+1 And it's even cheaper to send the laundry out. But better to include the housekeeper in the design process since OP is befuddled by how many laundries her household will need and where. |
| I think it’s funny you want to laundry rooms but you don’t want the housekeeper to worry about where the cleaning supplies are. Like you can’t buy extra for each laundry room? Having said that, I would do a laundry room on the main level only if I had the choice. I’ve had an upstairs washer and it kept me awake so I never ran it at bedtime. Unlike right now where there is a load in the washer right now as I’m about to go to bed. |
Does it not bother you that the wet clothes sit in the washer overnight? I've done that once or.twice on accident and re run the wash. Smells musty otherwise. |
Why would you even bother with that? I take my laundry when I have a big was to the wash and fold. No use to pay someone to sit there, costs less to have the wash and fold people do it. |
I honestly don't think anyone does that, outside (perhaps) New York City (where having a laundry room is expensive real estate). A housekeeper doesn't just stick everything in the washer and dryer and call it a day. Things are expected for stains, treated, some items air dried, others pulled out of the dryer while damp in order to iron, etc. There's just no way to replicate what is done outside a home. Laundry services are okay, but do not compare. |
If you’re building the house I think they do something to sound proof it. My parents have a laundry room next to the bedroom and you can barely hear it. |
DP: Do it all the time. My washer gets clothes like 90% dry. It is only a few hours once the washer is finsihed. The dryer airs everything out. |
+20000000 |
| I think that sounds reasonable in certain circumstances. If she’s doing a lot of laundry, you may not want her on the second floor so much of the day if you work up there. If the home offices aren’t up there, though, then I don’t understand why in a large custom home you can’t just build a large laundry room on the second floor. |
| How did my mother manage with 7 kids and one washer and dryer in the basement? |
☝🏼 |
| Carrying laundry to the basement isn’t a big deal. I barely notice. |
| I wouldn't buy a house with a full size laundromat in the basement and an insufficiently sized one on the second floor. That's inconvenient. |
Such a tiny little family for such a big house! |
| We recently moved into a large house with a large laundry room. Plenty of room for folding, drying racks, ironing etc. I’d stick with that, skip the smaller one. |