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Wednesday, June 03, 2026

2026.0603.0002...

1930s/40s




7 comments:

  1. What a set of terrible plans! The first one shows that these plans date from the era when you had to have a huge dining room but the kitchen was tiny. All the kitchens have no kitchen cupboards for storage, again standard in that era, but they each have a pantry for kitchen storage. But the second, third and fourth plans have no dining room. So presumably you had to eat in the tiny kitchen. The fourth plan is the strangest. Instead of a dining room, it has a downstairs bedroom that is open to the living room, so it has no privacy. Also, this bedroom has a door into the kitchen pantry instead of a closet. The pantry could store kitchen items or bedroom clothes, but it's not big enough to store both, so in effect, the bedroom has no closet. If the downstairs bedroom were labeled "dining room", this would be a standard design for the era. I have the feeling that someone relabeled the dining room as a bedroom so they could claim it was a 4-bedroom design, even though the downstairs "bedroom" is unusable.

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    Replies
    1. Larry - I agree the last plan probably mislabeled that downstairs bedroom.

      Delete
  2. Those homes are as tight as a man whore in church.

    The only saving grace is the last one, 8268. I would eliminate the bedroom and design a eating area and a television room. I would need to see it laid out. I would see if I can fit a 1/2 bath somewhere on the first floor. Bascially lets rework the ground floor. Let's have a little breathing room. The second floor is just for sleeping. I would do a little soundproofing.

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  3. No 8268
    C’est comme la maison en stuc que possédaient mes grands-parents à Montréal (1936-1972), où mon père et ses frères ont grandi.
    Monsieur Dupuis 🇨🇦

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Mr. Dupuis - That's a good house for a family.

      Delete
  4. So tiny and cute homes!

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Nice you must be or delete your ass I will.