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Mock Cockpit wrote:Lay down the law brother, it's the only way. The trouble is knowing when to go off and knowing when to keep your power dry. I never quite understood these in-laws downstairs and married couple upstairs deals, recipe for disaster back home but when in Nippon........
The drier thing is another conundrum, we have one and it does a good job but only gets used a couple of times a year, mostly by me.
About power points, the rule of thumb is think of a number and double it. Inevitably though you'll have ones you never use and ones that have Rio shanty town-like proliferations of adapters sprouting outwards from it.
My hint- have a few outside, we've got 4 outside ones, very useful.
GomiGirl wrote:That looks great - lots of rooms.. but I never understand why Japanese architects never plan for more closets. Built in closets take up less space than extra wall cabinets and are way better for storage and easier on the eye - less clutter. Your plans don't show much actual storage space but fight to keep your room and your roof terrace.
While I am at it - bench space in kitchens or cupboards that are way too tall for the average person to reach without a step ladder. Your kitchen looks great with the island bench and under floor storage. Plus a pantry!! Nicely done!!
Bucky wrote:It looks like the living room is way at the other side of the house from the genkan. Is that right? Seems like visitors would have to walk through most of the house to get there. Is that on purpose?
Looks like you've done pretty well shoe-horning the place into an odd-shaped lot.
emperor wrote:daft
this is one of the more popular sites in Ireland for buying/renting/etc
(it's usually consumer to consumer - few businesses acting as middlemen and skimming the profits)
are there any good equivalents for Japan?
I mean buying in particular
/daft = also probably interesting for some of you to get some perspective on how much an equivalent sized building goes for in this part of the globe
ttjereth wrote:We don't have a lot of little closets, but several large spaces. On the first floor the in laws' rooms have their own decent size closets, there is a big closest under the stairs, a huge closet at the entryway a closet next to the sink in bathroom, and big walk in pantry in the kitchen, plus the utility room which is where all the usual household stuff gets stored (vacuum, laundry stuff, extra toilet paper, paper towels, etc. etc.).
GomiGirl wrote:Yes - am very envious of the pantry and walk-in closets!! You have done really well with the design. Especially with all those windows on the East side of the house. Rooms are certainly not pokey at all.
I really was venting in general how japanese architects don't consider storage as necessary and kitchen benches are not included. I edited my posts above to make sure you knew I was talking in general and not your design.
ttjereth wrote:Plus there's a movie theater and bowling alley at the station (8-9 minute walk from the house) so I'm more or less set for all of my own entertainment needs
Greji wrote:Any goat herds in the neighborhood?
I remember telling one of the neighbour-hood farmers here that turning his weed-whacker on at 120,000 rpm outside my bedroom window at 6am on a Sunday morning had very little future for him.ttjereth wrote:I hope not. When I lived out in the boonies some around the corner from me had roosters and that was annoying enough in the mornings.
Mock Cockpit wrote:I remember telling one of the neighbour-hood farmers here that turning his weed-whacker on at 120,000 rpm outside my bedroom window at 6am on a Sunday morning had very little future for him.
ttjereth wrote:I don't mind criticism's of the design and such, as occasionally they end up pointing out things I hadn't thought of or considered, but a lot of the more oddball features are actually things I have specifically requested (several big storage spaces instead of lots of little ones, living room at the back of the house, living room being an enclosed space with doors etc.).
Grumblebum wrote:What height are your kitchen counters? A lot of them are 850mm 'by default'.. I made sure ours were 900mm since 850 would be back-breaking for me.
thx! this one is pretty easy to use.ttjereth wrote:http://www.myhome-homes.jp/
ttjereth wrote:
She thinks the place we're building in Chiba 8 minutes from the station is "inaka"...
Mock Cockpit wrote:You don't need to be too far out of the town before you're in the "inaka" here. Must admit it's one of the things I like though, the ability to be (relatively) out in the country but still close to town. I know what you mean about those big houses in the country. You see those huge, falling down monstrosities and think "christ, what I could do with that", but in the same instance dread the dressing down from the wife if you even dared suggest it.
amdg wrote:Woot! Whens the housewarming party?
ttjereth wrote:..According to the architect if everything goes smoothly from here on out the house should be done by September, according to the construction company November is more realistic..
Adhesive wrote:Congrats! I hope everything goes smoothly for you. We'd like to build our own place someday as well, possibly in Japan, so this thread is very helpful.
Charles wrote:Don't forget "The Estimator's Rule" which states "Everything takes longer than estimated, even after taking The Estimator's Rule into account."
Mock Cockpit wrote:When we signed our contract in 2003 they told us when everything would be happening from grounbreaking to handing us the keys. Everything happened the day they said it would. Thumbs up for them.
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