🇺🇸American Houses vs British Houses! 🇬🇧

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 22. 05. 2024
  • A long time ago we made a video about British housing, so here's an updated version with some American counterparts!
    #BritishHousing #AmericanHouses #JoelandLia
    Subscribe: bit.ly/2R1o6tg
    Watch Next, “CZcams REWIND”: • CZcams REWIND: Joel &...
    Become a Joel & Lia Member ⭐️: / @thosetwobrits1
    👫Follow our Social Media:
    Facebook: joelandlia
    Instagram: joelandlia
    Twitter: joelandlia
    🙋🏻‍♀️Lia's Social Media:
    CZcams: / lotsoflia
    Instagram: liahatz
    Twitter: liahatz
    🙋🏻‍♂️Joel's Social Media:
    CZcams: / joelwood1
    Instagram: joelwood
    Twitter: JoelMWood
    Watch More Of Our Videos:
    All of Our Videos: • 3 THINGS BRITISH PEOPL...
    Questions Brits Have For...: • Questions for Australi...
    American vs British: • 🇬🇧 BRITISH Insults AME...
    British Culture: • 10 Worst Things About ...
    BUY US A COFFEE: ko-fi.com/joelandlia
    *FILMING EQUIPMENT: amazon.com/shop/britishenglishwithjoellia
    GET £25 AIRBNB CREDIT: airbnb.co.uk/c/joell2886
    *OUR AMAZON SHOP: amazon.com/shop/britishenglishwithjoellia
    ____________________________
    Hello! We are Joel & Lia. We post videos every week, all about British culture, British accents and the English language! We live in London and love sharing our top travel tips in the UK and abroad. As well as being best friends we share a passion for language, different accents and all things British. With past and future trips to the USA, lots of our content is American vs British.
    Don't forget to subscribe to see our videos in your subscription box every week and click the notification bell if you want special alerts send straight to your phone!
    _____________________________
    Links marked with a '*' are affiliate links, which means we receive a percentage of the revenue made from purchasing products through these links. This doesn't affect you at all or increase the price of the products!

Komentáře • 3,6K

  • @WiseOldMike
    @WiseOldMike Před 4 lety +852

    A Masionette sounds like an American Town House.

    • @aneophyte1199
      @aneophyte1199 Před 4 lety +17

      My first thought would have been split-level.

    • @cherrymoore2873
      @cherrymoore2873 Před 4 lety +20

      A Neophyte, A spit-level is usually a house where the main entrance is onto a small landing with 2 short stair cases, one going to the upper level & anothergoing to the lower level.

    • @cherrymoore2873
      @cherrymoore2873 Před 4 lety +33

      I agree, town house.

    • @deannacrownover3
      @deannacrownover3 Před 4 lety +22

      It sounds exactly like a townhouse!

    • @whelk
      @whelk Před 4 lety +10

      Could be townhouse, but that might be a row house too.

  • @lisacisneros1405
    @lisacisneros1405 Před 4 lety +371

    An apartment building doesn't necessarily have a lobby and/or conceirge.

    • @aliszar
      @aliszar Před 4 lety +25

      Most don’t

    • @michelleg9194
      @michelleg9194 Před 4 lety +9

      Exactly we have “club house” for amenities-gym, tanning bed. These are rented for parties for a fee.

    • @Wiley_Coyote
      @Wiley_Coyote Před 4 lety +13

      I'd agree most don't. In the US an apartment building can range anywhere from a small house divided into two apartments, to a mega structure taking up a whole city block. Pretty much the same as the UK, I bet, except for the name used to describe it.

    • @kaylynkremblas689
      @kaylynkremblas689 Před 4 lety +13

      I think they stayed at hotels lol

    • @fjanson2468
      @fjanson2468 Před 4 lety +10

      @@kaylynkremblas689 sounds like they stayed in NY or LA fancy places.

  • @TTMama-jx1we
    @TTMama-jx1we Před 4 lety +175

    Block of flats = apartment building and if it’s a whole neighborhood of them it’s an apartment complex.

    • @michaelmerryman99
      @michaelmerryman99 Před 4 lety +7

      As an American myself, I agree. Apartment complex for a large conglomeration of apartment buildings.

    • @eluv7284
      @eluv7284 Před 3 lety +2

      Ha, I was like wtf is a block of flats 🤦‍♂️ I thought they was talkin bout grass 🤦‍♂️

    • @paigecat9104
      @paigecat9104 Před 3 lety +1

      And they aren't always nice there are slews of disgusting apartments in a complex places are dumps. You enter one like a motel.

    • @deltagsyntarro1329
      @deltagsyntarro1329 Před 3 lety

      No mention of the Co-op apartment setup where the tenant society votes on all issues involving the building.

  • @danablackburn7288
    @danablackburn7288 Před 4 lety +50

    Also, I think "roommate" is derived from sharing a room with someone in college. A lot of times, people move into an apartment after the first year of college with their same roommate, so now anyone who lives together are considered roommates

  • @CrunchyASMR84
    @CrunchyASMR84 Před 4 lety +486

    Masonette is called a “townhouse” in America

    • @debholtz54
      @debholtz54 Před 4 lety +2

      CrunchyASMR84 - or Townehome

    • @kristenrose1283
      @kristenrose1283 Před 4 lety +5

      For sure a townhouse but normally two bathrooms in a townhouse.

    • @footscorn
      @footscorn Před 4 lety +2

      What's a maisonette? A condo is called a townhouse in Australia.

    • @Conflictinator
      @Conflictinator Před 4 lety

      A townhouse is usually one story, a condo, two.

    • @johnpiland
      @johnpiland Před 4 lety +16

      I've always thought of a condo as an apartment or townhome that you own, not that you rent in the US.

  • @wallybeep
    @wallybeep Před 4 lety +71

    “Roommate” derives from university days where it it common to share a room with a fellow on-campus student, The term then carried over from university days to shared living space after.

    • @sugarkitty4777
      @sugarkitty4777 Před 4 lety +3

      Roommate derives from more than one person living together. That could be townhouses, single family houses, dorms, condos, apartments, or even a cabin in the woods. "University days" is ridiculous.

    • @wallybeep
      @wallybeep Před 4 lety +1

      Sugar Kitty ... and you’re an idiot.

    • @lcflngn
      @lcflngn Před 4 lety +3

      “Housemate” is very common, aka how I met my husband 😉

    • @auldrick
      @auldrick Před 4 lety +2

      @@sugarkitty4777 I agree. The "university days" explanation wouldn't resonate with many people, since most have never had that experience, so that's not a likely origin for the term. Besides, there's a better explanation: When the word was introduced around 1770, it was very common for unmarried young people to live in lodging houses, where they enjoyed individual bedrooms but generally shared a bathroom/toilet and possibly a sitting room. This gave us the verb "to room", meaning "to occupy a room as a lodger". A term was needed for the kind of relationship these lodgers had, which was closer than neighbors but not as close as family. That term became "roommates", not because they shared a room (noun) but because they roomed (verb) in the same establishment.

  • @brandonk1097
    @brandonk1097 Před 4 lety +36

    I’d say that “condo” in the woods is a cabin.

  • @quillonri
    @quillonri Před 4 lety +43

    Apartment hotels in the US are coined, "extended stay" hotels.

    • @quillonri
      @quillonri Před 4 lety +4

      I've also heard them referred to as, "corporate housing", as a lot of companies will put up employees traveling to far-flung areas that are working an assignment away from home.

    • @twofiveb
      @twofiveb Před 3 lety +1

      Also in big cities like NYC L.A. and Chicago there are buildings that were originally hotels but became more like apartments with permanent tenants. With concierge, manager and maybe maid services.
      The ones I have seen are either pretty nice in nice areas or pretty crappy in run down areas. Not much in between.

    • @bchapman1234
      @bchapman1234 Před rokem

      I always called them a residence hotel. Think of Eloise at the Plaza

  • @rjdavid3
    @rjdavid3 Před 4 lety +263

    A flat with stairs is a townhouse or townhouse apartment.

    • @kathleenjimenez8394
      @kathleenjimenez8394 Před 4 lety +6

      Bob D not true. Townhome refers to a home where you receive ownership of the actual land the unit is located on. A flat with stairs is just called a two story.

    • @ltaken2589
      @ltaken2589 Před 4 lety +11

      In Ohio when we say townhouse that just refers to like a house thats split in two basically apartments but its just a house cut in half either upstairs downstairs or side by side

    • @johnbowers6258
      @johnbowers6258 Před 4 lety +14

      @@ltaken2589 Rest of the country calls that a duplex

    • @ltaken2589
      @ltaken2589 Před 4 lety +3

      @@johnbowers6258 makes sense not the most stupid thing happening in Ohio 😂😂

    • @jerronaw
      @jerronaw Před 4 lety +11

      Townhouse

  • @samuelmiller4964
    @samuelmiller4964 Před 4 lety +80

    An apartment "Building" is a single building with apartment "units" in it, as opposed to an apartment "Complex" which is a community of units!
    Love u guys! ❤

    • @janetbousho7625
      @janetbousho7625 Před 4 lety +3

      There are apartments that are bought in the US. Specifically in New York, but I'm sure there are other cities that do the same.

    • @michiganabigail
      @michiganabigail Před 4 lety +1

      Janet Bousho yeah I’ve lived in Utah and Michigan, and people buy apartments both of those places.

    • @samuelmiller4964
      @samuelmiller4964 Před 4 lety

      @@michiganabigail
      I live in Indianapolis, in. i hear about ppl buying condo's all the time but not apts, to my knowledge they only rent, and we don't have "squatter's rights" here!

    • @michiganabigail
      @michiganabigail Před 4 lety +1

      Samuel Miller good! Squatters don’t get rights! Rights come when you purchase or loan a property! That’s interesting about not buying apartments in Indianapolis. I’ve never heard that before! I don’t think it’s common in Michigan, either. But someone I knew moved from Michigan and had to sell their apartment! It’s definitely more common in Utah.

    • @tj_2701
      @tj_2701 Před 4 lety +2

      @@samuelmiller4964 a "Complex" is a group of buildings owned by the same landlord and grouped together.

  • @daricetaylor737
    @daricetaylor737 Před 3 lety +3

    Subdivisions are a group of streets and land plots that have been chosen to build new homes on. They usually have 4 or 5 model homes that you can choose from, each model has it's own floor plan. From there, you choose the color, roof, carpet, cabinet and tile from a book.So basically it is new homes on a strict budget, no special additions, so the can put them up literally in a few months and have a brand new home ready.

  • @genrex072572
    @genrex072572 Před 3 lety +4

    Where your parents live at in Florida Joel is called a subdivision, not a division. A subdivision is a neighborhood of houses built by same builder that may have several styles selected for that subdivision. Also a slang term for the houses in a subdivision can be referenced as cookie cutter houses -- meaning they all are very similar in appearance such as a batch of cookies made from a cookie cutter...hahahaha

  • @dr.westwood
    @dr.westwood Před 4 lety +190

    Block of flats is an apartment building. A luxury apartment building will sometimes have a doorman and/or concierge. An apartment with stairs is a townhome but only if there's not a unit above or below, otherwise it's just an apartment. A condo is an apartment you own with lots of communal fees. A duplex is a semi detached home. A brownstone is a brick row house with 3-4 floors. A terraced house is a split level home studio is a bedsit. Sometimes called an efficiency. A loft is a flat with no walls. Subdivisions are housing developments, usually gated and sometimes with security. Project housing is a tenement. Ranch style house is just a single level home that is usually rectangular. Bungalow may or may not be single level but more square in shape. It may have 2 levels but not 3. It may also have a basement which is a cellar that the walls are proper walls not dirt.

    • @TheGinnygoose18
      @TheGinnygoose18 Před 4 lety +25

      That is a well done explanation!👍🏻

    • @shaunabrennan6596
      @shaunabrennan6596 Před 4 lety +12

      Rod Westwood hmm... I have been an American all my life and have never seen nor heard of a doorman at an apartment complex. Maybe the office of the complex is open 24/7 but it’s not called a doorman. Lol

    • @shaunabrennan6596
      @shaunabrennan6596 Před 4 lety +12

      Semi attached house 🤷‍♀️a duplex is 2 homes attached together. They are attached not semi attached

    • @pjschmid2251
      @pjschmid2251 Před 4 lety +10

      Terraced house is not a split level. They are townhouses or row houses. A split level is a style of single family (detached) house in the US that became popular in the 50s and 60s.

    • @pjschmid2251
      @pjschmid2251 Před 4 lety +16

      Shauna Brennan Doorman buildings are more common in large cities like New York or Chicago. They tend to be high end places where the “other half” live.

  • @jasonmaysonet2686
    @jasonmaysonet2686 Před 4 lety +44

    I stopped cleaning because I thought Joel & Lia were talking to me through the TV when they said Maisonette

  • @theoldvirginian
    @theoldvirginian Před 3 lety +4

    Hello! Katy from Virginia here. Just so ya know, we do have bungalows-I live in one. It is not a ranch style house. While they both are on one floor, a ranch is spread out length wise (it's long to the side) and usually has a living room and kitchen/dinner with a long hall to one side with the bedrooms and bathroom are located. A bungalow as you know is more squared or if it's rectangled (to the back) and may not have a hall at all (mine doesn't ). I hope I didn't confuse you too much. Anyway, I enjoy watching you two. Take care and stay safe.

  • @danabrown2391
    @danabrown2391 Před 4 lety +4

    My daughter lives in Naples, Florida and I was amazed at all the "Gated Communities" as the sub-divisions that are gated are called, they have there. The beautiful entrances with palms and lovely landscaping, the community clubhouse and pool! I REALLY feel like I am on vacation when when we visit her! More modern American neighborhoods are bought by a developer who builds all the houses in that neighborhood, and that's called a sub-division. Many have names but not all unless they are gated.

  • @danahebeler632
    @danahebeler632 Před 4 lety +83

    Americans do use the word “bungalow”. I have heard it used when referring to a single level home on/near the beach. Larger homes on the beach are referred to as “beach houses”.

    • @francescampbell4731
      @francescampbell4731 Před 4 lety +2

      Usually quite small houses near the beach.

    • @johndoe-wv3nu
      @johndoe-wv3nu Před 4 lety +7

      I'm American and owned a bungalow for years. It wasn't on a beach.

    • @jenniferflynn4948
      @jenniferflynn4948 Před 4 lety +4

      Dana Hebeler that is true, but it’s also a style of home. My home is a 2 story, walk out basement, 5 bedroom bungalow, in the middle of upstate NY. That’s what’s on the title and deed. Not sure what makes it a bungalow, but everyone is shocked how large it is once they are inside because it looks smaller on the outside to them. I have no clue. I inherited it from my grandparents.

    • @williamlucas4656
      @williamlucas4656 Před 4 lety

      It is a somewhat outmoded term.

    • @barbarapringle621
      @barbarapringle621 Před 4 lety +4

      Dana Hebeler bungalow is a specific architectural style but a lot of Americans use it to mean “small house” which is just wrong.

  • @stevenroach6809
    @stevenroach6809 Před 4 lety +71

    In case nobody beat me to it, here's another one - I live in an "Apartment Complex." It consists of three apartment buildings all under the same management.

    • @Ten13Grl
      @Ten13Grl Před 4 lety +2

      That's a tiny complex!

    • @DeniseEggertwaterlily
      @DeniseEggertwaterlily Před 4 lety +2

      I have lived in apartment complexes for my entire adult life. They are usually an entire area of at least 40 or more identical buildings which are either 2 or 3 stories high, with about eight apartments to a building. On the ground floor of each building there will be washing machines and dryers, as well as individual storage units for each apartment. The complex will offer different sized apartments with a different numbers of bedrooms and bathrooms. These apartment complexes will be in a park like setting in the suburbs, with large areas for playing sports, enjoying the park like setting. They will have playgrounds for children. They will have a swimming pool, tennis courts and a basketball court for apartment residents. There will be a management office and a concierge office, with a concierge on duty.

    • @JustAGalOnTheGo
      @JustAGalOnTheGo Před 3 lety

      I live in apartment complex, 3 (two story) buildings surrounding a landscaped common area. 40 units(apartments).

  • @mountainlace7618
    @mountainlace7618 Před 3 lety +14

    Homes with Steep slopes roofs are known as "A" frame homes. Depending on what part of the country you live in, they also are refered to "chalets".

    • @kristinebailey6554
      @kristinebailey6554 Před 2 lety +1

      No, my brother in law is an architect and I can tell you the difference, chalets do have steep roof pitches, but they also have side walls and A frames do not. In a A frame the roof nearly touches the ground. A chalet is not an A frame.

  • @dmendez4741
    @dmendez4741 Před 3 lety +2

    We say bungalow, it's generally an Arts and Crafts style low one or 1/2 stort house, with large covered porches and lots of woodwork/builtin's. Ranch are plainer houses that are generally long and sorta narrow, but the long side faces the street. They have a pitch to their roofs, just not a super steep pitch

    • @martimbe
      @martimbe Před 3 lety +2

      Thank you! A bungalow is not just a small house. It's a specific architectural style of house from the Arts and Crafts period.

  • @hansash2
    @hansash2 Před 4 lety +106

    You mentioned that you call a stand alone house a "detached", we tend to call it a "single family home".

    • @nowthatsjustducky
      @nowthatsjustducky Před 4 lety +11

      I just call ours a house.

    • @theheartyaerie
      @theheartyaerie Před 4 lety +4

      Or a house

    • @bigboy69v
      @bigboy69v Před 4 lety

      “Bungalow” comes from a Hindi word meaning belonging to Bengal... the British adopted the word when the area was part of the British empire (how we similarly adopted pyjama into British language) in the uk we refer to single story houses as bungalows, in America maybe they have some Bengalese architecture when they’re multi-storey??

    • @joaquinjr2570
      @joaquinjr2570 Před 4 lety +3

      I feel like most American live in single family homes that are detached

    • @personalcheeses8073
      @personalcheeses8073 Před 4 lety

      nowthatsjustducky But is it a detached, semi detached or terraced house?

  • @donniebrooks21
    @donniebrooks21 Před 4 lety +87

    Subdivisions are very popular here and most aren't gated. Gated subdivision are gaining in popularity here. Bungalow and Ranch are architectural styles of detached houses here.

    • @markbernier8434
      @markbernier8434 Před 4 lety +1

      Both types are all on one level but to my knowledge Ranch houses are usually a linear floor plan. On an actual ranch they were often enlarged by building on one or both ends.

    • @robnorris4770
      @robnorris4770 Před 4 lety +1

      Another American word for subdivision is ‘tract’.

    • @allisonhamilton1245
      @allisonhamilton1245 Před 4 lety +1

      Yep^^^

    • @tiffanymims8691
      @tiffanymims8691 Před 4 lety

      @@markbernier8434ranch houses can be built in cities too. I live in a city in Missouri and we have tons of ranch houses built in the 1950-60s. It is usually a 3 or 4 bedroom, single story house with a certain architecture look.

    • @annchovies1831
      @annchovies1831 Před 3 lety

      Subdivisions are usually developed by a single contractor who bought a large tract of land and “subdivided” into individual lots for purchase

  • @dawnkathleenmyers
    @dawnkathleenmyers Před 4 lety +32

    Not all apartments have a conceirge. None of the apartments I lived in had one.

    • @jowen466
      @jowen466 Před 3 lety

      If you have a conceirge you are rich or how do you spell it booshy?

    • @numbernine3436
      @numbernine3436 Před 3 lety

      Heck no.. that would be an expensive apt complex

    • @terrifictomm
      @terrifictomm Před 2 lety

      "Concierge"? Apartment manager with a full-time maintenance staff? Every apartment I ever lived in that wasn't "ghetto". I did live in a few ghettos in my 20s.

  • @terrifictomm
    @terrifictomm Před 2 lety +2

    When my in-laws first look at moving to Vegas from California, they visited one weekend and came back with about a half-dozen brochures from brand new housing developments and an amazing statistic. At that time, there were TWO HUNDRED AND FOUR BRAND NEW HOUSING DEVELOPMENTS being built in and around Las Vegas consisting of HUNDREDS OF HOUSES EACH! That number not only did not DROP for the next twelve years, IT GREW! Not until the housing crash of '08, which only slowed it down. The Vegas housing boom started in the mid-80s and is still going on.

  • @rjdavid3
    @rjdavid3 Před 4 lety +105

    A "ranch house" is typically one level. It may have a pitched roof.

    • @pjschmid2251
      @pjschmid2251 Před 4 lety +3

      They are typically larger as well. There are smaller single story houses that are called cottages. I think the concept comes from the large single story homes built by ranchers in the west.

    • @benrast1755
      @benrast1755 Před 4 lety +5

      Exactly. They rarely have flat roofs except maybe in the southwest. They’re just single story houses that are more sprawling than bungalows or craftsman style houses. They may have a roof with a lesser pitch than some styles, but rarely flat and still adequate for rain runoff.

    • @AlbertMeza
      @AlbertMeza Před 4 lety +3

      To be more exact, ranch houses have low-pitched roofs.

    • @mermaid1717
      @mermaid1717 Před 4 lety +7

      Ranch is a direct style & floor plan. You can have a 2 story ranch, but that's usually a ranch with a basement or half basement.. where the basement is a walk out in the back. And MOST Ranch houses on average in the US are all fully bricked. They're like the #1 style house you'll find everywhere in the US because sooooo many were built from the 60s-early 80s.

    • @mermaid1717
      @mermaid1717 Před 4 lety +1

      @@Judy_R agreed.. so many differences depending on where in the US they are. I'm in eastern North Carolina & our ranches traditional do not have garages, but single carports. We don't have basements here because we're so low in elevation. I even grew up in a white brick ranch my parents built in 1977 on one of my family farms that I will one day inherit. Oh & they always had a formal living room plus a separate den. That's why I say.. Ranch styles are very specific floor plans.

  • @pukwudjivc
    @pukwudjivc Před 4 lety +83

    Ranch house refers to the house being a single level.

    • @teawill509
      @teawill509 Před 4 lety +2

      And usually the living room or family room is open to the kitchen and dining area.

    • @allisonjae3152
      @allisonjae3152 Před 4 lety

      There's also executive ranchers. Those are larger than normal, and I think they are in an L shape.

    • @liglyhuse9058
      @liglyhuse9058 Před 4 lety

      We call that a bungalow

    • @allisonjae3152
      @allisonjae3152 Před 4 lety +1

      @@liglyhuse9058 I just see a bungalow as a cozy house.

    • @liglyhuse9058
      @liglyhuse9058 Před 4 lety

      Allison Jae a bungalow is a house that is only one level so there’s no upstairs

  • @DATo_DATonian
    @DATo_DATonian Před 3 lety +7

    "Roommates" - a very Brit answer - Think, Sherlock Holmes and Watson. They each had their own bedrooms but shared a "common room". See? You guys invented it before we did.

  • @steventambon2588
    @steventambon2588 Před 3 lety +3

    The Duplex is actually different than a semi-detached based on how you described it. We have an equivalent called a "Twin House". A duplex is essentially 2 flats with one on top of the other and they have their own entrance

    • @gleckia
      @gleckia Před 4 dny

      In Minnesota, Never heard of a Twin House. I usually hear Side by side duplex

  • @Shannon0470
    @Shannon0470 Před 4 lety +51

    We say "Studio Apartment" too.
    The term "they" are trying to coin is "Efficiency" to entice people to go with it and feel better about. it.

    • @Ryarios
      @Ryarios Před 4 lety

      It’s also called a bachelor apartment...

    • @42istheanswer23
      @42istheanswer23 Před 4 lety +2

      It used to be called efficiency back in the 70s and 80s when they were not that common. Then make them sound fancier they started calling them Studio

    • @iwouldratherbewithmydog
      @iwouldratherbewithmydog Před 4 lety

      I've always heard studio and efficiency as different things. Like a studio has a designated kitchen, bedroom, and livingroom area all without walls separating them out it's still an ok size, but an efficiency is a much smaller version of that where you don't have a designated livingroom area, basically just the bed and kitchen.

  • @supersop
    @supersop Před 4 lety +64

    Division ... I think you mean Subdivision. Literally any "neighborhood" in the suburbs is a subdivision.

    • @juliem6372
      @juliem6372 Před 4 lety +1

      They are generally named for the land developer.

    • @TXKafir
      @TXKafir Před 4 lety +1

      A subdivision is part of a larger housing development.

  • @summeromstead7070
    @summeromstead7070 Před 4 lety +34

    Never heard of an apartment hotel and I’m born and raised in the USA 🤔

    • @barryfletcher7136
      @barryfletcher7136 Před 3 lety +17

      Extended stay hotels like Marriott Residence Inn are apartment hotels.

    • @amandachilders9939
      @amandachilders9939 Před 3 lety +1

      Suite?

    • @belle9438
      @belle9438 Před 3 lety

      @@amandachilders9939 A suite has a living room and bed room. Not just one room.

    • @johntaphouse5235
      @johntaphouse5235 Před 3 lety

      i think disney has them, they call the rooms villas they ae like little appartments with several rooms used by long stay residents or families

    • @bmcdaniel3148
      @bmcdaniel3148 Před 3 lety

      Executive suits in Alabama. Short term housing

  • @cla9751
    @cla9751 Před 3 lety +8

    Your terraced houses are what we would call “rowhouses” or more commonly known as a townhouses (or sometimes called brownstones bc townhouses were made with a type of sandstone that turned brown)-US person that loves your channel!

  • @mitsim
    @mitsim Před 4 lety +18

    It's subdivision. Meaning that a developer bought a large piece of land, and subdivided the property into individual lots where they built houses and sold them individually.

  • @rjdavid3
    @rjdavid3 Před 4 lety +32

    We not only have a duplex, but also triplex and quad. One building with 3 units or 4,

    • @mermaid1717
      @mermaid1717 Před 4 lety +1

      Then there's the simi detached house.. that at the end of the day is just a duplex 🤣

  • @daniellemarie2625
    @daniellemarie2625 Před 4 lety +2

    American here~I just found your videos and am enjoying them tremendously! Thank you for always speaking so respectful about our culture/way of life.

  • @trottheblackdog
    @trottheblackdog Před 4 lety +24

    A lot of these American terms mostly come from New York, like "brownstone"

    • @yellowsub22
      @yellowsub22 Před 3 lety +2

      Brownstones often have an exterior stair up to the main floor and sometimes another apartment flat half a story down.

  • @KiraBKADestroyerOfWorlds
    @KiraBKADestroyerOfWorlds Před 4 lety +83

    "Bungalow" and "ranch-style" are types of housing styles, like colonial, Georgian, Victorian, etc.

    • @balakuntalamsridhar5789
      @balakuntalamsridhar5789 Před 4 lety +2

      The word 'Bungalow" comes from Hindi "Bangla". Brits imported the word from their then colony.

    • @wesleypeters4112
      @wesleypeters4112 Před 4 lety +2

      Victorian is not a style, it is an era. Queen Anne is a style.

    • @biancastepney1517
      @biancastepney1517 Před 3 lety +7

      @@wesleypeters4112 In the US we call them Victorian style homes

    • @wesleypeters4112
      @wesleypeters4112 Před 3 lety +2

      @@biancastepney1517 I am a stickler for definitions and proper wording. Victorian is an era, hence Queen Victoria's reign , 1837-1901. Queen Anne, Second Empire, Italianate, and Eastlake are all styles of architecture.

    • @biancastepney1517
      @biancastepney1517 Před 3 lety +9

      @@wesleypeters4112 You being a stickler doesn't change that it also a style lmao

  • @dennismorgan2230
    @dennismorgan2230 Před 4 lety +14

    I live in a “townhouse” we have our kitchen,living room and a half bath downstairs and three bedrooms and a full bathroom upstairs.

  • @ChaoticDestiny1
    @ChaoticDestiny1 Před 4 lety +17

    It's all over the us and it's called subdivisions, and hardly any of them are gated

    • @DW-vd9mp
      @DW-vd9mp Před 3 lety +1

      Unless in Florida a lot of subdivisions and upscale apartments are gated. I hated it. I moved to Georgia in a new subdivision with no gate or guard. Costs the homeowners a lot to have gated security.

  • @reginawallinger8711
    @reginawallinger8711 Před 3 lety +1

    Yes, in Fl, the housing developments are called subdivisions because the huge plot of land they all sit on has been sub divided into individual plots. Many of these subdivisions have gate security men who check who goes in and out for security reasons.

  • @rjdavid3
    @rjdavid3 Před 4 lety +35

    Yes, a division is actually called a sub-division.

    • @wesleybush8646
      @wesleybush8646 Před 4 lety

      Subdivisions, In the high school halls, in the shopping malls. Be cool or be cast out. ("Subdivisions" by Rush)

    • @lamllemaussade
      @lamllemaussade Před 4 lety

      And, while it technically qualifies as a real estate subdivision, I’d say it sounds like Joel’s parents’ Florida home is in a “gated community”.

  • @JEdwardBanasikJr
    @JEdwardBanasikJr Před 4 lety +14

    "Ranch" style house - Marty McFly's home in Back to the Future is a typical American Ranch. Note the lower pitch of the roof. Many have the garage built on the front or a carport. Some had the garage detached in the back with a side driveway. These were also typically built in subdivisions that started popping up after WWII. Many have huge backyards for cookouts and family home life. Very common style home built during the 50's - 70's in the U.S.

  • @pcno2832
    @pcno2832 Před 4 lety +2

    3:43 I live in a condominium-townhouse with 2 rooms up, 2.5 rooms down and a full bathroom upstairs. It also has a foyer shared with the townhouse on the other side and a back stairway stairway shared the same way that leads to the basements, which are separated and mostly finished. The main thing about the term "condo" or condominium is that it can be any kind of housing unit, an apartment, townhouse, semi-detached or even a detached house, but like a "common hold" it is legally part of a trust that funds the management and maintenance of the grounds, facilities and parts of the building that are considered commonly owned (my roof and heating systems would be examples of that).

  • @patriciaarayahenriquez7769

    You smashed it guys!! When I first moved to the UK your previous video about housing helped me a lot to learn about it 😉
    This was fun too 👏🏼

  • @nicejewishenby
    @nicejewishenby Před 4 lety +155

    What you kept calling a “division” is actually called a “subdivision” or, more commonly, a “neighborhood”. lol
    Do y’all really not have those in the UK?

    • @travis3810
      @travis3810 Před 4 lety +12

      they think of neighborhoods more like a whole section of the city, where we would call it a suburb. idk though

    • @doncarlton4858
      @doncarlton4858 Před 4 lety +9

      I believe they call them "housing estates".

    • @nowthatsjustducky
      @nowthatsjustducky Před 4 lety +1

      I consider the neighborhood to consist of the housing and the people.

    • @quitman2050
      @quitman2050 Před 4 lety +13

      Correct......they missed the subdivision completely. It is simply a subdivision of a larger piece of land into smaller lots for houses, with connecting streets, and utilities provided. I have approved subdivisions of 5,000 to 7,000 homes in Central Texas, but elsewhere in the US, a typical subdivision would be 100 homes or less.

    • @TheOriginalLexa
      @TheOriginalLexa Před 4 lety

      Don Reynolds I disagree with the “under 100 homes” part of your comment. I’m in FL and my subdivision is fairly small at just over 400 homes. My grandmother’s house was in a subdivision with several subdivisions that are part of a larger subdivided area (they’re all over here, most communities are are like that here) and the overall subdivision was probably 2,000 homes.

  • @deannaeakle8680
    @deannaeakle8680 Před 4 lety +16

    Condo is owned but also has Monthly fees for any extras like a pool or workout rooms etc.

    • @Trifler500
      @Trifler500 Před 4 lety

      Yes, but these fees are collected by the homeowner's association within the condo building, rather than by a landlord.

    • @lamllemaussade
      @lamllemaussade Před 4 lety

      Condo and HOA owners own a percentage interest in the association itself, which is a legal corporation.

  • @danielleporter1829
    @danielleporter1829 Před 3 lety +1

    A ranch house started on ranches as the main house the family would live in. The Bunkhouse was where the ranch hands ( ranch employees ) lives. When this style of house began to be built in suburbs and other parts of the city, the name just stuck. We do have bungalows in the US. There can be whole sections of cities that are known for their Craftsman style bungalows. In Los Angeles for example, in portions of the Jefferson Park and most of the West Adams neighborhoods, bungalows take center stage and many are on the city's, state's and national register of historic houses. Bungalows are usually a lot older than other types of houses given they were built in the 1910-20s.

  • @pcno2832
    @pcno2832 Před 4 lety +2

    8:00 "duplex" means semi-detached house in most parts of the USA, but in NYC, it can also mean an apartment with 2 stories and an internal staircase, though not necessarily a door to the outdoors (the main entrance might open up to a hallway). The Danny Thomas show, of the 1960s, was set in such an apartment.

  • @taylorg7079
    @taylorg7079 Před 4 lety +80

    What about duplexes? Two houses mashed into one, with separate entrances.

    • @juanitojaime4553
      @juanitojaime4553 Před 4 lety +10

      Semi-detached, I believe.

    • @doncarlton4858
      @doncarlton4858 Před 4 lety +2

      Two houses with a common wall. A concept of multi-family housing that pre-dated condominiums.

    • @theheartyaerie
      @theheartyaerie Před 4 lety +1

      They covered that in the video the call them semi-detached

    • @morganhall5755
      @morganhall5755 Před 4 lety

      And a "division' is a *subdivision*

    • @joaquinjr2570
      @joaquinjr2570 Před 4 lety

      Think of it as a multifoor apartment so it’s in a building. Think if iCarly, Spencer and Carly technically live in a duplex because it was a Multi floor appointment

  • @mitsim
    @mitsim Před 4 lety +24

    Never knew anyone living in an apartment that had a concierge. You probably came upon that because where you stayed they did. But, on the whole, probably 95% of the time they don't.

    • @SternLX
      @SternLX Před 4 lety

      We call that "On site Security" in certain Apartment complexes here in Las Vegas. :)

    • @Teewriter
      @Teewriter Před 4 lety

      Ritzy apt may have. It would be an up charge.

    • @Belovelyava
      @Belovelyava Před 4 lety

      NY. Thing! Anywhere up North that’s upper class

    • @m_soko
      @m_soko Před 4 lety +1

      That's because most of those building setups are most of the time condominiums. We have 7 different associations that we do contract work for that I'm in almost daily.

    • @sugarkitty4777
      @sugarkitty4777 Před 4 lety +1

      Depends on where. It's not always high end/ritzy either. Really large places in US cities have it more based on size than priced paid in rent. I know 1000 unit buildings in NYC that do but the rent is average. Yet in DC I know a building with loads of concierge servces because it's $80k a month.

  • @johe64
    @johe64 Před 3 lety +1

    I live in a suburb of Phoenix and we call our subdivision "Rancho El Mirage". We have both one and two story houses in our development. We don't call them "bungaloes" we just call them one or two story homes. Most subdivisions are not gated communities--because they usually have really expensive homeowner's association fees. Ours isn't gated. Phoenix is a great place to live, warm and DRY! I would never move back to the midwest. You don't have to shovel the sunshine! lol

  • @robertpearson8798
    @robertpearson8798 Před 3 lety +1

    In my part of Canada (Ontario) we tend to refer to a duplex as single family home that’s been modified and divided up into two living spaces so one can be rented out to a tennant.

  • @rjdavid3
    @rjdavid3 Před 4 lety +51

    We do sometimes say "Bungalow" but it typically means a small house.

    • @kathy2trips
      @kathy2trips Před 4 lety +11

      Bungalow is an actual, distinct architectural style. Simply being small does not make a house a bungalow. A ranch house can be small, but it is never going to be a bungalow. There are also sub-sets of bungalows, i.e. California Bungalow for example.

    • @pjschmid2251
      @pjschmid2251 Před 4 lety +1

      Yes we definitely have bungalows. I grew up in a brick bungalow in Chicago, a distinct style of bungalow that was popular in Chicago in the 1920s

    • @basicdebbie2114
      @basicdebbie2114 Před 4 lety +1

      Architecturally a bungalow has a large swooping/sloping roof down over a front porch with chunky colums. A ranch style is a single level house with smaller pitched roof around a 5 or so.

    • @bkm2797
      @bkm2797 Před 4 lety +1

      Doesn't a bungalow have a large porch entry, where you can have a swing and table with chairs. My friend in Utah has this and it's called a bungalow.

    • @TheBroomehilda
      @TheBroomehilda Před 4 lety

      Bungalow descriptions vary with regions. Beach bungalows, mountain cottages, similar but have differences depending on where it is. Here in North Carolina, a little vacation house in the mountains can be called a cabin, no matter what it’s made of. And some of these “cabins” get pretty big and fancy!

  • @chelseyfaye8778
    @chelseyfaye8778 Před 4 lety +13

    I personally love when yall dont do reasearch! I LOVE just seeing your point of view and your understanding of things❤

  • @christophercavanaugh6437

    Hey guys 👋 I’m so glad I found your Channel you always make me happy 😊

  • @krymsonuchiha14
    @krymsonuchiha14 Před 3 lety +1

    This is really helpful. I'm actually trying to figure out how to move there myself. Either for work for a few years or permanent if possible, but I feel so much more at home in the UK than I do in the US. The two times I've visited, I cried going home as compared to everyone else with homesickness.

  • @tracymaczka9614
    @tracymaczka9614 Před 4 lety +12

    Condos are rented out sometimes by the owner. A condo can be like an apartment, townhouse or a semi dettached house

    • @ottadeef6291
      @ottadeef6291 Před 4 lety

      Yes, although in Canada, "condo" is increasingly used to describe a freehold apartment to distinguish it from a rental apartment.

    • @tracymaczka9614
      @tracymaczka9614 Před 4 lety

      @@ottadeef6291 but an owner can rent them out. At least in Windsor they do.

    • @lamllemaussade
      @lamllemaussade Před 4 lety

      Otta Deef Interesting. “Freehold” is not a term we use in the US. We refer to the concept of also owning the lot as “fee simple”. However, it has nothing to do with rentability in our case. The rules on that vary by association.

  • @lolabear6788
    @lolabear6788 Před 4 lety +11

    I love this type of video! Very interesting about the housing names. A lot of good info in the comments here. I laughed when you thought apartments had concierge. hahahha Most apts or apt blds are middle or lower class. The very low end are the tenements also called housing or projects, bc of being created by a govt welfare project. I grew up in northern NJ outside of NYC by 15 min. We called the tall apt blds in NYC high rise apts or high rises. I think a high end apt bld would be a doorman bld. Bungalows are a specific architecture style. I've heard of them by the sea in New England or anywhere along the east coast. I grew up in a duplex. It was side by side full 3 story Victorian type house in Nutley, NJ. Right next to Montclair. Good neighborhood. We always called lower end or mass produced duplex or row houses townhouses. They usually were laid out front to back and very narrow, but had multiple floors. Ranch is simply a one story house. Fun stuff.

  • @KKC927
    @KKC927 Před 4 lety +19

    A ranch style house is a house where everything is on one level.

    • @danikarecore9601
      @danikarecore9601 Před 3 lety +2

      Yes, "Ranch-style" doesn't have anything to do with the roof style.

    • @dalelatham2718
      @dalelatham2718 Před 3 lety +1

      I live in what was advertised as a three level ranch. A rambler is a one level home.

    • @1177kc
      @1177kc Před 3 lety

      Split levels where you go up a half flight to the next level in a ranch style.

  • @michaelhart2373
    @michaelhart2373 Před 4 lety +1

    In the Catskills of New York, there were "bungalow colonies" everywhere for weekend getaways from NYC. Just a group of small rental cottages.

  • @intallpines
    @intallpines Před 4 lety +19

    In Los Angeles and California in general, bungalows are everywhere for sale. They are small cottages usually selling in the millions.

    • @martinrow1213
      @martinrow1213 Před 4 lety

      A bungalow can be quite large and a cottage can be enormous,, even manor house size.

    • @teamcougars
      @teamcougars Před 4 lety

      intallpines we have bungalows in Northern California also.

  • @Jack_Stafford
    @Jack_Stafford Před 4 lety +8

    Brownstones are very much in style and configuration as Regency housing in London. Just not quite as elaborate and of course with the different kind of stone. But it is the same concept of a house arranged vertically and attached to a whole row of other houses with stairs going into the front door and often these are broken into smaller apartments in large cities.

  • @isabellegarza9070
    @isabellegarza9070 Před 4 lety

    Yeah, the house division that Joel is talking about are pretty cool. We have some out in Texas. They have their own water park, man-made beach, Clubhouse, Convention Center, and gym.

  • @jaeric
    @jaeric Před 4 lety +1

    I always think of a bungalow as a secluded vacation house on a tropical island.

  • @Tlakemom1
    @Tlakemom1 Před 4 lety +22

    I would call a “2 up 2 down” a townhouse. However so many terms are regional, like you only find brownstones in the east where brick is prevalent.

    • @LlyleHunter
      @LlyleHunter Před 4 lety +1

      You’re correct.
      The stone came from the NJ Palisades and is no longer attainable.

    • @timothyfield2841
      @timothyfield2841 Před 4 lety

      A toenhiuse is a row house in more suburban areas arranged in a "town" style instead of say a single row on a city block. A two level apartment in an apartment building is called a duplex apartment.

    • @RobertBelcher
      @RobertBelcher Před 4 lety

      Actually Chicago has an area of old Brownstones where the wealthy live.

    • @aishaumar110
      @aishaumar110 Před 4 lety

      ...and the west coast is earthquake country.

  • @JJ367
    @JJ367 Před 4 lety +23

    I used to live in a ranch. It’s just a house where everything is on one floor. The roof isn’t flat and it does have a basement.

    • @42istheanswer23
      @42istheanswer23 Před 4 lety +5

      A ranch can have a basement, but not a second floor.

    • @teamcougars
      @teamcougars Před 4 lety +1

      JJ367 very few basements in California. Hard to find one. Especially in Northern California the water table is too high in a lot of Northern California so they flood too often.

    • @kanstrand
      @kanstrand Před 4 lety +2

      I would say that some ranch houses have a basement and some do not, out West like Colorado, Arizona, Nevada, the ground is so hard that it's too expensive and difficult to dig a basement so it's just not cost effective and so they are a lot less common in housing, but in the midwest where I live (near Chicago, Illinois) most houses have a basement
      also, housing near the ocean or even close to one of the great lakes will less likely have a basement because they are more likely to flood and fill with water

    • @ericvandet8517
      @ericvandet8517 Před 4 lety

      @@kanstrand and need one in tornado season!

  • @inoname99
    @inoname99 Před 3 lety

    Duplex description was excellent. House attached to another house.
    Much of our vocabulary is create it by advertising and local usage.
    Example, I kept hearing "my bad" one day I had enough, I asked a couple of young men
    what does it mean, he was polite and told me it was a way of saying excuse me, or I am sorry?

  • @jobaghadonitz3790
    @jobaghadonitz3790 Před 3 lety

    A "condotel" is a lodging that is a hybrid of a condominium and hotel, by being operated as a commercial hotel even though the units are individually owned. A condotel has rental and reservation desks, short-term occupancy, food and telephone services, and daily cleaning services.

  • @emerald637
    @emerald637 Před 4 lety +10

    In the U.S.A.:
    -Roommates are those who rent/share an apartment unit or a house, with multiple rooms, generally, each having their own bedroom, and yet, all sharing the other common rooms: Kitchen, living room/lounge, laundry room, garage, a screened-in patio or porch, backyard/courtyard, etc. Sometimes the term "roommates" or "roomies" can be quite literal, like when six college students all rent a three-bedroom, unattached house off-campus, and there are two to a room. Even though it can be cramped at times when it comes to space, it can still be less expensive (with everyone sharing the costs) and have more options for privacy, than the student dorms are on campus.
    -A two-level apartment or house would be called a two-story.
    -A duplex or a fourplex apartment building is a certain number of separate, attached (meaning the walls) units. You could live in a whole residential neighborhood with all duplex or fourplex apartment buildings, with attached walls/apartment units. They are very similar to condos (condominiums).
    -A single-family home is an unattached, generally larger house.
    -Yes, we do say bungalow, when referring to a smaller, one-story, unattached home.

    • @johnp139
      @johnp139 Před 4 lety +1

      Debórah Lee a bungalow is either one or two stories.

  • @kimberlyk2295
    @kimberlyk2295 Před 4 lety +12

    Give Joel & Lia a break... they're entertaining the Nation!!😆😁😄😂😅 You guys are sooo cute!💗💖Thank you for the much needed laughter; you make my day!❤️🌷

  • @victorduffany7723
    @victorduffany7723 Před 3 lety

    I love you guys. I am learning so much about you brits watching you. Plus you are so amusing sometimes making you so entertaining.

  • @MrSheckstr
    @MrSheckstr Před 4 lety

    An apartment hotel is usually a older hotel that no longer in an area where many people are staying for a short time anymore. It’s higher priced for its square footage because a lot of times it continues to have the ground floor amenities of a hotel (cafe ,restaurant, barbershop or salon, in house laundry and shoe service.

  • @kelcal6697
    @kelcal6697 Před 4 lety +36

    “Condo” is owned and occupied. But the difference is all condo owners then become part of the “Condo Association.” And they do no lawn/outside maintenance of their condo.

    • @miltonlegendre2024
      @miltonlegendre2024 Před 4 lety

      A condo can be rented out by the owner most of the time. Condo owner's also have meetings and vote on matters. An apartment has a management group that owns the buildings and make decisions without tenant approval.

    • @xNYCMarc
      @xNYCMarc Před 4 lety +2

      @David Roberts "Condo" is a legal term that essentially means "an individually owned portion of an otherwise single property". In other words, a single plot of land is officially subdivided into separate, deeded tax-lots and the individual owners own their tax-lot within the larger property. I don't think an entity is legally allowed to call itself "condo" if the conversion process hasn't been filed. When you buy a condo, you receive a deed just like any other property and its yours. If someone can throw you out, then its not a condo and I'd bet that the word "condo" isn't actually written anywhere. People in your scenario might casually call it "condo", but I guarantee that the word "condo" isn't in any contract.

    • @meomy29
      @meomy29 Před 4 lety +2

      Most of the time, a condo association does not include lawn and sidewalk maintenance. Condo association fees pay for lot maintenance. In our area, at least, the condos associations that take care of outside work own the yard. You only purchase your home itself. They usually let you plant flowers where you want, but there can be limits. With zero lot line homes you basically own the inside of your home. With a zero lot line you're dependent upon the condo association to repair roofs, outside walls, etc.
      Some small condos don't have associations.

    • @xNYCMarc
      @xNYCMarc Před 4 lety

      @@meomy29 Condo association fees pay for the common areas of the development, like if there is a clubhouse with a pool, the fees will pay for the electricity for the clubhouse and the maintenance of the pool. The fees will also pay for the gym equipment if there is a common gym for the residents. Sidewalks are common property and ALWAYS maintained by the association. Sometimes your front landscaping is included when the association makes a bulk deal with a landscaping company and you can opt-out if you don't want them touching your stuff.

    • @meomy29
      @meomy29 Před 4 lety

      @@xNYCMarc Not all condos are large buildings and they don't always have associations or any monthly fees. Smaller developments may have individual entrances so each condo owner is responsible for their own sidewalks. These types of developments have agreements about building and roof maintenance. Developments like this don't have landscaping, gyms, pools, etc.
      I'd just about bet that the definition of the term "condo" varies from one city to another. We live outside a big town so there probably is one or two developments like you describe. That type of condo development is rare around here. It might be because, although the nearby city is pretty big (couple hundred thousand in the general area), it's nothing like NY, Chicago, or other huge cities.

  • @butterflyforeve
    @butterflyforeve Před 4 lety +1

    An apartment can have stairs or 1 floor. Apartments here in the 🇺🇸 can be in a building with units only attached to each other or attached and stacked on top of each other. These can also be called condos or condominiums. We also have places called duplexes where 2 individual homes are attached in the middle. Usually they have a backyard that is either shared or a fence down the middle to divide them. I have seen huge duplexes like 2 houses just stuck together like siamese twins. Lol
    I have never heard of an apartment hotel.
    No a sub division doesn't have to be gated. Its basically how they plot out land.
    The definition of subdivision
    an area of land divided into plots for sale.
    "Subdivision" means the division of a lot, tract, or parcel of land into two or more lots, plats, sites, or other divisions of land for the purpose, whether immediate or future, of sale or of building development.
    Not all are gated and not all have concierge services. Thats just for rich people lol
    No a ranch style house is just meaning its all on one level has nothing to do with the roof pitch.
    Ranch is a domestic architectural style originating in the United States. The ranch-style house is noted for its long, close-to-the-ground profile, and wide open layout.

  • @twylanaythias
    @twylanaythias Před rokem +1

    There are multiple 'grades' of apartment buildings in the US.
    ~ At the high end are condominiums (aka condos) and luxury apartments - same general amenities, though the former units are owned individually (usually by the tenants) while the latter are owned collectively by a real estate company. These are the ones with doormen, concierges, valets, and the like.
    ~ In the middle are the standard-grade apartments - fairly nice amenities, basic washer & dryer, decent sized, but that's about it. An on-call maintenance crew and an on-site office that keeps banker's hours (like 10 AM to 3 PM), but no other staff.
    ~ Low end apartments are pretty bare-bones - 1 or 2 bedrooms, small bathroom, and you're lucky if you find one that has a full-sized stove. No in-unit laundry facilities, and maybe half even have a laundromat on the premises.
    ~ And then there are the PJs (aka Project Housing) - sizes and plans vary, but bare-bones throughout.
    In the US "roommate" basically just means someone that you share a residence with but that's the only relation between you - husband, girlfriend, children, etc aren't "roommates". Same as a "flatmate", the main criterion is that you both/all have a key to the front door.
    "Maisonete" sounds very much like the "Town House" in the US - kitchen, living room, laundry, and a half-bath (aka water closet) on the ground floor; two or three bedrooms and at least one full bathroom upstairs. There are also some three-story Town House designs which include a garage and laundry on the ground floor; kitchen, living room, and half-bath on the second floor; two or three bedrooms and at least one full bathroom on the third floor. A newer design in some areas adds an additional floor below the top level which is one huge master suite (huge bedroom with private bath, walk-in closets, a semi-private area for a nursery or home office, etc).
    There are a wide range of "plexes" in the US - the duplex is the most common; basically one 'house' but has two separate units which share one common wall. Less common are the triplex (three in a row; a duplex with one additional unit in-between) and quadraplex (same, but with two middle units). Think "single-story Maisonetes".
    Plexes are somewhat unique to the US owing to how residential zoning works. There's a lot to be said for single-family detached homes, but situations arise where more housing is needed - duplexes, in particular, increase the number of residents in a given neighborhood while still presenting the general appearance of single-family homes. While some neighborhoods (via HOAs - Home Owners' Associations) can be excessively anal, there's a general propensity for all homes in a given neighborhood to share a general aesthetic. Standing directly in front of a plex it's obvious that there are multiple units but, simply glancing down the street, you generally can't discern a plex from a single-family home.
    Think about it like this - A single building with multiple rental units has:
    ~ one level of single-story units; it's a duplex/triplex/quadriplex.
    ~ one level of multi-story units which lack basements; it's a town house.
    ~ one level of multi-story units which have basements; it's a row house (aka "brownstone").
    ~ multiple levels of (usually single-story) units; it's an apartment.

  • @teknekon
    @teknekon Před 4 lety +7

    This is great guys! Perhaps one of the most FAQs I have from students (and friends). There is a lot of confusion about this topic. You did a fine job clearing this up. Really appreciate it. Thanks! L&C 👍 ♥️😘 🇬🇧

  • @pennylane36
    @pennylane36 Před 4 lety +11

    We have a ranch house in a housing development lol
    A ranch house is a style and usually 1 story but the roof is just a normal roof like any other roof. They are not flat

    • @williamlucas4656
      @williamlucas4656 Před 4 lety

      But I do have a lower pitch roof than the British are used to and one can see flat roofed single story homes out west, though I don’t think people would call them ranch style.

  • @sassygrammy1258
    @sassygrammy1258 Před 2 lety

    I have COVID and I am still feeling like 💩 but I am able to sit up for a short length of time. I am revisiting your videos. I especially enjoyed your videos that were taped in Nashville.

  • @macvena
    @macvena Před 4 lety +1

    The apt/condo distinction is true throughout the United States, however in New York City, people often refer to condos as apartments, despite it being own vs rented.

  • @Suzibird307
    @Suzibird307 Před 4 lety +6

    Joel "carefully selected other people". LOLOLOL....love it !!

  • @dorothypaul4642
    @dorothypaul4642 Před 4 lety +6

    So interesting! Thanks J & L ❤

  • @badjer4328
    @badjer4328 Před 4 lety

    -An apartment with stairs is a townhome.
    -A duplex/ triplex/quadplex is a property split with multiple living arrangements.
    -A studio is an apartment that doesn't have any rooms, they don't have to be a crammed small space.
    A housing development after its been around a while is just a neighborhood,

  • @LoudLeo3
    @LoudLeo3 Před 4 lety +5

    Hey guys 👋🏽 I’ve been binging your videos the last couple weeks and just wanted to say I so appreciate your journey and how tenacious you’ve been and so happy I stumbled upon you guys because your so “my vibe” or “up my street” lmao 👍🏼💕 from South West Michigan much love

    • @LoudLeo3
      @LoudLeo3 Před 4 lety +2

      The closest thing we have is flat with stairs would be maybe a duplex which is what I live in. A duplex is the term for a semi detached that you rent rather then own. And yeah roommate = flat mate. I would see it as more person we share rooms with (?) it that makes sense

  • @kimberlyk2295
    @kimberlyk2295 Před 4 lety +5

    Love the topic of this video, fun fun!!
    You guys had me cracking up!!😂😂
    Love you guys!💗🌷

  • @karenmullen3210
    @karenmullen3210 Před 2 lety

    Yes we have bungalows; that usually refers to a very small cozy cottage type place, a little hide away, a love nest for trysts, a romantic getaway, a lake cottage...
    Whereas ranch houses are Usually one level, but can be split level, meaning two or three steps down into the living area or dining area, or couple of steps up to the kitchen or down into the den, couple more to the garage which is usually attached, and they are sprawling long houses so that you can see all of your huge ranch or hacienda can be seen from the long wide windows

  • @kennance115
    @kennance115 Před rokem

    You guys make really good videos.

  • @Baconbreath0652
    @Baconbreath0652 Před 4 lety +11

    A rancher really has nothing to do with the roof it's more that it's all one level. Theres no upstairs or downstairs.

    • @neesie7597
      @neesie7597 Před 4 lety +1

      Agreed i live in a ranch house very spread out but one level.

    • @cargen241
      @cargen241 Před 4 lety +1

      I live in a ranch with a finished basement...we call it a raised ranch ( from the outside it looks like one level)

  • @nogooddeed77
    @nogooddeed77 Před 4 lety +18

    I just moved into a two-floor apartment and we call it a duplex. I'm in NJ.

    • @chantaln6843
      @chantaln6843 Před 4 lety +5

      Rob I : usually, side by side home.

    • @tarynriver
      @tarynriver Před 4 lety

      That’s more of a town house isn’t it

    • @nogooddeed77
      @nogooddeed77 Před 4 lety

      @@tarynriver It is, but they consider it a two floor apartment because we don't own it. There is also no yard or anything

    • @WhatAWonderfulNameItIs
      @WhatAWonderfulNameItIs Před 4 lety

      In DE, a duplex is two houses that share a common wall. When looking at it, it almost looks like one house.

  • @LeavingIslam
    @LeavingIslam Před 4 lety +1

    💙💙❤❤
    I love the triangle above the houses .

  • @laarrsiavelli
    @laarrsiavelli Před 4 lety

    Condominiums are apartments/flats in a building owned by someone privately. Usually real estate firms do this in places like Florida (FL). Apartments are flats owned by a specific company, they get rented out monthly. We call them apartments because they're apart of the building and the insides are usually built alike.

  • @jeanweatherby7864
    @jeanweatherby7864 Před 4 lety +6

    Thanks for making me laugh! I really enjoyed this video. I remember the very first time I heard the word "flat" was when Princess Diana got engaged to Charles and they mentioned she lived in a flat with roommates. I was unsure what a "flat" was. But that was in 1980. I actually love that term now and wish we used it here instead of 'apartment". Much love from Jean xo

    • @lolabear6788
      @lolabear6788 Před 4 lety +3

      Way back when I first heard of an English "flat" it made me think of the shoes called flats. lol Like living in a shoe!

  • @jacob7829
    @jacob7829 Před 4 lety +34

    Apartment Hotel are better known as “bed in breakfast or BnB”

    • @Hunnydee357
      @Hunnydee357 Před 4 lety +5

      Bed and breakfast

    • @grannyweatherwax8005
      @grannyweatherwax8005 Před 4 lety +5

      What they described sounded more like a suite hotel to me. Like a Holiday Inn Express - aimed at business travelers often. Often a bedroom & sitting room with a kitchenette.

    • @ninaradio
      @ninaradio Před 4 lety +1

      I’ve only just started to see apartment hotels in the last few years, and I think they’re likely only in areas with a lot of tourists/visitors and lax laws regarding AirBnBs They’re apartment buildings that are entirely operated as vacation rentals through sites like that. The developers manage to operate a hotel without offering the full range of services you’d usually expect (like daily cleaning) and in many cities they avoid hotel taxes as well because they claim to be apartments that could be rented long term like normal housing (although their rates are really only attractive on a short-term basis). And because the units are all apartment-style, if they need to they could at any time switch quite easily to just renting it out as a normal apartment building. In which case I’m sure that concierge services in the lobby would largely disappear-at most, there would be a line rental agent/building superintendent stationed down there.

    • @brettrabideau4632
      @brettrabideau4632 Před 4 lety +2

      It sounded like a long term hotel rental (rent by the week) to me.

    • @laurenbrunault6902
      @laurenbrunault6902 Před 3 lety +2

      @@brettrabideau4632 --- agree, didn't sound like a Bed & breakfast at all to me.

  • @shellsbellswac1
    @shellsbellswac1 Před 3 lety

    I have a friend that bought a condo that sounds like your Masionette. Where I live in America, a Duplex is essentially a single-family home that is divided in two, creating to Masionettes basically. It's more afforable for city living.

  • @ojaimark
    @ojaimark Před 3 lety

    In the US a bungalow is a one level house with a compact and efficient floor plan. Usually quite small in square footage. They're also frequently built raised a half story up for some reason I've never understood. They were a very very popular affordable housing option in the mid 20th century that really helped explode "suburbia". A great kind of house for someone who just wants a little plot in the burbs to raise a few kids basically. At this point a ranch house is essentially just a big bungalow. Single level but bigger and more sprawling and not raised up at all. It was originally the style of house you would find on a ranch/farm basically so meant for a plot with a little more room to spread out.

  • @krisiglehart3061
    @krisiglehart3061 Před 4 lety +3

    Housing developments are called subdivisions, depending where you live. Some older housing developments don't have names, just the address and street name.

  • @ITSBRYINDY74
    @ITSBRYINDY74 Před 4 lety +18

    We also call a Duplex a “Double”.

  • @jantrevathan-siard8433

    There’s an old song that was a hit in the U.K. but not in the U.S. called “no milk today” by Herman’s Hermits that had that as part of the lyrics “ a terraced house two up two down” therefore the states had no idea what they were singing about. I’m a big British Invasion fan so it took me a lot of research to figure out what they were singing about. Best wishes

  • @lorielizabethwade7505
    @lorielizabethwade7505 Před 4 lety +1

    My parents lived in a "patio home" with other patio homes. I think a patio home is meant for homes that are large, in that they are built upward with 2-3 floors on a very small piece of land, usually in a neighborhood of other patio homes. The other homes and land lots can be somewhat similar or unique in design, depending on the neighborhood. The term is meant for a taller home on a very small parcel of land which is usually designed for little yard upkeep. Of course, the homes are very close together, but still maintain land between each patio home. The term is usually meant for, as the British would say, "up market" homes.

  • @MaryMary-pr4iu
    @MaryMary-pr4iu Před 4 lety +7

    I've always thought condo sounded pretentious! 😄💕
    A duplex : 2 houses put together with one roofline 🤔💕💥

  • @crypticcorgi8280
    @crypticcorgi8280 Před 4 lety +6

    4:35
    Idk why but it is very pleasing to here "tomato" in a British accent.