Anonymous wrote:The ceilings do look really low. Has anyone actually visited this house?
I’ve been in this model of house - there are many in that immediate neighborhood. They mostly had similar core layouts and designs when they were built in the 1940s, but almost all of them now have some form of rear addition so there’s more variation from one to the next.
In the main living and dining area, the ceilings aren’t low…I think they just look that way because these photos have been stretched horizontally.
These houses can have a much nicer and more useful main floor layout. You take down the short wall that’s currently separating the dining space and the office. Where the office is is where historically there was a galley kitchen. You make that side a larger living room/couch/tv area, then put the dining table on the other side of the now big open room.