunlight, and there are no ceiling lights installed in the living room and spare bedroom. They're in every other room though! I feel like I'm living in a cave most of the time!
@kathyastrom1315
@kathyastrom1315 Жыл бұрын
I’ve lived in apartments since graduating from college 34 years ago, and I have never had a place with ceiling lights in the living room or bedroom. They are invariably the worst-lit places in my unit, and it is oh so annoying!
@lizcademy4809
@lizcademy4809 Жыл бұрын
On the Jack & Jill bathrooms ... I briefly lived in a shared house where the upstairs bathroom had a door to the hall, and another door to my (master) bedroom. The doors to the bathroom locked from the bathroom, which made sense, but gave me no security. So I placed my dresser in front of the door, so it could not open even if someone tried. A couple of times, friends of my roommates did try.
@emryspaperart
@emryspaperart Жыл бұрын
god that sounds like a nightmare
@Hans-iq3fn
@Hans-iq3fn Жыл бұрын
They probably weren’t even trying to get into your bedroom, they were probably just trying to poop in peace and wanted to check behind the mystery door to see what was behind it.
@lizcademy4809
@lizcademy4809 Жыл бұрын
@@Hans-iq3fn Probably, but at 1:00 am I didn't want to find out!
@Sunshine-fy4fz
@Sunshine-fy4fz Жыл бұрын
I built a home with a Jack and Jill bathroom for my boys (so technically it was a Jack and Jack bathroom, but I digress). Loved it! They had their own bathroom, not shared with guests, that connected with double vanity, and then the toilet, shower and linen closet was in a separate space with a door that locked. So no one could walk in when you were needing privacy. Also, I agree with you about wanting a ceiling light fixture, especially in the bedrooms. And especially in the kids’ bedrooms, where you might not want a lamp that can get knocked over and break or potentially cause a fire (had a friend whose cat knocked over a lamp which started a fire!)
@susantom4400
@susantom4400 Жыл бұрын
I thought I wanted hack and kill bathroom for kids but we found just putting two sinks in main bathroom was enough. They didn’t need their own doors (with the potential privacy issues of the forgotten unlocked door). We have a main floor powder room for guests. I prefer single sink in principal room ensuite and a separate “makeup” area for everything else. That way each adult can use the bathroom in private.
@RandalLovelace
@RandalLovelace Жыл бұрын
The problem with most of the 'Jack and Jill' bathrooms is that the whole space is one room with the two doors, a properly designed space would have the sinks, and then a door to the toilet and bathing space that is lockable (the other two doors do not need to be lockable at that point in the designing).
@pysq8
@pysq8 Жыл бұрын
I wish my children had them!... with a powder room for guests.
@emmakayf
@emmakayf Жыл бұрын
Hi friends! Architectural designer here :) the pop corn ceilings we’re actually originally used to help muffle sound. So you might have more sound penetrating from the lower floor to the next floor. Nothing super intense just something to consider. And do your research when removing them as he said the particulates from removing them can be hazardous to you and respiratory system especially if you have little ones.
@dellalabelle
@dellalabelle Жыл бұрын
@emma f Thank you for your input. I, actually have popcorn ceilings that I really want to get rid of.
@pbandjedi5006
@pbandjedi5006 Жыл бұрын
Sound dampening is bit is a lie as it reduces the sound transference so little as to be not noticeable. Also most of the homes with the popcorn I have seen are bungalows. For sound reduction get a carpet/area rug, a couch and a couple of plants. The stippling isn't reducing noise - sounds like someone trying to sell you a story. As for removal there are several companies that will safely remove the popcorn.
@Theresakg_
@Theresakg_ Жыл бұрын
You're so right on each of these 😭 I have a corner fireplace and it means we can never rearrange the furniture from the ONE arrangement that suits it well.
@leannejscott
@leannejscott Жыл бұрын
So I couldn’t agree with you more… And the best part is… I have every single one of these issues built into my home! Lol. We have a special needs child that is wheelchair-bound and the condo is especially good for adding accessibility equipment, it’s beautifully located on a canal in the Okanagan, we can reach our pool beautifully with the wheelchair and it’s close enough to his bedroom that we can have a monitor while we swim on our own… So those are all the reasons we bought the condo and have to stay. But, the jack and Jill bathroom, the popcorn ceilings, the fireplace in the corner, no ceiling light(s) in the living room, but nine pot lights in the kitchen! Lol I just giggled the whole way through because we literally have every single one that you mentioned! Builders can do better than this ❤ (But living in the location that we live in, makes up for a little bit of this! Lol )
@stellarsjay1773
@stellarsjay1773 Жыл бұрын
My corner fireplace is part of a particularly efficient use of indoor and outdoor space. I love how it makes a beautiful focal point.
@milabolognini6305
@milabolognini6305 Жыл бұрын
I’m curious about your corner fireplace situation… tell me more! I have one and it’s a bit awkward, but I could convert the large window beside it into a walkout to my yard…. 🤔
@sherielowe4256
@sherielowe4256 Жыл бұрын
Mine is the perfect focal point in our small home.
@DesignTimeWithPaula
@DesignTimeWithPaula Жыл бұрын
#1 Pet Peeve: HVAC returns RIGHT IN THE LINE OF SIGHT FROM THE FRONT DOOR. Come on builder friends. TRY. Try to locate it somewhere just a bit less conspicuous.
@NatalieG427
@NatalieG427 Ай бұрын
What I hate that builders started doing is putting the electrical outlets in a horizontal position instead of the old vertical position in the older houses and apartments. Because in the past when looking for the decorative night lights, they don’t swivel so they would also go sideways or just not fit. Same with those oil defusers. The outlet NEEDS to be upright & not sideways, like they Install them. Also you are right about the ceiling lighting. Our house was built in 1974. We have ceiling lights in the kitchen, actually the kitchen has TWO of them. One in the middle & one over where you would have a table. The dining room & the guest bathroom. The main bathroom has a light bar with 5 lights over the mirror, not the center of the bathroom. That’s all the ceiling lights we have. None in any of the other rooms & we have 3 bedrooms. I LOVE lighting. You need to be able to see when it’s dark. Lighting in a room can make it look much better. I like the warm LED lighting the best. Also the narrow linen closet shelves. So small that my husband took an old coat closet in the hallway and made me a larger linen closet. We have a coat closet by the front door so to us, it was weird that there was a second one in the hallway.
@kkouz45
@kkouz45 Жыл бұрын
Oh yes! Hate, hate, hate corner fireplaces and popcorn ceilings. The idea that a ceiling fixture is an upgrade is annoying as you know what. My other peeve is living rooms that make it virtually impossible to create pleasing and functional furniture layouts. Spaces that look good empty but when you allow for traffic patterns, you’ve got nada to work with. Drives me nuts!!
@michellejoy6752
@michellejoy6752 Жыл бұрын
100%. you definitely hit on every single pet peeve of mine to which I will add, lack of storage. Cabinetry and closet space make for a tidy, organized environment.
@despinakyraleos2234
@despinakyraleos2234 Жыл бұрын
Small baseboards, we want the 5.5 inches
@moocrazytn
@moocrazytn Жыл бұрын
Yes, or more.
@AlexiaM
@AlexiaM Жыл бұрын
My pet peeve is cut outs for art. Maybe I wanted a bigger piece of art or a floor mirror but now I’m stuck with this specific indent of a specific size and it’s not easy to change 😩
@DesignTimeWithPaula
@DesignTimeWithPaula Жыл бұрын
Corner fireplaces should be outlawed. They mess up the ENTIRE plan of furniture placement. I wonder how many homes have been sold because of them? I know of one, FOR SURE.
@natureallmighty
@natureallmighty Жыл бұрын
Yes, we too want A light! We don't have ceiling lights in either bedrooms in our apartment and wiring through the ceiling now means that we have to do a suspended panel ceiling and I don't know which is worse!
@noniesundstrom119
@noniesundstrom119 Жыл бұрын
In our older condo we put a new 1” lower ceiling of spruce, insulated for sound and t accommodate new wiring. A lot of work!
@kathaai
@kathaai Жыл бұрын
don't do that.... just get the lights that you have to recharge every once in a while that u can just hang up and control with a remote... maybe a bit annoying but a lot less ugly than PANEL CEILING
@natatatt
@natatatt Жыл бұрын
Probably won't work in a larger bedroom, but my bedroom is quite small and the solution I found was a subtle but very bright (with dimmer) floor lamp that's tucked discretely in one corner. The light in it shines upwards, so it somewhat replicates the feel of a ceiling light.
@noniesundstrom119
@noniesundstrom119 Жыл бұрын
@@kathaai we did it through the whole condo with a kitchen that needed many lights. The wood was Sitka spruce 20’ by 4” boards, which are beautiful. The insulation helped buffer noise from the condo floor above us. For us, less mess than drywall, plus we had a good inexpensive source of wood.
@archibaldy1929
@archibaldy1929 Жыл бұрын
Something nice about a corner fireplace is that it often times opens up a wall to be used for the tv, so the tv doesn’t have to be mounted above the fireplace, which I know is even more popular than barn doors, but I prefer to avoid that.
@crazyliv
@crazyliv Жыл бұрын
Exactly, I've been house hunting and so many have a fireplace in the main wall. And theres nowhere to put a TV now, you HAVE to mount it above the fireplace which is a no no. The corner fireplace is perfect. You can enjoy both the TV and the fire from the couch
@daniel_sc1024
@daniel_sc1024 Жыл бұрын
@@crazyliv Exactly. A lot of architects and designers are stuck on the romantic notion that the fireplace is the focal point, when in fact today it is the television. Many architects and designers don't even want to acknowledge the TV, or want to hide it away like it's something dirty. Both my sisters live in the south, in houses without fireplaces. But they wanted that picturesque fireplace, so they added them in the corners, where they were still seen but not in the way of the TV. 😄
@PanamaRose
@PanamaRose Жыл бұрын
We don’t want a TV mounted over a fireplace. My husband had neck surgery and that would be most uncomfortable!!
@wisteria808
@wisteria808 Жыл бұрын
@@daniel_sc1024 - Guess what -- I don't even have a television in my living room. Don't need it because I spend a lot of time on my laptop. In the evening, we have a smaller TV room where we actually watch a few shows.
@daniel_sc1024
@daniel_sc1024 Жыл бұрын
@@wisteria808 The majority of people have a TV in their living room, and it is the focal point of the room.
@Jodi9810
@Jodi9810 Жыл бұрын
I agree with these, and usually all of your criticisms of design decisions people make. I think I'm getting curmudgeony in my old age! That's why I talked my husband into buying land that one day we'll build a custom-designed home on rather than settle for someone else's bad choices. 😁 BTW, is your second home progressing? I hope so -- for your sake, and selfishly because I'm curious to see it go from plan to reality in videos.
@chuckhoyle1211
@chuckhoyle1211 Жыл бұрын
A deal breaker for me would be lack of ceiling fans (with lights) in the bedrooms and living room. Our first house had no celling fans or lights in most of the living areas and after we moved and every bedroom and living area had ceiling fans with lights. I would never go back. It makes a huge difference to have air movement and light. I don't even own a floor lamp any more.
@mortimerbrewster3671
@mortimerbrewster3671 Жыл бұрын
Do you mean that the ceiling fan with light has to be installed already or it has to have the ability to install a ceiling fan w/light? Being able to install one but not having one would be a ridiculous reason to not be willing to buy a house since you can easily switch them out yourself.
@chuckhoyle1211
@chuckhoyle1211 Жыл бұрын
@@mortimerbrewster3671 Generally speaking, a builder is not going to run an electrical line and install a junction box and then not put anything there. So, if you look at a house and there are no lights or fans or anything in the ceiling, then there is a 99% chance there is no infrastructure there to work with and you are going to have to run lines and install the boxes yourself, which is a tremendous pain in the butt. If there is nothing there, then I am probably going to walk away. I can live with light fixtures so I can swap them out over time.
@whateva8964
@whateva8964 Жыл бұрын
One option to the dreaded popcorn ceiling is to use sand in the paint. Worked great in our 1903 house. Hid stuff that would have taken great time and expense to fix. Used it on the walls too.
@larizzo
@larizzo Жыл бұрын
Quartz paint does the same. You can get it with fine quartz and it gives a slight texture, covers small imperfections and isn't as ugly as popcorn ceilings.
@susanmartinez1485
@susanmartinez1485 Жыл бұрын
Nick, I have disliked the barn doors from day 1; because I considered them a fad. I don’t think we need a door as a “focal point.” I am with you on jack and Jill bathrooms. We have friends who, when they built a new home had a corner fireplace put in. My thought was the space is too small to pull up 2 chairs and sitting there on one chair would feel like I was bad and as put in the corner as a punishment. I really enjoy your tutorials, thank you!
@Whistlewalk
@Whistlewalk Жыл бұрын
I'm getting to that place where a really well designed wood stove over a fireplace anywhere is going to be the best solution going forward.
@dianeosgood6594
@dianeosgood6594 Жыл бұрын
@@Whistlewalk Interesting! We have a wood stove that came with the house as a energy efficient home built in 1983 with 2 story wall of windows. If we use fireplace, we do have to have a chimney sweep clean it every few years. It is rated to heat the whole house and set on a tile hearth. I often want to tear it out and put in a nice gas fireplace with mantle. But, most gas fireplaces are not very efficient. My family back east had a major ice storm that put electricity out for a week. Then last year here in Colorado we had huge winds and fire that destroyed 1100 homes in Boulder County. First time ever. We had no electricity or gas for several days mid winter. We really needed that wood stove then. (We have some logs from our larger trees when we have them trimmed stacked on side yard, we used bunch of those logs up). I love the look of a regular fireplace with mantle though.
@thatjillgirl
@thatjillgirl Жыл бұрын
@@Whistlewalk I want to eventually put in a wood stove. My house once had a fireplace, but it was in a conversation pit! A previous owner remodeled and had the pit covered over so the floor is all flat, which meant the fireplace went away. (Weirdly, the part that used to be the mantel is still there sticking out of the floor as sort of a ledge. I use it to put plants on.) I'd really love to get a fireplace back in, but there's really no other good spot to put one. There's an okay spot for a wood stove though, so we may someday be able to add one.
@pandoravictoria9541
@pandoravictoria9541 Жыл бұрын
We went over our popcorn ceiling with drywall and it's been 10 yrs and its still perfect
@Abby_Liu
@Abby_Liu Жыл бұрын
great idea. how much ceiling height did you lose or not much at all?
@pandoravictoria9541
@pandoravictoria9541 Жыл бұрын
@@Abby_Liu thanks Abby, it was around 10 yrs ago so I can't be certain but you would never know the height looks exactly the same I believe they used 1/4 inch think sheet rock
@pandoravictoria9541
@pandoravictoria9541 Жыл бұрын
@@Abby_Liu not much at all
@Vera-kh8zj
@Vera-kh8zj Жыл бұрын
genius!
@pandoravictoria9541
@pandoravictoria9541 Жыл бұрын
@@Vera-kh8zj lol thank you 😊
@lauraday3163
@lauraday3163 Жыл бұрын
Many years ago, my parents had a house fire. Even though it only impacted two rooms directly, my mom used it as an excuse to get rid of all the popcorn ceilings from the whole house. We never missed them once!
@denisedevoto5703
@denisedevoto5703 Жыл бұрын
When I bought this place, 4 years ago, I had all the popcorn ceilings removed before I moved in. Really horrible!
@DesignTimeWithPaula
@DesignTimeWithPaula Жыл бұрын
#2 Pet Peeve: No electrical outlet on the living room floor. JUST DO IT. Don't worry that it will show. Make it flush. A rug or furniture will cover it up. This is a MUST in an open floor plan. Please.
@TheSeatedView
@TheSeatedView Жыл бұрын
I wish more builders would create a layout that has the possiblity to be made wheelchair accessible. Instead, we see narrow hallways, 90 turns into eg, bedrooms, kitchen islands that make it impossible to use a wheelchair in the kitchen (y'know, those parallel counter things that are everywhere), non-existent turning radius, condo windows that open at floor level, too-small elevators, washrooms that are unuseable, and so much more. I'd also love to see you go off on a rant on accessible design that looks like they're from a hospital and some tips on elegant accessible design (eg, grab bars). It IS possible, but most builders are too lazy or ill-informed to do accessibility well. Note: accessibility standards in building codes are always the bare minimum and then everyone are building to the minimum. Which makes it impossible to find a home that works, have friends/lovers visit who are disabled, function in your home as you age or eg, break a leg skiing... And I'll stop now before the rant goes out of control
@sammyg4159
@sammyg4159 Жыл бұрын
Oh man. We built a corner fireplace in our previous home. Made the whole living room so awkward. Don’t do it! 😊
@AmyNorthLight
@AmyNorthLight Жыл бұрын
This has been your funniest video yet, I loved your commentary on the jack and jill bathroom LMAO. It's also funny that just the other day, I was telling my husband that I hate corner fireplaces because they are unnecessarily awkward. I grew up with one in my parent's house and always hated it. I'm glad I'm not the only one.
@thesultan4030
@thesultan4030 Жыл бұрын
I had popcorn ceilings in several areas of my mid century bungalow. The living room 450 sq ft, was the worst, it had the popcorn sprayed on to those 1ft x 1 ft acoustic tiles, so scraping wasn't even an option, not to mention the possible asbestos threat. I finally found this product , very lightweight ,fire rated, paintable styrofoam panels (20 in x 20 in), they come in various styles and attach with ceramic adhesive right over the popcorn, no need to disturb anything. The style I chose looks like a faux coffered ceiling. Took me a total of 7 hours to install.
@taheramamdani670
@taheramamdani670 Жыл бұрын
This is what I’ve learned: So, are Styrofoam ceiling tiles safe? Generally speaking, these tiles are safe. However, they can be harmful if a fire breaks out. That's because fire will cause the Styrofoam to burn and melt, which coincides with the release of toxic gasses.
@blaster-zy7xx
@blaster-zy7xx Жыл бұрын
Thank you! I dispise Jack and Jill bathrooms! Even the Brady bunch showed us how awful they are. There is a solution to them. There are new electric locks that lock and unlock BOTH DOORs simultaneously and unlock both in a power failure. .
@marylut6077
@marylut6077 Жыл бұрын
@Nick Lewis, next time I am asked to something I would rather not, I’m gonna say “Sorry, But I just can’t because we all know - it’s a whole thing.” 😅
Interior Design Trends That Deserve a Comeback!
15:25
Nick Lewis
Рет қаралды 252 М.
Architect's TOP 10 Bathroom Design Mistakes
28:13
Daniel Titchener
Рет қаралды 41 М.
规则,在门里生存,出来~死亡
00:33
落魄的王子
Рет қаралды 25 МЛН
Brawl Stars Edit😈📕
00:15
Kan Andrey
Рет қаралды 58 МЛН
*Gently* Roasting My Subscriber’s Homes
17:41
Nick Lewis
Рет қаралды 152 М.
5 Worst Upgrades To Include When Building Your Custom Home
14:35
Colorado Custom Homes
Рет қаралды 207 М.
Surprising Interior Design Trends That Won’t Age Well 😬
17:32
A Living Room Makeover for ZERO Freakin Dollars
23:25
Caroline Winkler
Рет қаралды 152 М.
Addressing My Most Controversial Interior Design Advice
18:44
Nick Lewis
Рет қаралды 220 М.
Genius Home Hacks!
14:40
Nick Lewis
Рет қаралды 407 М.
规则,在门里生存,出来~死亡
00:33
落魄的王子
Рет қаралды 25 МЛН