British Couple Reacts to European vs American Houses | 10 Major Differences

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  • čas přidán 5. 09. 2024

Komentáře • 470

  • @johnpackard1614
    @johnpackard1614 Před rokem +14

    11:31 It actually splashes less the higher the water. Also, less residue left after

    • @themourningstar338
      @themourningstar338 Před rokem +6

      No doubt, it's funny that Europeans think the opposite in literally every video I've seen that mentions the toilet water level (and seem to think our toilets are full up to the top). It's just basic physics, the farther something falls the more velocity it has when it hits....Splash! And having to use the toilet brush after every number two is not appealing to say the least.

    • @runrafarunthebestintheworld
      @runrafarunthebestintheworld Před rokem

      That's interesting. Pfft

    • @Oturan20
      @Oturan20 Před rokem +1

      @@themourningstar338 With a low enough water level the whole turd sticks to the bowl.

  • @cherylflam3250
    @cherylflam3250 Před rokem +82

    Not called walk-in wardrobes. They are walk-in closets. A wardrobe is a piece of furniture. Millie needs a French door refrigerator!!!

    • @dawnpalacios8312
      @dawnpalacios8312 Před rokem +5

      I second with the French door refrigerator. 🥰

    • @l.t.1305
      @l.t.1305 Před rokem +4

      It can also be a collection of clothes

    • @borisbalkan707
      @borisbalkan707 Před rokem +11

      We don't have wardrobes in the U.S. because of all the lions and witches that come with them

    • @SK-lk3iu
      @SK-lk3iu Před rokem

      You have to have a strong back to have a French door fridge. My sister insisted on having one, then (due to her being older and not in shape), she could barely pull the bottom drawer out. I'm also getting older so prefer the 2 door model.

    • @kellysong2256
      @kellysong2256 Před rokem +3

      I've only heard of "wardrobes" being called Armoires in the U.S.

  • @tomgardner2638
    @tomgardner2638 Před rokem +34

    I guess I'm just used to what we have here. I like our forced air furnace/AC setup. The double hung windows with screens, the much bigger 2 door fridge/freezer with cold water and ice right through the door fridges, the very easy to use round door knobs we have, the walk in closets and our commodes that do not require 3 flushes to empty like most European ones. I think those window louvers are in the windows, not outside. If they were outside, a peeper could just lift them to see in. We also have windows with the blinds embedded between the dual panes if you want to pay for them.

    • @anastasia10017
      @anastasia10017 Před rokem +4

      the window shutters are outside and no, you cant just lift them up and peep into someone's house. They are more like security anti theft shutters. I lived in europe and everybody has them.

    • @tomgardner2638
      @tomgardner2638 Před rokem +5

      Yeah, I looked them up, they run in tracks attached to the window, I can see they might be good, for blocking out light and peeper people. Some here, in the states, are actually between the window panes, embedded. They stay clean and dust free as long as the frame stays intact.

  • @karens.5515
    @karens.5515 Před rokem +45

    It's funny to me to hear that "American homes" have such and such. We are as diverse in our home choices as the size of our country. What types of heating and/or cooling we have depends on what the climate is like where we live. Many in the northern states don't have air conditioners. Many, if not most, in the south do not have fireplaces. My home has an electric heat pump that heats and cools, because we have extremes here of 120°F and -11°F! I've lived in this house since '93. The size of our homes depends on which state, which city, which small town, which rural area, the size of our family, our income, etc. There are also many here who are into "tiny homes". I❤️you guys!

    • @theunovanative7640
      @theunovanative7640 Před rokem +10

      I think that Europeans are used too different countries as having different cultures while their own country has the same culture because of size, American is just so big they don't realize that many states have different cultures

    • @ambroseacres
      @ambroseacres Před rokem +5

      I am in the Midwest in a rural area and we heat our home with a wood burning furnace an fireplaces. I have the option to use my propane furnace but I am not willing to pay the cost. We spend the summers cutting and splitting firewood. You are so right…homes are so different here in the US and it all depends on where you are.

    • @daviddodds30
      @daviddodds30 Před rokem +6

      Right, our extreme temperatures in Dallas, Texas range from -2°F/-19C to 113°F/45C, but we have a variety of heating/cooling options that depend upon the age of the home and the income level of the resident. Most of us here have either a natural gas central heating unit combined with a central AC, (of which we have one for each floor of our house), or an electric central heating/AC unit. Meanwhile, when we visit our friends in Seattle, everyone has either no AC or a small split unit AC and usually some small baseboard heaters or wall heaters.

    • @ErinStev64
      @ErinStev64 Před rokem +1

      Actually in the south and SW we do have fireplaces. We even get to use them a few times a year. Ps, I live in Texas and every home I’ve lived in, has had a fireplace.

  • @jonsmith9045
    @jonsmith9045 Před rokem +175

    A bedroom literally can't be called a bedroom legally without a closet where I live.

    • @dennislbrown
      @dennislbrown Před rokem +16

      True in most areas. Here (North Carolina), if you have a wardrobe (furniture) in that closet-less room, that stays with the house, then you can call it a bedroom. That may very state to state.

    • @bedinor
      @bedinor Před rokem +15

      Where I live it can be a bedroom without a closet but it has to have an escapable window to be "habitable".
      Most states don't require closets but some smaller localities do.

    • @pjschmid2251
      @pjschmid2251 Před rokem +9

      Yes I don’t believe it’s necessarily required by law in most states but from a real estate listing perspective they generally will not call something a bedroom unless it contains a closet.

    • @pjschmid2251
      @pjschmid2251 Před rokem +6

      One other thing he did not mention in the video that Americans would find mind blowingly crazy is that most houses and often even apartments in Germany do not have a proper kitchen. There is a room that has all the places to hook up a kitchen but people move with their entire kitchen. I mean stove, sink, cabinets, refrigerator the whole thing is owned by the tenant/homeowner and they take it with them when they leave. Wher I live in the US a house is not considered legally habitable unless it contains a working stove. When I built my house 15 years ago I had to purchase a stove along with the house. I was allowed to upgrade it but I was not allowed to buy it on my own later and have it installed. They could not certify the house as habitable without a working stove. They probably required a sink as well but it wasn’t something I even inquired about but I did inquire about the stove.

    • @cjayj442
      @cjayj442 Před rokem +5

      @@dennislbrown In Arizona, an appraiser won't count it as a bedroom in the valuation unless it has built in closet. It really is funny how each state has its own rules about random things.

  • @billbrasky1288
    @billbrasky1288 Před rokem +24

    I would not trust a toilet mounted on the wall instead of the floor. I’d feel like it’s going to fall off the wall while I’m on it.

  • @y2kmadd
    @y2kmadd Před rokem +15

    They need to compare houses in similar city sizes. Many of these differences were not standard, but random.
    Also, no screens on the windows is insane.

  • @sparc77
    @sparc77 Před rokem +9

    In many states, the heating is central heated air with vents in each room, and you can shut the dampers for rooms that are not occupied.

    • @JP-ur8eg
      @JP-ur8eg Před rokem +5

      You can't beat the comfort of central air!

    • @TheAnnoyingBoss
      @TheAnnoyingBoss Před rokem +1

      I like the ones where the floor heats up and the heat rises. You wake up on the cold days and your toes are on warm tiles.

  • @causticchameleon7861
    @causticchameleon7861 Před rokem +33

    We have incorporated fridges over here in USA made to look like the cabinets but they are extremely high end. Also, some windows but mostly doors have built in blinds that you can adjust open or closed and up or down or just half way up. I love those. Never have to dust the blinds.

    • @HyperWolf
      @HyperWolf Před rokem +2

      I visited a house here in the us that had a giant fridge (6ft/~1.8 meters wide that looked like part of the wall. The handles were hidden in the “wall panel” sides. I wanted one until I learned the smaller version would cost about 10 thousand dollars. I never even asked what the full version would cost. 😂

    • @rich7447
      @rich7447 Před rokem

      @@HyperWolf We have the Thermador 30" fridge/freezer built in columns with stainless panels. The combination gives us a 5' wide unit. We bought them along with a 48" range (plus 54" range hood) and a couple of dishwashers (one was free when you bought the fridge and freezer) about 3 years ago while we were building the house. Because it was a package we got a pretty good discount, but everything is an add on when it comes to the refrigerator and freezer. Each unit was about $6000, plus two door panels at $500 each and two handles at $250 a piece. Buy the time you add delivery the fridge/freezer combo is about $15k. The 36" units are about $300 more per unit. Kitchen appliances came to about $30,000.

    • @HyperWolf
      @HyperWolf Před rokem

      @@rich7447 Now I’m glad I didn’t ask in the moment. I don’t even want to imagine the face I would have made… Thanks for giving me a better idea about how much it costs with everything involved and not just the basic initial costs. Maybe one day I’ll be able to afford something like that.

    • @rich7447
      @rich7447 Před rokem

      @@HyperWolf Happy to help. These went in house number 6, two of which were modified spec builds, for us. We had a good idea of what we liked and didn't like, so we bought a building lot (just over 2 acres) and custom built. During a build the extra cost of higher end appliances doesn't look as bad. I was a little annoyed when the dealer wanted $600 to deliver everything. It felt like I was buying a car and the list of extra charges were endless.

    • @chica9781
      @chica9781 Před rokem

      There are several different houses and number of floors in US houses. I lived in one that had 4 floors. The regular toilets have about the same amount of water as shown here, many have less and higher pressure for water conservation. They do not go to the top…. Yuck. Window coverings vary but you can purchase doors and windows with the blinds inside the 2 layers of glass. I’ve seen some that automatically switch to a “block out” color, no window coverings. You have to get the fridge with the water and ice dispenser on the outside of the door. Never need to open the door to access either.

  • @LisaMarshall0
    @LisaMarshall0 Před rokem +56

    The water in toilets in th U.S. are not filled to the top as I think you guys are imagining. Generally the water may be filled to where you originally thought the German toilet was filled(but turned out it was much less) or less depending on the toilet and local ordinances.
    Keyless entry on our doors has become very popular here.

  • @timreno72
    @timreno72 Před rokem +8

    I used to work for the City Sewer Dept. and I'll tell you low flow toilets (etc.) are not helping to save water much if at all. Areas with 'modern' low-flow plumbing have more problems with plugging and soap/grease build up because of stagnant flow. Sure it's a feel good short lived moment for the home owner but in reality it takes THOUSANDS of gallons of water to free up blocked lines to keep them flowing. The worst lines we encountered with solid waste build up were industrial areas due to lack of showers, sinks etc.

    • @suem6004
      @suem6004 Před rokem +2

      My plumber said the same thing as he replaced our laterals

    • @timreno72
      @timreno72 Před rokem +1

      @@suem6004 This is just me speaking but what I personally do once a year is fill up every possible home source (sinks, tubs, toilets) and release them all at once to flush out you lateral. Also beware of root aggressive trees/shrubs; a good local nursery will tell you what to avoid.

    • @virginiarobbins7539
      @virginiarobbins7539 Před rokem +1

      It takes at least twice to flush just the paper with the pee even.. Suu they aren't saving anything.
      Now over there if they flush that hard like that one did then that wouldn't be an issue

  • @aniE1869
    @aniE1869 Před rokem +25

    My grandparents house had a radiator. But it was built in 1900 and it still has a coal shoot from when it was coal heated.

  • @pjschmid2251
    @pjschmid2251 Před rokem +11

    Question for any Germans out there or Brits as well. How can you not heat some of the rooms in your house during the winter particularly if it’s something like a kitchen or a bathroom that has water? At least where I live in the US in Northern Illinois that would be a recipe for disaster in the form of frozen pipes and flooding. The way I control how warm or cool a room is is by opening or closing the heating vents in that room. That way even if I leave a room cooler some little bit of heat will get into the room and still keep it from getting below freezing which is a real possibility here.

    • @MarySpain1958
      @MarySpain1958 Před rokem +2

      Guess they have milder Winters don't worry about pipes freezing and bursting. In VA .it's a concern

    • @aaronburdon221
      @aaronburdon221 Před rokem

      @@MarySpain1958 Same in Indiana. It gets COLD around here sometimes. Not as bad as Wisconsin or Minnesota but still pretty nasty. I think the coldest i've ever seen was -12 F (but we average 5-20 degrees F during winter) We had to literally put a heater under the house to keep the pipes from freezing and just curl under the blankets while our space heaters kept the pipes from exploding.

    • @NarwahlGaming
      @NarwahlGaming Před rokem

      I'm in Michigan.
      I close off half my house in winter with no issues except I have one bathroom at the very far end of the house.
      I keep a small space heater in there set to the lowest setting, which keeps it in the low 40s.
      I only have to do that for about a week a year when it drops below zero.

    • @pacmanc8103
      @pacmanc8103 Před rokem

      Given that heat rises, everything downstairs needs to be closed off from upstairs or all the heat just rises to the top floor. Not a lot of ‘open plans’.

  • @audisnewbeginning8616
    @audisnewbeginning8616 Před rokem +13

    In our former home in Germany we had the those blinds usually metal inside the windows. Basically inside double paned glass

  • @johnhelwig8745
    @johnhelwig8745 Před rokem +13

    Couple of things. In the U.S. the deadbolt is used to lock the door, and the doorknob or lever is used to open it. Replacing the deadbolt with a keypad is a godsend, you can unlock without a key.
    In Germany, when you move house, you take the kitchen... cabinets, countertops, appliances and all. That is probably why he has an integrated fridge/cabinet.
    U.S. toilets have more water by design. There is a trapway (P-trap) built into the unit. It is designed to hold water, and the water in the bowl need to be high enough to fill this trap. The function of a P-trap is to trap sewer gases from entering the room. BTW. Water usually fills only half the bowl and are limited to 6 liters a flush.

    • @JustMe-dc6ks
      @JustMe-dc6ks Před rokem +3

      Yes. It’s the sudden influx of water into the bowl that causes a standard American residential toilet to flush/drain. Dumping a big pan of water in will do the same.

    • @TheAnnoyingBoss
      @TheAnnoyingBoss Před rokem +1

      It is nice to be able to unlock without a key.

  • @barryfletcher7136
    @barryfletcher7136 Před rokem +10

    NO, toilets in the USA are NOT "full to the top" with water. I have no idea where this idea came from but it's not true. Toilet bowls in the USA are from 1/3 to at most 1/2 full of water.

  • @gr8t1bobo
    @gr8t1bobo Před rokem +16

    Here in USA I think alot if not most modern homes have keyless / keypad doors. It's great for when we lived in another state and rented our house to people. We just gave them the combination then after renting we could change the code.

    • @TheAnnoyingBoss
      @TheAnnoyingBoss Před rokem

      I like how when the doorbell battery starts dying it tells me. I had an experience with one doorbell it just sounded like demons in the matrix growling at me. There's lots of settings with the doorbells where you can make it whistle at people when they show up or make them glow at night so people see the button. It feels sorta like a video game because growing up a doorbell to me was always an old school ding dong button. These new ones ding dong, they wee woo. They doo doodle loo do. Most of the time You ignore it totally the main thing is when everyone's asleep at 3am and you're chilling on your phone if some lunatic or crackhead comes to your door you can see what they're doing

  • @bagnome
    @bagnome Před rokem +13

    In the U.S. wall mounted/tankless toilets are commonly found in public restrooms. Whereas even in modern houses, toilets are typically mounted on the floor and have a tank. I think the tankless ones require higher water pressure than what typically enters the average American home.

    • @emmasmith1564
      @emmasmith1564 Před rokem

      You can buy pressurized toilets here. We replaced all the cheap, builder toilets in our house after the US passed the maximum flush of 1.6 gallons of water. They never clog but may scare you the first time you flush.

    • @rich7447
      @rich7447 Před rokem

      Tankless macerating toilets are common in larger class A RVs. They have the big advantage of using a small diameter hose as a sewer line.

  • @cyndialver2130
    @cyndialver2130 Před rokem +3

    Deliberately replaced door locks requiring a key to lock and unlock the door from inside when I moved in. I had visions of trying to find the key, the RIGHT key, then fit it in the keyhole to unlock the door and escape during a fire when seconds are critical. Dead bolt locks are infinitely better.

  • @beckycaughel7557
    @beckycaughel7557 Před rokem +37

    One of the things he didn’t mention and it’s probably because he’s talking about houses as opposed to apartments or flats. I used to watch a CZcams channel about an American living in Germany and one of the major differences was their kitchens. When you rented an apartment in Germany it didn’t come with a kitchen! You actually had to buy your own kitchens ( refrigerators, stoves ovens sinks, counters and cupboards everything except the walls and floor) and then have them installed into your apartment a whole lot of people that were from Germany and maybe elsewhere in Europe said that that made so much more sense and they liked it. I can’t imagine that because what if the kitchen that I buy fits the one apartment but doesn’t fit my next apartment ? where does one go about storing a whole kitchen?!

    • @MarySpain1958
      @MarySpain1958 Před rokem +3

      Guess you selll them piece by piece IDK 😶

    • @borisbalkan707
      @borisbalkan707 Před rokem +8

      Sounds awful. Tell them it's 2022 not 1822.

    • @Markle2k
      @Markle2k Před rokem +1

      It was a similar situation in Paris. My best friend’s sister had to basically part out her apartment when she moved. Wardrobe to kitchen. Even the lighting. The apartment came with no electrical lighting, just bare wires in the ceiling.

    • @NarwahlGaming
      @NarwahlGaming Před rokem +3

      @@Markle2k I can't imagine being an 18 year old kid in that situation.
      You get your first big people job. You plunk down your entire life's savings (about $1,300 at that point) on rent and, then, have to plunk down another few grand on appliances and fixtures?
      I bet the "appliance debt" is just as bad as "college debt" is in the U.S.

    • @beckycaughel7557
      @beckycaughel7557 Před rokem

      @@Markle2k I’m surprised the landlord would be brave enough to allow that. I mean if I had to install my own lighting, I would electrocute myself and burn down the whole place!!

  • @arrobrewer2730
    @arrobrewer2730 Před rokem +3

    The shade on the window is actually sandwiched between the glass. Yea no dusting

  • @SuperBigblue19
    @SuperBigblue19 Před rokem +6

    Where I live only real old houses have radiant heating & newer ones you can have zone heating. Here most appliances stay with the home & are even a selling point because bathrooms & kitchen upgrades are a worthwhile selling investments here. By code here you can't call a bedroom a bedroom if it doesn't have a closet.

    • @TheAnnoyingBoss
      @TheAnnoyingBoss Před rokem

      Man I hate stupid regulations. In my county I would have no limits. You call it a bedroom or you call your extra bedroom the closet you do whatever you want man we would have the most free real estate in the market. Some guy across the street probably living in a teepee and his stock portfolio doing really well his teepee have 3 floors. No permits. If it falls and kills somebody that's their fault if it was due to faulty unsafe construction. "It hAs To hAvE A ClOSet" shoot I hope Karen doesn't become the inspector because if she ever comes to the house I might live in if there was no limits it would be a bit peculiar. I saw a guy who lived in a lake and he wanted to build.a water slide into the lake and they told him mhe couldn't have any none perfectly attached structures to his house so he nailed it to his deck. Who cares man, pound the legs of that thing in real deep so it couldn't fly away in a hurricane boom who cares man

  • @marieneu264
    @marieneu264 Před rokem +2

    It’s common for us to leave our fridge and other appliances when we move, whether they’re integrated or not.

  • @mrdankie3953
    @mrdankie3953 Před rokem +27

    With toilets in the USA it really depends on where you live plus some other things. Some states have passed laws on how much water a toilet can use (or something like that). So some states have low water toilets that are absolute garbage while others have a classic toilet with a high water level.
    Also it really depends on the people who build the house/business. It's cheaper putting in a low water toilet than a classic one.

    • @causticchameleon7861
      @causticchameleon7861 Před rokem +4

      DeKalb County in Georgia requires low flow everything. Such a pain in the rear when selling them. But it’s only that county not the whole state.

    • @yia01
      @yia01 Před rokem

      @@causticchameleon7861 u can alway get a pressurize toilet tank, itll pass the gallon per flush.

    • @causticchameleon7861
      @causticchameleon7861 Před rokem +3

      @@yia01 Which is ridiculous. It’s the only county in metro Atlanta with such regulations. They will not put the water in the new owners name or switch it on unless the faucets and toilets have been verified low flow. That is my problem with it. That is one reason no one wants to move to DeKalb county. Dictatorial mismanaged county government. It’s a disgrace.

    • @rich7447
      @rich7447 Před rokem +2

      As of 1992 all toilets sold in the US can use no more than 1.6 gallons per flush. Energy Policy Act of 1992.
      I don't really see the point since I pump water out of a hole in my backyard and dump it into a septic system in my front yard.

    • @ccricers
      @ccricers Před rokem +1

      I can't believe King of the Hill did an episode about the complaints of low water toilets but if any show can pull it off it's them.

  • @phukyerpheefees
    @phukyerpheefees Před rokem +5

    I've never seen a toilet with the bowl more than half full anywhere I've been in America in the 38 years I've been alive.

  • @tammystark6364
    @tammystark6364 Před rokem +19

    The blinds are not on outside they are in between the window panes. Very cool...we do have them in the US just not as common. Good thing about them is no dust. It just can't get to them

    • @kevinduveneck1504
      @kevinduveneck1504 Před rokem

      I had thought of getting blinds that were between the thermopanes because of the dust and also they will not blow around when the window is open. However, with the crank out windows, (casement style) if the window is cranked open the blinds don't provide much privacy, especially if it is dark outside and you have lights turned on in the room.

  • @Lyrabela
    @Lyrabela Před rokem +3

    Two things I found interesting coming from the midwest, houses don't have a typical style of garage per se. I've seen connected and stand alones, along with a ton of the far less popular carports.
    Another is the idea of not heating rooms in the winter! I actually have a device to plug into the sockets to help warm up pipes bc heating sometimes isn't enough in some rooms with not enough insulation. I couldn't imagine going all winter without using heat in some rooms

    • @NarwahlGaming
      @NarwahlGaming Před rokem

      I have an older home where I can shut off parts in the winter.
      The bad part is, one of my two bathrooms is in the "cold" part so, I have to have a small space heater, set to the lowest setting, in there on the sub-zero days.
      It's not too bad, though. Sub-zero days are usually less than a week a year.

    • @Lyrabela
      @Lyrabela Před rokem

      @@NarwahlGaming just a weird concept yo me lol bc even at 23F degrees pipes can freeze and that's more costly than heating. Plus I can just close vents to the inside rooms that aren't used as much, which allows air through still, but pushes air to other areas of the house.

    • @NarwahlGaming
      @NarwahlGaming Před rokem +1

      @@Lyrabela Yeah. I guess the difference is; I don't have central heat.
      I heat my house with a pellet stove so, no forces air through vents.
      I have replaced many a pipe, in my day, but, not in 20 years or so since I got my system figured out.
      5 degrees Fahrenheit seems to be the magic number where I have to start thinking about the heater.
      And, it's on an Alexa plug device so, if I'm at work and forget - _bloopity bloop!_ 😁

    • @Lyrabela
      @Lyrabela Před rokem

      @@NarwahlGaming that makes sense! Always interesting how much of a difference the type of climate, heating/ventilation really changes things!

  • @MarieFara
    @MarieFara Před rokem +2

    I definitely would opt for the windows, but I would also want a screen.

  • @brandonaston2261
    @brandonaston2261 Před rokem +2

    Thats kind of funny they don’t have enough room to have a big fridge, or walk in closets or large yards but can have a shower separate from the bathtub.

  • @dynamodan8216
    @dynamodan8216 Před rokem +3

    While our toilets have fuller bowls, they are generally designed so that 1 flush while clogged will still fit. Just don't try a 2nd one right away.

  • @melenedezssss
    @melenedezssss Před rokem +2

    In California, attached garage is very common but homes built before the 60s, it's common to have detached garages or the garage may be in the backyard with a extra long driveway. Detached garages are being brought back in many larger middle & upper end homes.

    • @braemtes23
      @braemtes23 Před rokem +1

      California's climate makes it easy to walk to your home from the detached garage. In the North, the weather is so brutal in the winter, being able to unload your groceries from the garage directly into the house (as opposed to across the icy sidewalks) is safer and warmer.

  • @rgood66
    @rgood66 Před rokem +1

    I modify all my new toilets to 5 gallons, where I live water is not an issue at all. My doors have either fingerprint, keypad, Wi-Fi or a key to open. I do like the blinds in the German windows, but it will not work with decorative grids. I also use heat pumps for heating and cooling, that are Mini splits one for almost each room.

  • @adventureridergirl
    @adventureridergirl Před rokem +7

    I'm a dual US/Italian citizen (my kids inherited my Italian citizenship from me) and my kids are gonna be shocked when I finally get around to taking them to Italy (They're 3 and 19 months, so there really hasn't been a good time to travel since they've been born). My house in the States is 4,000 sqft (372 m2) while my house in Italy is only 1,200 sqft (111 m2). Oh, and the house in the States has an attached three car garage while the house in Italy has street parking only (but I don't keep a car there, so it doesn't matter).

    • @LancerX916
      @LancerX916 Před rokem +2

      Going to be really shocked now that the party of Mussolini is in charge.

    • @adventureridergirl
      @adventureridergirl Před rokem +4

      @@LancerX916, the "right wing" in Italy would be left wing in the States, calm down.

    • @shawnanderson6313
      @shawnanderson6313 Před rokem

      @@adventureridergirl Wow what an ignorant comment. The party in charge is Brothers of Italy. Their platform is are conservatism, nationalism,nativism, Euroscepticism,and opposition to immigration. This nothing like the Republicans party.

    • @lightsalt8530
      @lightsalt8530 Před rokem

      Wow, I can't even decide which of these 2 pointless comments that have zero to do with the video is more stupid. The parrot or the liar 🤔

  • @willlane2388
    @willlane2388 Před rokem +3

    As anywhere I'm sure, it depends on where you live. In the south very few have basements and are more of the pier and beam or slab style foundation, while up north many people have basements.

  • @LadyWinterHawk14
    @LadyWinterHawk14 Před rokem +1

    I love it when you guys are just natural

  • @chrisjohnson1599
    @chrisjohnson1599 Před rokem +2

    In America, it depends on where the house is built. We have houses that are built right up against each other in the city and much further apart on a larger lot in the country. Older homes in America have radiant heat, some have wall-heaters, some have central heating, and some have individual heaters which are electric and are in every room.
    All American bedrooms must have a closet and two points of entry, one must be a door and the other can either be a door or window.
    When I was in Denmark, our bathroom had the toilet in the shower, which was a walk-in shower about twice the size as the one shown, with a tile floor, no shower pan.

    • @TheAnnoyingBoss
      @TheAnnoyingBoss Před rokem +1

      Is this an indication of too little or too much fiber in the diet? Tile floor sounds a little difficult to truely clean to s higher degree

  • @yugioht42
    @yugioht42 Před rokem

    Door knobs or handles are more common here but newer ones are either fingerprint controlled or code controlled although keys are still around. It’s just an added security. At least you have what you need.

  • @aveemarie268
    @aveemarie268 Před rokem +1

    My favorite thing was the blinds. I have cats and never thought of that. So cool. 😎 Blinds are too expensive in my house anymore😏

  • @robinmills8675
    @robinmills8675 Před rokem +7

    That toiler water level looks just like it does in the US. I don't know why people think it is higher in the US.
    MILLIE, when you get your American refrigerator, don't get the side by side. They aren't wide enough for a large pizza. Get the French doors with the freezer on the bottom.

    • @anastasia10017
      @anastasia10017 Před rokem +2

      american toilets have more water. european toilets have barely any water in them. I much prefer american toilets.

  • @colleenmonfross4283
    @colleenmonfross4283 Před rokem +4

    There is nothing I like better about German homes as opposed to American homes. I really hate the windows in Germany and I can't imagine living with that refrigerator and no freezer! Also, the water in the toilets in America does NOT fill the bowl but probably does have more than in Europe. We are switching over to high efficiency toilets now.

    • @TheAnnoyingBoss
      @TheAnnoyingBoss Před rokem +1

      I hope by high efficiency you don't mean one of those crap ones that clog up easily. Because people say we need to conserve water when water is more abundant than dirt

  • @SolivagantCraig
    @SolivagantCraig Před rokem +2

    the blinds aren't external, they're actually sandwiched between layers of glass.

  • @Gonzo617
    @Gonzo617 Před rokem +5

    not everywhere tho. i am from Boston. you can literally reach out your window and touch your neighbors window.

    • @hrussell9677
      @hrussell9677 Před rokem

      Depends where in Boston. Some neighborhoods have more space than that.

    • @Gonzo617
      @Gonzo617 Před rokem

      @@hrussell9677 true. south boston i was in a highrise. east boston was houses stacked on top of each other. in lowell half the city is stacked. the other half is open

  • @Stew2130
    @Stew2130 Před rokem +2

    When we lived in Germany, nobody told me about the windows. The first time I opened it and the window started to tip inward, I thought I'd broken it!

  • @michelle32855
    @michelle32855 Před rokem

    From what I understand, the lack of closets goes way back to a time when homes were taxed by the number of doors they had. So, a regular closet would cost more, so people went with free standing closets.

  • @SGlitz
    @SGlitz Před rokem +1

    Most places I have been in, there is a door lock and a dead bolt. I even have a security door on my house.

  • @plebiansociety
    @plebiansociety Před rokem

    11:30 The longer the drop, the bigger the splash. It kind of balances out. Also on big ones, it'll just sorta slide into the water instead plopping down into low water.

  • @supportsydney
    @supportsydney Před rokem +4

    Hi! I always love watching you both, but this was by far my fave! Watching you giggle made me laugh too! Oh & I’m glad you didn’t bleep out that one certain bit 🤣 By the way, I’m 🇬🇧 half Brit half American 🇺🇸 born & raised in the US. 😊

  • @lolacorinne5384
    @lolacorinne5384 Před rokem +1

    If you close the lid before you flush (which is recommended), you won’t get any splashing.

  • @dr_waffle_house
    @dr_waffle_house Před rokem +1

    It makes me laugh so hard every time they mention the water in U.S. toilets "going all the way to the top" 😂

  • @anastasia10017
    @anastasia10017 Před rokem

    roll down metal shutters are common on the Continent. We lived in Switzerland and all apartments have them - cheap places and fancy places all have them.

  • @manxkin
    @manxkin Před rokem +2

    It is NOT common for houses to separated by a kilometer or so in the U.S.! So, my American house is an old 1929 bungalow. Single story, detached garage, two bedrooms one bath. The houses are close together. I can look easily into my neighbor’s house if the curtains were open (not that I would!). I do like those windows but they would not look appropriate in my old bungalow.

  • @livinglife8333
    @livinglife8333 Před rokem +1

    In our state a room must have a closet or they are not counted as a bedroom. You think not a big deal but it is, that means you can’t list your home for sale with those listed. Meaning if you have 4 bedrooms and only one has a closet you must list it as a one bedroom.

  • @gmunden1
    @gmunden1 Před rokem +1

    Split-level houses depends on the area. Most houses have two or more floors. I have lived in Europe, and , in particularly, Germany. The house where I stayed was separate, so that also depends.

  • @calvinc7548
    @calvinc7548 Před rokem +1

    So many houses I've lived in and been in, in the US have the same ceilings (known as 1 and a 1/4 story or 1 and a half story house) depending on how far up the wall the angle is.

  • @catherinesearles1194
    @catherinesearles1194 Před 20 dny

    Please clarify a bungalow. Here they often small 3 room cabin type home. 3 rooms not 3 bedrooms, deep in the country (woods,/forest) using well water and maybe a generator for electricity, within walking distance of a lake.

  • @brandonaston2261
    @brandonaston2261 Před rokem +1

    It really doesn’t have to do with size. Just how big a housing complex is. There are housing complexes where each house is only a couple feet apart due to them trying to squeeze as many houses as they can on the lot.

  • @richminor3081
    @richminor3081 Před rokem

    I think the window blinds you like are in between the panes of glass . So they are neither inside nor outside !

  • @phillippiuma724
    @phillippiuma724 Před rokem +1

    you guys shouldn't worry about apologizing for pausing the videos...these videos all exist on their own...people are always free to just watch the original video...the whole reason to watch them here is your comments and banter...

  • @cherylsorrell74
    @cherylsorrell74 Před rokem +10

    Very interesting! I love these videos about the differences between America and other countries ❤️

  • @dave8599
    @dave8599 Před rokem +1

    Single floor is nice as you age or become injured and stairs become a barrier.

  • @petestaint8312
    @petestaint8312 Před rokem +2

    Both of you killed me! 😄

  • @isisred
    @isisred Před rokem

    When I moved to England in the 80’s our refrigerator couldn’t fit through the front door without 1st removing the door. And it couldn’t fit in our kitchen so we left it in the entry hall, by our stairs. The movers moved it last because they didn’t know what it was.

  • @jamesjones8482
    @jamesjones8482 Před rokem +1

    I'm now living in the 5th house I've owned in my 72 years in Texas. The commentator said that it wasn't uncommon for U.S. houses to be a separated by a kilometer, or so? A kilometer is equivalent to 0.6214 miles. I don't know of too many people that live in a house more than a 1/2 mile from another. (I do have relatives that owned farms/ranches that were miles from their neighbors.) My largest lot(& house) was on the west end of Galveston Island. It was a 1/3 acre lot, and the houses on both sides, were maybe 100 feet away. My current(widower) house of 3 bedrooms/2 bathrooms, is approximately 20 feet from neighbors houses on both sides. This is a relatively new subdivision(10 yrs) that might fit the definition of community living, within a small Texas town.

  • @stephenbaker5431
    @stephenbaker5431 Před rokem

    The window blinds are inbetween the panes of glass that make up a thermal window.

  • @Tommyturbo1981
    @Tommyturbo1981 Před rokem

    I like the windows. The metal that slides up and down that gives you more safety. The only issue is, I use air conditioners that go into the windows. I don't have central air

  • @dbsagacious
    @dbsagacious Před rokem +16

    I literally want James to get her a damn giant fridge more than i want anything in my own life lol

  • @melenedezssss
    @melenedezssss Před rokem +2

    Older homes in the US that still have old toilets, are more likely to have toilets with little water. The concern of a half filled toilet over flowing really isn't that much of a concern unless you try to flush a toilet that's already fill. The way they work is beneath the rim of the toilet where the seat rests, are many holes that release the water that causes the swirl effect. Once the water reaches those holes, there's equilibrium of water pressure that causes the water from continuing to flow.

  • @somedayDefect
    @somedayDefect Před rokem

    I like hearing your comments especially when it's comparison videos. I also don't mind you pausing the video

  • @k.g.8957
    @k.g.8957 Před rokem +1

    I lived in Germany for 6 years. Had heated floors. Loved that feature

  • @ivyrose779
    @ivyrose779 Před rokem

    A lot of newer or upgraded central AC/heat systems in the US have zones so you can heat or cool different rooms based on the specific need. I didn’t realize that American refrigerators were so much different than everyone else’s until I watched you guys!

  • @timpolchow8395
    @timpolchow8395 Před rokem

    The phrase for toilet water splashing back is
    “Poseidon’s Kiss”

  • @thesmokypurr
    @thesmokypurr Před rokem

    Get some houseplants and sunlight goin in the area you stream from in your new house, that would be lit, with ferns or your favorite plants behind you lol

  • @jstmez
    @jstmez Před rokem +1

    Don't like radiators. They take up a lot of space and the one place I lived with them, the hot pipe supplying it could be touched easily so babies and toddlers had to be watched constantly. It was an older home so more modern ones may be safer.

  • @GenXfrom75
    @GenXfrom75 Před rokem +1

    Those windows in Germany! Love those! So easy to clean!

  • @shellysuepearce3993
    @shellysuepearce3993 Před rokem +2

    Oh Lord. I would be locked out all the dang time! Lmao

  • @MrGlenspace
    @MrGlenspace Před rokem +2

    You can get those German windows in AMERICA. Plus you get screens to keep bugs out.

  • @Treasacello
    @Treasacello Před rokem +1

    It's a casement window, meaning it's double paned with a space between. You can get blinds installed in custom casement windows so you never need to buy blinds again. These are semi-modern, within the last 30 years or so. (if you'd like to see them in action in the US, look for a Pella store- and no, I'm not affiliated, but at one time I really wanted to replace all my double paned windows!)

  • @PenelopeFrank
    @PenelopeFrank Před rokem +2

    I’ve suggested to several reactors to check out the Dollar Princesses. I didn’t know about this part of history between England & America. Fascinating.

  • @paigeharrison3909
    @paigeharrison3909 Před rokem +3

    I guess our house is typically American by most standards. We live in 13 acres, but we are in rural Texas, so our plot is actually one of the smaller ones. Of course most of our neighbors have cattle or run deer leases. ( for deer hunting) It's 4 bedroom with 3 bathrooms. Right now there are only 4 of us living here, but throughout the years we've sometimes packed as many as 10 people living here. It's an old house, and did actually have central air conditioning, but a storm a few years ago collapsed the old deck on the unit and crushed it, so we now rely on several window units. One in each bedroom and one in the kitchen/ breakfast area. The den and dining room we don't bother with because we never use them anymore. I occupy the master bedroom, so I have the most closet space, 2 walk in closets. Plus I have a small office/sitting room attached. The rest of the bedrooms are pretty standard. It's a good thing we don't have those low ceilings, seeing we have twins who are 6'6" living here. Kitchen wise we have a standard American refrigerator, plus a big chest freezer. Comes in handy since the grocery store is a bit of a drive. Hell, one of my doctors is 130 mile round trip. We also have that standard American convenience, a garbage disposal in the sink. And American toilets are only about half full, not up to the brim. Unfortunately I don't have that common European convenience, the bidet.
    Oh, I'd never open a window here without a screen. We have a creek (slow flowing) on the property and it's a wonderful mosquito breeding ground. I dare not walk outside in the evening without insect repellent on.

    • @NarwahlGaming
      @NarwahlGaming Před rokem

      As someone who's lived by himself for 15 years, 4 people in a house sounds like a nightmare.
      I couldn't imagine 10! 😂

    • @TheAnnoyingBoss
      @TheAnnoyingBoss Před rokem

      I lose all respect for any house as soon as I know it has a bidet

  • @sandragarner3913
    @sandragarner3913 Před rokem +1

    My son was stationed in Germany for 4 yrs and the thing about the closets was one of the unusual. About the blinds we have blinds between two sheets of glass. They don’t get dirty and you adjust them from inside. The toilet, I wonder about how difficult it is to work on? Just wondering. Our water level in our toilet is about the same as you were talking about. The newer ones!!

  • @paulamcdonald6568
    @paulamcdonald6568 Před rokem +2

    As an American I don’t care for any of the listed German homes. I mean I love super tall ceilings but with our summer heat & winter below zero temperatures it’s not very feasible. 😁🥰

  • @JP-ur8eg
    @JP-ur8eg Před rokem +1

    The toilet water level is way exaggerated its probably only a quarter to maybe a third full but definitely not near the top of the bowl and American bathrooms are all different depending on when your neighborhood was built and also how expensive your home is. There are many different styles and types found throughout the USA but goes for many of the things listed.

  • @agdtec
    @agdtec Před rokem

    American toilets are 1.28 gpf/4.8 lpf. For new installations to reduce water waste. The thing I like the most is the windows, and I have seen them here with insect screens. But they are very expensive.

  • @ambroseacres
    @ambroseacres Před rokem +2

    I am in rural US and we heat our home with a wood burning furnace. We even have a wood burning cooktop stove in our kitchen as well as an electric stove. I love homes with character. New/modern homes are not my cup of tea!

    • @NarwahlGaming
      @NarwahlGaming Před rokem +1

      You have an indoor wood burning furnace or, one of those outdoor, stand-alone units?
      I used to have an indoor fireplace as my only heat but, splitting wood got old, fast.
      I upgraded to a wood pellet stove.
      The gas company was installing new lines down our road and came knocking, asking if I wanted a hook up.
      I said no.
      He asked how I was getting heat - since I didn't have a visible propane tank outside.
      I told him "Wood pellets" and he said, "You can't do that! It's not reliable. What if the power goes out?"
      I'm, like, "Really? What happens to your furnace if the power goes out?"
      "Oh, yeah..." 😂
      I was expecting a visit from the county after that for "concerns" but, they probably told him to beat it if he reported me.

    • @ambroseacres
      @ambroseacres Před rokem +1

      @@NarwahlGaming It is an indoor wood burning, full house furnace. We have 2 wood stove fireplace inserts…one in the kitchen and one in the living room. I don’t like my bedroom heated so we usually only use the fireplaces. We haven’t used the whole house furnace in a few years. We have propane for our water heater so when we do fill the tank, it lasts about 2 years. Pellet stoves are great! Splitting wood does get old but my in laws are retired and get bored so they come over and split wood pretty frequently to stay active. We had one evening where the power did go out and we were fine with the fireplaces and we could even cook with our stove if we needed to. I wouldn’t hook up either if they were offering lines to our house.

  • @lindaclark7868
    @lindaclark7868 Před rokem

    Near Philly or in Philly there are row houses. I grew up in a 3 floor row house. In the suburbs away from cities there are 1 or 2 floor homes.

  • @RayWhiting
    @RayWhiting Před rokem +2

    Nooo..... toilets in America typically fill halfway up to the rim. It does NOT fill to the rim. The only way your bottom gets wet is if you fail to put the seat down first ... like when you're drunk, or maybe four years old. :-)

  • @edg8535
    @edg8535 Před rokem +1

    On the original video, someone from Germany told me he was wrong about them not having freezers. Also, in the US a large number of houses built before the 60's, you will find the slanted ceiling on the second floors, or third floor on the large houses.

  • @marchendrickson2382
    @marchendrickson2382 Před rokem

    That window design in southern Louisiana...NIGHTMARE SCENARIO. You don't wanna think about the amount of mosquitos that would be in your house and eating you alive.

  • @coldcoma
    @coldcoma Před rokem

    In the US its actually part of the building code. If you want to advertise a house as having 2 bedrooms, each of those bedrooms must have a closet and a window.

  • @yugioht42
    @yugioht42 Před rokem

    Heaters are weird as technically radiators still are around but only in cities that run on steam. Florida is not on that system. New York, Chicago, Boston basically anywhere in the north are on that system. It’s why you saw the chimneys in the street as they were flushing out that system for routine checks and fixing what needed to get fixed. So the city puts the chimneys in during the summer to prevent it from happening slowly taking them away during autumn to slowly get the system back up and running for winter. It’s a ton of work every year even spring you see these. Florida fortunately is on central heat but it doesn’t mean we don’t use electric heaters when it gets cold. It used to gas or propane but the dangerous CO issues really changed everything to electric as it’s much safer.

  • @davidc1450
    @davidc1450 Před rokem

    Most of the house in the area of New Jersey where I live, most houses are 2 floors. I have seen single floor houses being bought and converted to 2 floors.

  • @AxelFoleyDetroitLions
    @AxelFoleyDetroitLions Před rokem +1

    I think those blinds are in-between the window planes

  • @jlpack62
    @jlpack62 Před rokem +34

    All American subs should send Millie a photo of our refrigerators. Our toilet water level is not as high as is presumed by many in Europe.
    I think that I'd choose the German windows to add to my American home. I really like the outside rolling shade for them.

    • @daviddodds30
      @daviddodds30 Před rokem +1

      I think the shade is between the layers of glass. We have something similar available in our more expensive windows.

    • @houseofaction
      @houseofaction Před rokem +1

      outside shades make no sense, anyone can just open the shades

    • @rich7447
      @rich7447 Před rokem

      @@daviddodds30 The shade is between the glass. We have something very similar on our side door.

    • @pacmanc8103
      @pacmanc8103 Před rokem

      @@rich7447 The shade isn’t between glass - the shade is metal and held within a frame that is attached to the window. Shades like this are great for blocking direct sunlight and are widely used in homes throughout the Middle East like the UAE and Saudi Arabia. They are also good for keeping out dust during dust storms. Often, they are controlled with a remote control. And, no, a person cannot move them up or down from the outside.

    • @pacmanc8103
      @pacmanc8103 Před rokem

      @@houseofaction They aren’t flimsy shades made of some fabric. They are metal and are fitted in a frame. They’re often controlled with a remote, but this guy’s isn’t. The cannot be opened or moved by a person standing outside.

  • @psylinx
    @psylinx Před rokem

    I really liked the outside window curtains.

  • @dave8599
    @dave8599 Před rokem +1

    In some American cities a bedroom must have a closet to be considered a bedroom.

  • @anastasia10017
    @anastasia10017 Před rokem +3

    That integrated fridge is not common in the US. It exists but it is usually in very expensive homes of millionaires who hired interior decorators to do up their kitchens. Most people just have the big refrigerator of their choice in their big kitchen and these days, they are mostly stainless steel. If you live in an apartment though, the space is smaller, so the fridge has to be smaller too.

    • @karenstjohn8603
      @karenstjohn8603 Před rokem

      I wouldn't want any of the things about gean. Her. German houses l like the us ones much better

    • @anastasia10017
      @anastasia10017 Před rokem

      @@karenstjohn8603 are you drunk?

  • @garyarnett1220
    @garyarnett1220 Před rokem +3

    Please note that most American houses are no where near as nice as some of them shown. A ranch style with 1 car garage, with a small plot of land, usually 1/2 acre or less is more common. And since the majority were built in the late 40s to mid 70s, most don't have the amenities mentioned. The German windows would be nice (with screens).

    • @pacmanc8103
      @pacmanc8103 Před rokem

      Except you cannot put furniture in front of them easily. And window coverings - interior shutters/blinds/shades/curtains - are a huge issue when opening or closing the window.

  • @rvt_h3d
    @rvt_h3d Před rokem

    I can't imagine not having screens on your windows and having bugs constantly coming in.

  • @livinglife8333
    @livinglife8333 Před rokem +2

    Good lord our toilet doesn’t have much more water than the one shown, where in the world do people get the idea our toilets are full of water? The only time a toilet is full to the top is if it’s plugged and someone try’s flushing it more than once!

  • @michelleparsons6931
    @michelleparsons6931 Před rokem

    By law a bedroom in the US has to have a closet to be listed as a bedroom when selling it.
    Also, when we were stationed in Stuttgart, Germany (2000-03) we had the same kind of windows, as pictured in the video, in our base housing, except ours were twice as big.
    Another difference not discussed is that a lot of US homes have carpeting, whereas in Germany it was all tile or wood/wood laminate flooring.