Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hate the kitchen but otherwise I love this house
The kitchen isn’t pretty, but it was built in a time where kitchens were closed off from the rest of the house and not expected to be pretty because it is a utilitarian space. Personally I’m game for not having a kitchen open for all to see.
Open floor plans suck. It makes me sad whenever I see a flip of a beautiful 1920s home with the entire first floor opened up into a horrible cavernous space.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If she is moving there she probably is not an old, so will have zero percent interest in this hobbit house.
OP here. She's 27, went to undergrad at Pitt, and absolutely loves this house. She lived in a similar building for a semester and misses the vibe.
What neighborhoods is she looking at?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If she is moving there she probably is not an old, so will have zero percent interest in this hobbit house.
OP here. She's 27, went to undergrad at Pitt, and absolutely loves this house. She lived in a similar building for a semester and misses the vibe.
What neighborhoods is she looking at?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If she is moving there she probably is not an old, so will have zero percent interest in this hobbit house.
OP here. She's 27, went to undergrad at Pitt, and absolutely loves this house. She lived in a similar building for a semester and misses the vibe.
Anonymous wrote:If she is moving there she probably is not an old, so will have zero percent interest in this hobbit house.
Anonymous wrote:I used to live in a house that looked so similar that I just had to call my mom to verify it wasn't ours. It was not. We lived about a block away. That was a fun old house. It had a dumb waiter, a laundry chute to the basement, and a button on the dining room floor to call the staff. Also very close to amazing sledding. Those were the days.