Anonymous wrote:Pro - there are lots of them out there
Con - I have never seen one where the kitchen and a bathroom were on the same level. So if you are on crutches or are incapacitated for awhile, you have to hop upstairs to get to the bathroom.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love my split foyer!
In the colonials we looked at the front door opened into the living room...no foyer at all so you end up with a pile of shoes and umbrellas in your living room. I prefer having the separation from the front door that the split provides.
For the same price as a 1500 sq ft box colonial with 3 bedrooms and 2 baths and a tiny kitchen...we got a 3.000 sq ft split foyer. 4 bedrooms, 3 baths and a huge bright kitchen. I love all the space! Looking back, the colonials we looked at all had small chopped up rooms. The split is open and sunny.
Our split looks like a wide brick colonial from the outside. The facade is really nice!
PS....it's BS that split foyers have low ceilings. They are the same height as ALL the colonials and ramblers we looked at.
I would rather have a mudroom
Anonymous wrote:Pros: easy to teardown
Cons: everything
Anonymous wrote:I love my split foyer!
In the colonials we looked at the front door opened into the living room...no foyer at all so you end up with a pile of shoes and umbrellas in your living room. I prefer having the separation from the front door that the split provides.
For the same price as a 1500 sq ft box colonial with 3 bedrooms and 2 baths and a tiny kitchen...we got a 3.000 sq ft split foyer. 4 bedrooms, 3 baths and a huge bright kitchen. I love all the space! Looking back, the colonials we looked at all had small chopped up rooms. The split is open and sunny.
Our split looks like a wide brick colonial from the outside. The facade is really nice!
PS....it's BS that split foyers have low ceilings. They are the same height as ALL the colonials and ramblers we looked at.
Anonymous wrote:Our split is very hard to heat and cool. Someone told us the stairs act like a chimney, taking all the warm air up. The uppermost level (4th level out of basement, main, 3rd and 4th levels) is never comfortable. Always very cold or very warm. I also feel like we don't have many windows, which I think is more the style of that era than the split. I like that if I'm in the kitchen, I can easily see down into our large family room, but I don't like that I have to turn and go down so many stairs to get from bedrooms to laundry. Through 3 baby gates. This is like a townhome in that regard, but it actually has fewer actual steps. We have a really large lot, so I think it's weird that they built a split instead of just a colonial like some of our neighbors, but the ceilings on the uppermost floor aren't quite as cramped as those colonials are, and it's only one of our 3 beds that has that feature (sloping ceilings). We have no bath on the main level, and as my grandmother gets older, it will eventually be impossible for her to stay with us because of all the stairs.