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Friday, November 14, 2025

2025.1114.0003...

1930s/40s



8 comments:

  1. Phoenix has a historic neighborhood called "The Willow" that is chock-full of homes like these, all immaculately loved and maintained. Back in the early 60s (before it was a historic district or fashionable) when I was a wee thing my family owned a home there. It was a quaint two-bedroom, one bath bungalow with a huge back yard. (https://voenixrising.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/1962-00-0010.jpg).

    Then my sister came along and ruined everything. LOL.

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    Replies
    1. I guess blogger has no way of directly inserting images in responses. 🫤 (Although I did think of something that I use in WordPress that may work here, too. Next time.)

      Anyhow, I really like "The CLAIR", but I'd rip out that rats' nest of a kitchen/nook and make it one "big" room and get rid of the wall separating it from the Dining Room (although that wall may be structural, but we can get over that roadblock too).

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    2. Mark - Anything is possible with a big enough bank account.

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  2. The striking angled exteriors look very appealing, but require interior rooms to have strange shapes, like all of the bedrooms in the second house. But that house has a kitchen cabinet! One, single cabinet. Whoopee!

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  3. A few of those bathrooms look like a layout for a half-bath. Tight I would say having all those people trying to use it. a schedule for sure.

    I did a quick Google:

    *Indoor bathrooms became common in the 1920's. Became universal during the min-20th century.

    *Half-baths became common in the 1950s and 1960s when indoor plumbing became standardized.

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  4. So reizend :)
    Wie Häuser in den Villa-Kolonie von Berlin, Darmstadt, Dresden, Hannover, Düsseldorf, Stuttgart und Karlsruhe.
    (vVs)

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Nice you must be or delete your ass I will.