American reacts to Typical Australian Homes

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  • Опубліковано 15 чер 2024
  • Thanks for watching me, a humble American, react to Australian homes and architecture and real estate
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,7 тис.

  • @twopencehalfpenny
    @twopencehalfpenny 9 місяців тому +327

    You cannot have a " Typical " Australian home. It all depends on how much money you have and where you live as to the type of home you can have.

    • @shaun5552
      @shaun5552 9 місяців тому +19

      Even just how to deal with sloping land. Eg Tasmania where the normal practice is leave the land as is and build the house to suit with a suspended floor and a storage space or even garage under the house at the low end. Versus some other states where it's more normal to level the block, build a retaining wall then put the house flat on the ground.
      Climate plays a big part too as does local availability of building materials, eg the stone houses common in SA that simply don't exist in most of the country.

    • @Aquarium-Downunder
      @Aquarium-Downunder 9 місяців тому +10

      Typical Australian home = 3 bedroom brick house and that is still pushing it.

    • @paulstewart1557
      @paulstewart1557 9 місяців тому

      Ah - yes that can be a problem but we have only exotics which are deciduous - enhancing rather than reducing the effect

    • @gail2500
      @gail2500 9 місяців тому +2

      I always wanted a Porter Davis home, but now they've gone bust BUGGER!!!!🇦🇺🥴

    • @StephenJohnson-jb7xe
      @StephenJohnson-jb7xe 9 місяців тому +8

      It also depends on the decade the house was built as different styles come into and go out of fashion.

  • @chrislocke2267
    @chrislocke2267 9 місяців тому +214

    Ryan, a lot of that information is not applicable to the rest of Australia. Everybody would think that Sydney (NSW) or Melbourne (VIC) are the only places worth mentioning, but I can tell you that other parts of Oz are so diverse with its housing, weather, and scenery it would blow your mind...

    • @sykotika13thirteen
      @sykotika13thirteen 9 місяців тому +12

      I think with the video it was that she only knew Sydney. I’m in Sydney but I love travelling all over and seeing all the cities and towns

    • @Stefcs92
      @Stefcs92 9 місяців тому +16

      @@sykotika13thirteen​​⁠​⁠yeah but she kept making it sound like it was a standard in all of Australia… which it’s definitely not. I would have said the queenslander would be the most iconic Australian house but they differ state to state. And it’s bloody cold all the time in tassie so we certainly have a reverse heat pump- aka air con for the north of Aus but fireplaces are common down here 🥶

    • @sykotika13thirteen
      @sykotika13thirteen 9 місяців тому +9

      @@Stefcs92 I made so much money in the outback during winter doing firewood. Pretty much every house had a fireplace pumping all day and night in winter.
      The video was very specific but not even accurate for Sydney.
      I don’t know where abouts she is but I don’t know many houses that don’t have A/C.
      I love Tassiie, I prefer the cold to the heat

    • @Stefcs92
      @Stefcs92 9 місяців тому +3

      @@sykotika13thirteen oh so true, I spent a lot of time in Bell when I was a kid- not quiiite the outback- more so out in the sticks I suppose but it got plenty chilly there at night! It’s nice to hear you speaking positively about Tassie, it’s such an underrated place. I’m a Queenslander at heart though, much prefer the heat! 🥶 I will say it’s getting pretty warm down here these days too- south was definitely the way to go!

    • @susansalafia2729
      @susansalafia2729 9 місяців тому +3

      Canberra has ducted heating in most houses.

  • @lyndenbobbitt5532
    @lyndenbobbitt5532 9 місяців тому +56

    We are more likely to call bedding “ linen” . Manchester is normally used in department stores. Most people would call a sofa a “couch” , but the whole set would be called a “ lounge suite”. The three switches on the bathroom wall usually operates a light called “fantastic” which heats , lights and operates the exhaust fan. She was talking about the Sydney places that she houses at, but Melbourne architecture is probably a bit more similar to English architecture , particularly the older houses. Fireplaces are much more common in Melbourne, Victoria where the weather is cold for 6 or 7 months of the year.

    • @lisathedivinetruth
      @lisathedivinetruth 9 місяців тому +2

      Lol also have open fires here in Mackay, North Queensland, even though you southerners (lol) might think we don’t need it, but it can get cold here for us!! Lmao 😂 cheers 🎉

  • @apm77
    @apm77 9 місяців тому +68

    A sunroom - which is the nearest parallel to what she calls a "conservatory" in the UK - is *extremely* common in larger homes in Australia. How she could have missed that is beyond belief, frankly. However, the conservatory she shows is small, whereas sunrooms are big, being a multi-function activity room.
    When she talks about "manchester", she's talking about how things are labelled in department stores, not talking about how Australians speak in everyday life. A lot of the language differences she mentions are simplified, but that's to be expected.

    • @terrilee68
      @terrilee68 6 місяців тому

      Well said!!! 🇦🇺😃

  • @AussieHussar
    @AussieHussar 9 місяців тому +77

    She hasn't seen too many Australian houses that's for sure. You need to get someone who knows what they are talking about.

    • @christinahawkins3265
      @christinahawkins3265 7 місяців тому +1

      that's for sure

    • @bkelly84
      @bkelly84 4 місяці тому +1

      Yes have to agree. People don’t realise it can get cold in places like Canberra but then total opposite in summer. Hence ducted reverse cycle.

    • @joolzmac1
      @joolzmac1 29 днів тому

      I live in South Australia and we have cold winters but no snow here. I love all four seasons. Hot summer, mild autumn, cold winter and again, mild spring.

  • @TenOrbital
    @TenOrbital 9 місяців тому +126

    Remember she’s talking about Sydney which has mild winters. Wood-fired slow combustion heaters are massively popular in southern Australia. Governments are trying to phase them out for environmental reasons but nothing pumps out heat like a wood fire stove.

    • @sykotika13thirteen
      @sykotika13thirteen 9 місяців тому +3

      They were popular in Sydney and slowly disappeared when they banned backyard burn offs. More people are starting to realise you can use fire to cook and for heating so they are making a comeback again.

    • @chaiwad21
      @chaiwad21 9 місяців тому +2

      They banned because they are not getting any benefit from it. + when people set a place on fire they have to spend money for the fire fighter to come. So they loosing money both way. ,😂

    • @chucky6367
      @chucky6367 9 місяців тому +8

      Wood fire is the only heat l have in my house, great for the chilly wet southern Victoria Winters and cooking if the power goes out 👍

    • @sykotika13thirteen
      @sykotika13thirteen 9 місяців тому +5

      @@chaiwad21 I’m old enough to remember having an incinerator and a fire pit, I am also old enough to remember how many people burnt their house down and sometimes a neighbours house.

    • @akitas8165
      @akitas8165 9 місяців тому +2

      Nothing pumps out heat like a wood fire stove ???? What utter nonsense. Wood fired heating is the most inefficient form of heating there is.

  • @rileym117
    @rileym117 8 місяців тому +14

    The heated light bulbs heat up the bathroom for when its cold; I usually use mine in winter/in the morning but considering I moved to Tasmania I will probably use it a lot more now 😂The fan switch isn't like a ceiling fan as well, its a vent that helps extract the steam from the bathroom so you don't get mold. Hope this helped !

  • @jasonb9652
    @jasonb9652 9 місяців тому +29

    In the UK I found many bathrooms with carpet. Never happens in Australia 🇦🇺

    • @CateB66
      @CateB66 9 місяців тому +1

      Particularly in the older homes. When I did live in aged care, many homes had carpet (more so washable carpet) in the bathroom and kitchen. Warmth

    • @Alicia-ij6gt
      @Alicia-ij6gt 4 місяці тому

      Carpet was all the rage in Australia from the 1950s. Then it seemed like a huge number of people developed asthma and hayfever, and it was blamed on dust mites in carpet. So they were ripped out by younger people.

    • @SleepyDove-zo8sk
      @SleepyDove-zo8sk 2 місяці тому

      So so gross and unhygienic holy moly. It's just as bad as the fluffy toilet seat covers that are a massive breeding ground for germs galore ughhhhh

    • @leahhaines5713
      @leahhaines5713 11 днів тому

      Carpet in Australia really isn't a thing as it would promote the growth of mold

    • @leahhaines5713
      @leahhaines5713 11 днів тому

      In the bathroom I mean

  • @terriemcgarrity-sr9kg
    @terriemcgarrity-sr9kg 9 місяців тому +114

    Unfortunately this girl hasn’t really experienced too much of Australia. Most apartments and houses have air conditioning, so not quite sure where she was staying, other then her saying Sydney.

    • @daveamies5031
      @daveamies5031 9 місяців тому +9

      Now they do, but that's a recent thing, in the 1990's it was very rare and in the 1980's basically unheard of. The first time i lived in a place with air-con was late 1999, my wife was pregnant and so we sought out a place with air-con because she was due late December and pregnant in summer with no air-con wasn't a pleasant thought.

    • @testedTransgressor
      @testedTransgressor 9 місяців тому +4

      Our house has air con in the master bedroom, but the rest of the place has ceiling fans. A lot of older rentals and places with asbestos tend to have the ceiling fans rather than risk disturbing the asbestos with installing air con.

    • @petermcculloch4933
      @petermcculloch4933 9 місяців тому +1

      She made it perfectly clear at the beginning of the comparison, her knowledge was based on living in Sydney.

    • @LoveratLoves
      @LoveratLoves 9 місяців тому +5

      Im 58 and have lived all over Australia - only the last two houses I have lived in have had aircon. The first one we built, and this one we have had it installed. It hasn't been common at all until about 2000 ish. You just opened the windows and sweated =)

    • @mindi2050
      @mindi2050 9 місяців тому +1

      @@daveamies5031 Air conditioning in the 1980's was basically unheard of? No it wasn't. My very average income parents' house had air conditioning. Not like the split system air condition we have now but many homes had air conditioning units sticking out of the windows when I was growing up. Maybe it depends where you live.

  • @downundarob
    @downundarob 9 місяців тому +58

    7:00 - The triangle atop the mailbox is for larger items, they get rolled up and stuffed into the triangular area, Australian Mailboxes are also a one way thing, you cant send mail by putting an outbound letter in there and hoping the mailman picks it up. I was also going to mention that the triangle thing is for shade so the redback spider living in your mailbox doesnt get too hot.

    • @joannedyson1768
      @joannedyson1768 9 місяців тому +6

      😅

    • @caroldudgeon50s
      @caroldudgeon50s 9 місяців тому +11

      The bit about keeping your Redback spider cool made me laugh out loud. 😂

    • @rotkatzeredcat4284
      @rotkatzeredcat4284 9 місяців тому +2

      lol

    • @debbiemohekey1509
      @debbiemohekey1509 8 місяців тому +2

      @@caroldudgeon50s Use bar 'b' que tongs to remove your mail from the box.

    • @caroldudgeon50s
      @caroldudgeon50s 8 місяців тому

      I get them in my backyard but thankfully not IN my letterbox hahaha that's the snails' domain it seems 😂@@debbiemohekey1509

  • @rayf9194
    @rayf9194 9 місяців тому +15

    Ryan, Australia is a big country, like the USA. We have a diverse climate across this country, it's not all dry and sunny, we have tropical regions, dry and hot regions, cooler regions, in fact some have snow in winter, it's not all desert like many from the USA seem to think. From what I have seen of houses in the USA, Australia is very similar. She is mainly describing Sydney real estate which is mainly not typical of other capital cities here.

  • @smmcb647
    @smmcb647 9 місяців тому +19

    I’m an Aussie travelling in Europe in Summer and I have found from the UK to Scandinavia all the AirBnB’s and most hotels I’ve stayed in are TOO HOT. Europeans seem addicted to overheating their houses. I like my cold Sydney house, so much better to sleep in. I only need a little bit of air conditioning for about 4 weeks in Summer. That’s it. In Winter, we wear warm clothes inside the house because our houses are cold and that’s the way I like it.

    • @minka_thork2892
      @minka_thork2892 6 місяців тому +2

      YES! I couldn't believe aircon wasn't standard in hotels. It was a sauna.

    • @vvvbbbbcccc
      @vvvbbbbcccc 2 місяці тому +1

      I visited a friend in Holland in their late winter. I couldn't believe how hot it was inside the house. The house had floor vents under every window pumping out heat like it was going out of fashion. I would walk to the local shops wearing jeans and a polo and all the local people were rugged up as if they were at the Snowy!

  • @PhillipGWilkie
    @PhillipGWilkie 9 місяців тому +119

    The 3 switch wall control contains: The Fan is for the exhaust that vents the humid air outside so the room doesn't get mouldy. The heat is if you have halogen lamps in the roof so in winter its not too cold when you get out. They also help defog your mirror. And the light is obviously the standard light

    • @jamescameron2156
      @jamescameron2156 9 місяців тому +6

      It is also quite common for the three functions (i.e. light, exhaust fan, heating lamps) to be built into a single unit, often situated in the middle of the bathroom. As the heating globes can consume a large amount of power (e.g. between 2000 to 5000 watts/hour), it is also common for a timer to be built into the unit that automatically cuts power to the heating globes after a period of time (e.g. 20 to 30 mins). Obviously, this is in case someone forgets to turn the heating globes off and they are accidently left on for several hours.

    • @tonirolfs9142
      @tonirolfs9142 9 місяців тому +6

      Yep. I grew up in Queensland, where the most you get in the bathroom is light & fan. But visiting my bro in cold old Canberra & later Tassie, that "heat" switch got a lot of use in Winter.

    • @dosdan
      @dosdan 9 місяців тому +8

      You can have a 4-switch version: Heat, Heat, Fan, Light. Look up "IXL Bathroom Heater Light Fan". The heat is 4 x 250-275W heat lamps in a square configuration, with a LED illumination light (5-10W) situated in the centre, and a grill around/behind this allowing air to be sucked in by the exhaust fan inside the ceiling behind the light. The two heat switches turn on separate 2x heat lamps (diagonal config.), so you can have half or full heat power. My daughter sometimes uses the heat lamps for illumination instead of the LED light, and can leave them switched on when she leaves the bathroom, leading to 500-1000W of power being consumed instead of say 10W from the LED light being left on. I try to save as much electrical energy as possible.

    • @timcarr4673
      @timcarr4673 9 місяців тому +1

      Your comments are just what i would have said so thanks for saving me the time

    • @mehere8038
      @mehere8038 9 місяців тому +1

      @@dosdan ouch at leaving those on! I get annoyed just at my birds being slow to have their bath on cold winter days, forcing me to leave the 500w of heat lamp running for 20-30 minutes while they screw around deciding if it's actually warm enough to bathe or not (not helped by the fact the little horrors refuse to bathe in warm water & insist on only cold water, therefore need the room heated to prevent them from shivering so much they fall off their perches or fall into the water & half drown cause they're too shivery to get out)

  • @1001reasons1968
    @1001reasons1968 9 місяців тому +31

    Nobody is saying manchester in normal conversation. But we know what it means when we go shopping for sheets and towels.

    • @andrew_koala2974
      @andrew_koala2974 3 місяці тому

      Nobody can say anything because everybody is buried in the cemetery.
      It is FULL of bodies
      Go and count them - and pay attention to what is write
      om the grave stone and HOW it is written.
      Then write an essay explaining it.
      Also explain - How many of YOU are there in existence on this earth ?
      And lastly - learn correct grammatical legal English.
      You are still at elementary school level

    • @katzrantz
      @katzrantz 2 місяці тому

      ​@@andrew_koala2974"elementary school"? What are you, a seppo? Neck up ya pelican.

  • @twoflyinghats
    @twoflyinghats 9 місяців тому +7

    Ryan, housesitting is volunteering to live in people's homes when they go away, often for longer periods when travelling. Some may bring their own caravan. House sitters look after the property, which makes it more secure, and care for any pets, animal stock and gardens in exchange for free accommodation with no bills. I have a friend who does it continually. She's always booked up as she has a great reputation from word of mouth.

  • @cassieoz1702
    @cassieoz1702 9 місяців тому +7

    It was minus 6C when i got up this morning and the only heating in my home is a wood fired stove. Not everywhere in Australia is perpetually hot. The bathroom switches are for an overhead light/fan/radiant heater. A 'dooner' is a trade name from the first manufacturer/distributor. US and Australia have more land developed for housing compared to UK, so homes are bigger

  • @imaginativeteacher8508
    @imaginativeteacher8508 9 місяців тому +37

    The ‘triangle’ on the letterbox is for rolled up large letters, junk mail (catalogues) and magazine subscriptions.
    The heat button is for bathrooms to keep you warm when you get out of the shower in winter.

    • @auntie44m
      @auntie44m 9 місяців тому

      You can install a unit in the bathroom ceiling that contains a heat lamp (the bulb that warms up) for winter and an extraction fan and a normal light. Google the brand name Mistral - bathroom light. Hence the various switches. Also in Australia you click the switch down to turn power on where as in a lot of American television shows i see them flicked up for on. The old metal letter boxes had triangle roofs mainly for rolled up newspapers, back when they were home delivered (way before online news/papers etc).
      Australian baths mostly sit inside a wooden box shape frame up against a wall. The front panel is usually tiled. I understand the plastic panel in the UK provides access to plumbing etc. I hope this helps.

    • @splashpit
      @splashpit 9 місяців тому +1

      The top triangle was from the days we got the daily paper home delivered

    • @bencodykirk
      @bencodykirk 9 місяців тому +1

      @@splashpitBack in the "olden days" lol

    • @Alicia-ij6gt
      @Alicia-ij6gt 4 місяці тому

      @@bencodykirk yes - about ten years ago!

    • @bencodykirk
      @bencodykirk 4 місяці тому

      @@Alicia-ij6gt Yes. Olden days - 2014, haha.

  • @noelleggett5368
    @noelleggett5368 9 місяців тому +35

    Ryan, back in the olden days, we had these things called ‘newspapers’. They were made of lot of sheets of paper and had the news written on them for people read. Letterboxes in Australia also had a large space (like the triangle bit at the top) for the newspaper delivery… rather than some kid on a bike throwing the paper at the house and breaking a window.

    • @bencodykirk
      @bencodykirk 9 місяців тому +2

      I live in QLD. When we DID have a local newspaper (up until maybe 3 years ago), it was delivered by a kid on a bike who would randomly throw the paper in the general direction of the house - never leave it in the mailbox, lol. The only thing the newspaper slot got used for was junk mail so eventually I bought a sign from Bunnings to cover the slot that reads "NO JUNK MAIL".
      These days I barely need a mailbox. Hardly anything gets put in it.

  • @TallowTheQuoll
    @TallowTheQuoll 8 місяців тому +2

    11:20 the fan/heat/light buttons is usually a vent system where the roof light is which has an exhaust fan, usually a set of heat lamps and a normal light.
    The heat lamps are for winters in which as they said earlier in the video aussie houses tend to be colder, so heat lamps above you when you hop out the shower keeps you warmer as you dry off.

  • @kaseyneville9894
    @kaseyneville9894 9 місяців тому +8

    Most Australian tend to have an air conditioner. Most of the time, it's also the heater as most of us get reverse cycle. Australia still gets pretty cold during winter. Some areas do get snow, other areas are more tropical. Also there is a larger amount of Sydney suburban houses that do not have pools these day. The heated.light build, just makes the bathroom warm in winter.
    You and the family should visit Aus, I think you would enjoy it 😊

  • @TL-li2lu
    @TL-li2lu 9 місяців тому +50

    Australia is a huge country. Down south we have snow and ski resort's. I live up north but in the high country. We get frost and have fireplaces here.

    • @sykotika13thirteen
      @sykotika13thirteen 9 місяців тому +9

      I lived outback for a few years and summer was around 40-50c in the day and winter we would drop to about -5c overnight. There wasn’t enough moisture for snow or much for rain either.
      The variations in Australia are massive

    • @bencodykirk
      @bencodykirk 9 місяців тому +1

      @@sykotika13thirteen There are massive variations of house in the US too. The UK, not so much as it's so much smaller.

    • @sykotika13thirteen
      @sykotika13thirteen 9 місяців тому +1

      @@bencodykirk I think with the UK a lot of it has to do with age too. When you look at the original houses in Australia they were small too. It was somewhere to eat and sleep

  • @TL-li2lu
    @TL-li2lu 9 місяців тому +171

    If you want the feel of an Australian home, watch this movie "The Castle" 😂👌🏼

    • @dianaperry1929
      @dianaperry1929 9 місяців тому +11

      Excellent movie🍿❤️

    • @karenwadwell6007
      @karenwadwell6007 9 місяців тому +4

      ​@dianaperry1929 one of my favourites

    • @vtbn53
      @vtbn53 9 місяців тому +10

      That's a great recommendation - do it Ryan!

    • @IPEX-BADD
      @IPEX-BADD 9 місяців тому +20

      Tell him, "he's dreaming"

    • @macdac9861
      @macdac9861 9 місяців тому +4

      You have to have lived in Australia for The Castle to make any sense. I’m kiwi and even I didn’t get the first time I watched it

  • @angrybutters
    @angrybutters 9 місяців тому +2

    The house I grew up in (Victoria) which is still owned by my parents is old. I don't know how old but it has 3 fireplaces. 1 in a room, 1 in the lounge room, and 1 near the kitchen. The home has high ceilings for summer seasons, old colour glass rectangle windows at the front door, and a front and back verandah. 1 extra toilet outside and a woodcutting shed. it's a good sized land compared to what you can buy now in my state, with an oversized garage with a pit to drive your car over it to work under the vehicle.

  • @the10th90
    @the10th90 9 місяців тому +6

    Pools are expensive, so not everyone can afford them. Growing up our pool was definitely more like the UK version!

  • @jaccilowe3842
    @jaccilowe3842 9 місяців тому +80

    Australia and US are both new countries, thus more space to build. The triangle atop the mailbox is for newspapers. Everything had to be imported to Australia in the early days, hence Manchester.

    • @elowishusmirkatroid4898
      @elowishusmirkatroid4898 9 місяців тому +36

      The triangle on our mailbox is a fancy apartment for a Huntsman spider.

    • @jamescameron2156
      @jamescameron2156 9 місяців тому +5

      Just to clarify, since Ryan seemed to be shocked when he heard that some things "had to be imported to Australia" in earlier years. "Had to be imported" in this case really means "needed to be imported due to lack/shortage of local production". It does not mean that there was a government mandate forcing locals to import things from overseas. This mainly applies to the times before WW1 and WW2. After WW2 Australia's manufacturing base expanded exponentially; some things were still imported but most things were able to be produced locally.

    • @tonyonofrio1147
      @tonyonofrio1147 9 місяців тому +2

      Australia had/has a large cotton growing industry, but pre 70's it did not have a large enough cotton manufacturing industry. So most of our cotton production was exported to UK which was then processed (in Manchester) and made into cotton and linen products that were imported for sale here.

    • @bblake5116
      @bblake5116 9 місяців тому +5

      My mailbox is on a pole at the front and usually houses a green tree snake thats looking for frogs in the pole.

    • @mehere8038
      @mehere8038 9 місяців тому +3

      @@elowishusmirkatroid4898 huh? huntsman have always lived in the main mail segment in mine, with smaller spiders with their webs relegated to the newspaper section

  • @divahc1
    @divahc1 9 місяців тому +54

    Some peopledo have open - fire places. Australia is a vast country, with a wide climate range.

    • @carokat1111
      @carokat1111 9 місяців тому +5

      I have two open fire places and a wood combustion heater. Yes, I live in Tasmania!

    • @vtbn53
      @vtbn53 9 місяців тому

      @@carokat1111 I only have one open fir place but I love it, Ialso have two gas heaters, one with a chimney and LOOKS like a wood combustion heater (wish it was), and and a fan powered radiant convection floor heater. Oh and I am in the Southern Highlands of NSW which is not unlike Tassie climate wise.

    • @heatherwardell2501
      @heatherwardell2501 9 місяців тому +2

      We had one in the countryside but it's too expensive for firewood in the cities

    • @carokat1111
      @carokat1111 9 місяців тому +2

      @@vtbn53 Yes, very similar. I think you actually get even colder than we do overnight. Hobart minimums are actually relatively mild.

    • @vtbn53
      @vtbn53 9 місяців тому +1

      @@carokat1111 Yes it can get down to -7C or even less and we get 6-10 frosts per winter. No snow in my 12 years here but it has happened.

  • @connorm3436
    @connorm3436 9 місяців тому +3

    The “heat” switch in the bathroom turns on heating lamps (typically 4 of them around the main light in the ceiling). They make getting out of the shower on a cold morning easier.

  • @Mrs_Hartz
    @Mrs_Hartz 9 місяців тому +4

    Our house in Melbourne has fully ducted reverse cycle air conditioning, a combustion wood fire heater and a open fire place (which we are too scared to use) and a pool for summer. Lots of different heating and cooling options depending on where you live in aus. Never had a fireplace in sydney,where i grew up. Heated lightbulbs in the bathrooms are common here

    • @Alicia-ij6gt
      @Alicia-ij6gt 4 місяці тому

      The light bulbs heat the room, via infra red. This means they heat surfaces directly, not the air.

  • @cbjones2212
    @cbjones2212 9 місяців тому +68

    Our house in the Goldfields of Victoria is over 170 years old. Known as a 'worker's cottage', it has a front verandah and, in the original part of the house, small sash windows. Windows in this area were small to stop the heat coming in from the summer and to reduce heat loss in winter. When we bought the house, the washing machine was in the kitchen and the real estate agent (realtor) apologised for it and said the current owner "is Welsh" 😅

    • @tonimedlen5371
      @tonimedlen5371 9 місяців тому +3

      lol

    • @77Zamarta77
      @77Zamarta77 9 місяців тому +3

      I love it!!!!!!

    • @Reneesillycar74
      @Reneesillycar74 9 місяців тому

      😂

    • @imac1957
      @imac1957 9 місяців тому +2

      We have one of them too. The front part of the house is original, but fortunately there was a new extension to the back that brought the toilet inside! Lots of extra insulation added but still bitterly cold in winter.

    • @vanessagoddess1
      @vanessagoddess1 9 місяців тому +1

      lol. Yeah, clean clothes in the kitchen?!? Ewwww!

  • @_billyjackson
    @_billyjackson 9 місяців тому +204

    Rather than lounge I think it's common just to call a 'sofa' a 'couch' in Australia. I personally only use the word 'lounge' in this context when talking about a 'lounge suite' which is the whole matching set of sofas usually a 3 seater and a 2 seater or with maybe an added 1 seat recliner.

    • @TL-li2lu
      @TL-li2lu 9 місяців тому +43

      I'm Australian and we call it a lounge

    • @rosaliewestphalen8121
      @rosaliewestphalen8121 9 місяців тому +28

      Yeah.... Nah... I'm Australian and we call it a lounge.

    • @brendonrookes1151
      @brendonrookes1151 9 місяців тому +27

      Lounge or couch there both used

    • @bucinsk
      @bucinsk 9 місяців тому +21

      Lounge, couch, sofa... pretty much interchangeable for me.

    • @Kiwi_Conor
      @Kiwi_Conor 9 місяців тому +16

      ​@@TL-li2luok so I'm a Kiwi and it's definitely a couch here. The word lounge refers to the room, so what do you guys call it? Sitting room?

  • @fionapaterson-wiebe3108
    @fionapaterson-wiebe3108 9 місяців тому +3

    Ryan, check out the Queenslander style home for a Northern perspective. My family home is over 120 years old. They are raised on posts to allow airflow for cooling. These posts are capped with tin, to prevent termites from accessing the building itself, protecting the structure, and are designed to be individually replaced. I have been through tropical cyclones in my childhood. Being raised on posts, the building moves, rather than being rigid, which also protects the building. Think of a large, old tree, blown down in the storm, whilst the saplings move with the wind and survive. Inside, the ceilings are high, and there are windows above the doors (fanlights), which can be pulled open with a cord. These control airflow, for passive cooling. As for the famous veranda; it wraps around the house, and provides shade in the summer, and a sunny place to warm up in the winter. On the hottest nights, it wasn’t uncommon for people to sleep on the veranda, in the days before electricity provided reliable cooling.

    • @sunisbest1234
      @sunisbest1234 9 місяців тому +1

      I love the old Queenslander homes. So practical for the north. ❤

    • @rossawood5075
      @rossawood5075 3 місяці тому

      The Australian 'Queenslander' house is an iconic design copied and modified from British colonial times in India.
      Featuring a raised house on high level posts with large covered verandahs on 3 or 4 sides allowing large airflow underneath and shade from our very regular and intense sun, designed for generally warmer northern coastal areas, ie the state of Queensland.
      Exposed windows often have an ornate shade over them sloping down to prevent sun entry from high overhead levels, also high sloping rooflines and 9 - 12 feet tall stud walls and insect screened entry doors and windows, slatted louvres often on windows.
      Most Australian more recent houses utilise 2 -3 efficient reverse cycle inverter type airconditioners that in cooler periods will heat also.
      Sadly excellent designs for Australian conditions are overlooked (ie the wonderful Australian architect Glenn Murcutt and others) with more American and European designs in many newer houses, due to some perverted colonial overhang I suspect, also maybe due to the fact that around 50% of Australia's current population is born overseas and or has a parent born overseas and old habits die hard.
      My family have 7 generations on this side of the world however are still very aware of our Scottish, Irish and British origins however embrace local adoptions and generally more laid back culture to our mostly originally British origins.
      Heat lamps in bathrooms are for warming the room after a shower in cool periods and fans to draw off condensation from hot showers/baths.
      Manchester is a very common term in many ex British colony's to describe linen beware and towelling, not uncommon in the United Kingdom either, maybe an older term this young lady has missed.
      Due to the great cotton/linen mills of the industrial revolution of which centered around the English city of Manchester.
      Power outlet styles and pin configurations vary greatly from country to country and Australia and New Zealand use an ANZ design standard for electrical wiring and appliances with mandatory 3rd earth pin unlike many early USA 2 pin non earthed outlets.
      British or UK plugs feature a different size earth pin and are often internally fused where in A/NZ fusing is done at the main power box.
      A/NZ uses a 230 volt AC standard, previously 240 vac similar to the UK whereas except for larger amperage fixed appliances, (ie central heating, airconditioning) the USA uses 120 volt power outlets for smaller appliances and lighting.
      The complaint about cold houses in winter is interesting, I found European and American houses overheated by comparison to here however we don't generally utilise dual or triple glazing for Wwindows due to generally milder winters in coastal regions although in more central and inland areas winter temps can be a lot colder at night, some areas will have almost a 25 degree Celsius variation between day and night time temps.
      Far western NSW in mid winter for example may reach 20 degrees Celcuius in daytime but 4 - 5 degrees sometimes down to minus 5 with wind chill factor.
      Once when travelling in the Simpson Desert I experienced a 27 degree noon with an early morning minus 6 Celsius a 33 degree variation.
      Australia is the largest island continent on the planet and the equivalent landmass to the continental USA therefore has a very wide range of climactic variables, ie Wisconsin to Texas/Louisiana to New Mexico/Arizona variations, therefore this blog only really takes in one aspect of the city of Sydney NSW (population around 6 million) and geographic variations are manifold.
      To generalise here is somewhat wayward.
      Jus sayin'

    • @rossawood5075
      @rossawood5075 3 місяці тому

      Quite unusual for most housing in Sydney not to have air conditioning in my experience!
      Heat lamps are very common and located in a cluster of lights and fans in the bathroom ceiling, designed to keep one warm during winter when showering or bathing as most bathrooms are not air conditioned.🎉
      Lounge for "lounging" not fancy,
      Cotton mills did exist in Australia from about the 1920,s therefore prior and later much of our sheets , linen, curtain and dress materials were imported from Britain.
      Australia was first settled by Europeans in 1788, not to be confused with original first nations inhabitants who have existed here continuously for 65 - 70,000 years the oldest contining culture on the planet.
      Cotton is grown in Australia in large scale highly mechanised laser levelled irrigated western NSW and Queensland farms, (controversially due to the mass extraction of water from local rivers causing environmental problems) since the 1960's, and now more recently in the Ord River area of the Kimberly region of Western Australia utilising tropicalized Brazillian cotton.
      Australia produces 1.2 million tons of high grade cotton with 62% exported to China with an export value of around $3 billion dollars.
      We still import most of our 'Manchester' cotton goods from China now however Hemp is also a developing industry here.

  • @teloenand
    @teloenand 9 місяців тому +1

    The triangle bit on top of the mailbox/letterbox is a dual purpose thing. It helps keep rain out/off the mail, and it's also for larger mail/periodical deliveries (magazines/newspapers) that won't fit through a normal mail slot.

  • @paulstewart1557
    @paulstewart1557 9 місяців тому +89

    Dear Ryan, I built my house in 2018 in the city of Canberra and one of my strong requests to the builder, was deep eaves and passive solar design, to ensure that the windows were shaded in the summer and yet streamed with sunlight in the winter. It makes a big difference to liveability and comfort throughout the year. The winter sunlight feature is important as that energy is then absorbed by the floor (our floor is oak but has a concrete base) throughout the day and radiates back into the home at night. The angle of the roof and the depth of the eaves prevents this solar penetration in the summer, as the shade falls across the window. Bathrooms in Australia often have an extraction fan (which is mandatory in most jurisdictions, if the bathroom does not have an opening window) and a separate function for heating, that is generated from intense incandescent lights.

    • @carolynrobertson4657
      @carolynrobertson4657 9 місяців тому +5

      We have reverse cycle aircon in Australia... she has obviously very limited experience

    • @jpbaley2016
      @jpbaley2016 9 місяців тому +1

      US code also requires extraction fans if there isn’t a window.

    • @prettypinklady69
      @prettypinklady69 9 місяців тому +1

      One of the biggest differences is that in America, the homes with air-conditioning have a vent in the bathroom which will send either cool or warm air, depending on the season as most homes have reverse cycle aircon. Homes in the far north tend to have boiler and stuff because it's more economical and more efficient as reverse cycle doesn't do well in super cold temps.
      Sorry I can't remember more but it's 1 am and I'm just rambling off the top of my head what I can remember - btw, my dad was a home construction company owner in the states but I've lived in Australia for 20 years.

    • @desleybettens5356
      @desleybettens5356 9 місяців тому +1

      I grew up calling them a lounge ; high set homes are designed to cool the house (not make them hit); I’m not sure where this Sheila got her information but some of her reasoning is a little off

    • @nickislade5533
      @nickislade5533 9 місяців тому +1

      @@carolynrobertson4657depends where you are.reverse AC is relatively new most older homes in our town still have ceiling fans and window air-cons. Split systems go in usually when the homes change hands

  • @Max_Flashheart
    @Max_Flashheart 9 місяців тому +36

    In New Zealand we have similar housing to Australia. We don't have screens over our windows because we don't have many bugs compared to the US or Australia.
    Heat Bulb = Heat Lamp - Heat lamps are special types of incandescent bulbs. They are designed to generate as much heat as possible through infrared radiation, so they are often called infrared lamps, infrared heaters, or IR bulbs.
    Sofa = Couch
    Manchester made everything cotton (cotton from the Southern States)

    • @shaundgb7367
      @shaundgb7367 9 місяців тому +2

      Yeah, I would have thought Austalia, Canada, New Zealand and USA would have similar housing compared to the much older UK.

    • @M3rVsT4H
      @M3rVsT4H 9 місяців тому +1

      Wait, you guys don't have screens at all? I don't know how I never noticed that. lol

    • @Alicia-ij6gt
      @Alicia-ij6gt 4 місяці тому

      The heat lamps produce infra red radiation, which heats surfaces, not the air.

  • @miniveedub
    @miniveedub 9 місяців тому +1

    Differences I have noticed between Australian and US houses. Wooden houses are less common here than in the US. Basements are extremely rare here. So are attics (too hot up there). Our sinks don’t usually have garbage disposals, they are banned in some places, because it pollutes the water and adds to the cost of treating it before it is released into the waterways. Our toilets have less water in the bottom and flush differently, they are less prone to blockages. Dual flush is mandatory to save water. All new homes must have a rainwater tank to collect roof runoff. In some houses it is used to flush toilets but usually it is used to water gardens to save the water in the dams. Solar panels are starting to become quite common, our power prices are high. It’s common here to have the shower separate rather than over the bath and those triple switches in the bathroom are for a popular ceiling fitting which combines a light and exhaust fan and heat lamps to remove steam and to heat the bathroom in winter.

  • @primroseletcher5698
    @primroseletcher5698 5 місяців тому +2

    I don’t know because I’ve only been to Sydney once for a short stay but as an Australian I can say there are no typical houses because the ones she’s shown in the pictures are very different to where I live… and with the “sofa” being the “lounge” I have actually never heard anyone in Australia call it a “lounge” I’ve always heard everyone say couch, bedding I have absolutely NEVER heard anyone ever call bedding “Manchester” we might call it linen or what the actual thing is like a towel or blanket…

  • @sandradavid4080
    @sandradavid4080 9 місяців тому +60

    House sitters look after people’s houses while the owners are away, generally because there are pets or gardens to be looked after.
    Could last from a couple of day to months at each house.

    • @tracysage2565
      @tracysage2565 9 місяців тому +8

      And it’s usually free

    • @jenniferharrison8915
      @jenniferharrison8915 9 місяців тому +6

      Yes, my sister used to do it especially at Christmas and family birthdays etc time! She lives on the North East Coast and only comes to Sydney "if she must", she particularly looks after pet cats and houses while the owners are on holiday! A huge saving in accommodation costs and also family stress!

    • @shaz8486
      @shaz8486 9 місяців тому +4

      We had a house sitter once to look after our cat and 2 dogs…… it was a disaster, we had their food individual frozen, named, but she only fed them biscuits. She used other beds (we had made up a bed in the biggest room other than ours) but she didn’t put sheets on them, oh yuk all the hairs in the beds, dirty towels, and bathroom, along with makeup, and had been smoking weed, it left green drip marks all down the walls in one bathroom…. The usual transaction I had been told by a different sitter, they live in your home rent free, eat your food and look after your house and pets for NO fee.
      We paid this lady $500 after she stayed there, ate our food, made a disgusting mess (which we didn’t know at that time) of the house and didn’t give two hoots about our animals. When we paid her she looked at us as though is that all ??? …..it was about 10 days we were away……NEVER EVER AGAIN! It took days to clean our home that she had trashed with her filth.

    • @mehere8038
      @mehere8038 9 місяців тому

      @@tracysage2565 Actually a friend of mine on the Gold Coast was telling me it's not anymore, she was trying to find someone to house/petsit her dog & cat & house (near the beach) & all wanted to charge her for the "privilege" of staying in her home & feeding & cuddling her 2 pets! That blew both our minds!

    • @NaGromOne
      @NaGromOne 9 місяців тому +1

      ​@shaz6570 that wasn't a usual housesitter, not one who is registered anyway. that was a squatter that you essentially bribed to go away before they completely trashed the place - sorry you had that experience :(

  • @trig1900
    @trig1900 9 місяців тому +26

    The "Federation" style house [and the "Queenslander"] are probably the most practical build styles for comfort in Australia. Designed when things like air conditioners did not exist, the federation house provided for a continuous overhang of the eaves around the entire house to shade not just the windows but a lot of the walls also. The federation house was predominantly built of brick, and the better ones [more expensive] also had a verandah [porch] around the entire [or most of] house also, generally with doors from a lot of the bedrooms opening onto the verandah. When I was young you could actually see some of them still around the suburbs. BUT, with property sizes [because of cost] being continually reduced and building costs going up, builders tend to build out to the edge of the eaves these days to maximise the floor space inside. All of which means you MUST have insulation, window tinting and air-conditioning/heating, resulting, I feel, in a loss of elegance and style. The Queenslander [obviously, built primarily in Queensland] was generally built of wood and on stilts. This allows for the free flow of air over, around and under the house. Unlike brick, wood cools a lot more quickly in the evening, allowing the heat and humidity of the day to be shed more easily. I've actually stayed in a Queenslander where the walls were also louvred and could also be opened to allow air, and some of the internal walls did not go up to the ceiling or down to the floor. This was in Townsville [which is very humid in the summer]. After staying in a brick building in the same area, the Queenslander was a blessed relief and way more comfortable. Oh, I might also mention every part of the queenslander also had mesh screens to keep the bugs out, and muslin curtains over the beds!

    • @sykotika13thirteen
      @sykotika13thirteen 9 місяців тому +2

      The federation and Queenslander are starting to make a comeback in Sydney now. I love the design

    • @trig1900
      @trig1900 9 місяців тому +4

      @@sykotika13thirteen Ah? I wasn't aware of that... been a while since I was in Sydney. Good to hear, though. Much better for the environment also...

    • @jackvos8047
      @jackvos8047 8 місяців тому +1

      The Queenslander has the advantage over other houses on a Flood plain as well.

    • @trig1900
      @trig1900 8 місяців тому +1

      @@jackvos8047 Oh, absolutely! Problem is, though, flood plain areas were designated for a reason... floods. When I first started working in Qld in 1976, flood plains were areas to be avoided for building because they had the potential to flood. When you drove up the highway between Brisbane and Caloundra there were areas of virgin bush land dotted along the route with big signs in front of them saying Flood Plain. By the time I left in 1978, the signs had disappeared and wholesale building was going on with a vengeance. A lot of people were asking why; the answer being given by the Bjelke-Petersen govt at the time was that these areas had been sectioned off previously in case there was a massive flooding event; a 'once in 100 year' event' which was highly unlikely to ever occur. Besides... look at all the land which could be sold off and built on! In 1974, the house I was renting in Ipswich, which backed on to the Bremer River, had been underwater up to the roof and the government said it was unlikely to ever get that high again. Fast forward to 2010 with the horrendous flooding which occurred. And again to 2022 and you begin to see why you should never trust a politician or build on a flood plain...

    • @anneloving8405
      @anneloving8405 7 місяців тому

      I have poor person window tinting...aluminium foil,works good tho,cools the house by at least 5-6 degrees and good insulation.I rarely use aircon.

  • @shanegooding4839
    @shanegooding4839 9 місяців тому +1

    Heat lamps are often built into bathroom ceilings in Australia so that you can stay warm on early winter mornings. The regular bathroom light is built into the same fixture, while the fan carries away steam so your mirrors don't fog up.

  • @Simbacat997
    @Simbacat997 9 місяців тому +1

    Lots of homes have security doors in Australia. In relation to heating, new build homes usually come with central heating and lots old homes have been updated/renovated to include central heating.

  • @lozinozz7567
    @lozinozz7567 9 місяців тому +56

    Unfortunately a lot of investors have forgotten they’re in Australia and I’m seeing more and more houses with out eaves and verandas. They even get rid of or don’t plant shade trees. Having a house with shady spaces helps to cut down the fuel bill as well as providing relief from the sun. I personally admire the queens lander or old country homestead. They knew all about breeze ways and cool space.

    • @Mark-wv6sg
      @Mark-wv6sg 9 місяців тому +4

      I’ve never had ac don’t need it use fans only hot for short time on the coast,we have safety circuit breakers on circuits,we don’t say Manchester it’s linen,most new homes are insulated so are cosy

    • @Krenisphia
      @Krenisphia 9 місяців тому +1

      With more and more foreign investors/residents growing every year, that's bound to happen as a lot are not that familiar with the local climate.

    • @elmohead
      @elmohead 9 місяців тому +8

      Air-conditioning allows architects to absolutely ignore the climate when designing. It's irresponsible imo

    • @robynmurray7421
      @robynmurray7421 9 місяців тому +4

      It's nothing to do with immigrants. The builders leave off eaves because it's cheaper. Also the extend the windows up to the roofing so they don't have to put in a lintel, which is not very energy efficient.

    • @redwarpy
      @redwarpy 9 місяців тому +2

      Smaller eaves is due to houses being so close together and complying with the housing code.

  • @scott1001
    @scott1001 9 місяців тому +15

    Verandah. What you would call a porch or some of us have a
    deck. Sometimes a back verandah or both. Very important in Australian homes to sit and watch the world go by.

  • @tennilletobin7823
    @tennilletobin7823 9 місяців тому +1

    The screen door is also for security… you can open your main door and still have something stopping people from entering. Also add an extra layer against break-ins. They are strong and lockable, and covered in mesh to keep the bugs out too. 😊

  • @sallyariad4623
    @sallyariad4623 9 місяців тому +1

    Some of her lingo is Sydney-centric.
    In different parts of Australia there are different words for different things.
    For example depending on where you live and your background the toilet could be the Dunny, the Loo, the Toilet, the Bog or the Shitter. We also have many euphemisms for going to the toilet.
    Many Aussie blokes will say I'm...
    Going to splash the boots
    Going to shake hands with the unemployed
    Going to drop a log
    Going to shake the snake
    Sofa- usually Couch, More often a lounge chair is a single seater
    Lounge- Lounge Room or living room
    Bedding- more often it is Sheets or linen, bed linen
    Duvet- Doona, Quilt, Duvet... depending on where you live
    Flat- it depends, a flat is in a small complex, where there might be say 3 or 4 or more flats. A unit is usually in a bigger complex or Highrise, could also be called an apartment if it's a biggish unit.
    It also applies to many other words. Some of them vary on the specific state or even the region.
    In QLD an Ice block, in NSW an Icy Pole.
    A school cafeteria is known as a Cafeteria, a Canteen or a Tuckshop depending on where you live.
    Many Australian homes have a toilet separate from the bathroom. And if you ask to use the bathroom you'll be shown the bathroom not the toilet.
    Many houses only have a shower and no bath tub.
    Heaps of older houses and colder climates have open fireplaces, pot belly stoves and fire boxes.
    If you don't have a separate Laundry room in Australia then the washing machine is likely in the bathroom, not the kitchen... that seems strange to me, to wash your clothes in the kitchen.
    Nearly every house has a veranda or a covered patio.
    The top triangle bit of the letterbox is for the newspaper delivery.
    Only new fancy homes have the three switches in the bathroom. Most typical houses just have a light switch.

  • @colddiesel
    @colddiesel 9 місяців тому +21

    Australian houses are usually very poorly insulated because until recently, energy, both electricity and gas were very cheap. That is changing with increases in costs. There is a massive increase in domestic solar systems, and improved insulation. Double glazing has not caught on much, but will eventually, particularly as apartments take over our cities. Their sound proofing is as important as their capacity to conserve heat.

    • @helenlecornu1651
      @helenlecornu1651 9 місяців тому +1

      It was more due to the fact of availability and cost of either retrofitting double glazing or insulation and having installed in new builds, now there are more incentives and changes to the BCA that has made it more prevalent.

    • @nashd8005
      @nashd8005 8 місяців тому

      Ironically, many older homes (100yo+) were built to allow air flow, rather than to seal, as fresh air was highly valued.
      And yes, those heated light bulbs heat the bathroom. Lovely in winter.
      My cousin from Ohio says her first Australian winter (Sydney) was the coldest of her life because inside our homes was so much colder than what she was used to.

  • @JustIn-mu3nl
    @JustIn-mu3nl 9 місяців тому +6

    "What's that, an iron? I've heard of one" 😄
    The triangle bit on the letterbox is for newspapers, junk mail, etc.

    • @Alicia-ij6gt
      @Alicia-ij6gt 4 місяці тому

      That’s not an ordinary iron. It’s a steaming iron. The base station has a large water reservoir, and unlike a usual steam iron, the bit you pick up has no water reservoir in it, but a thick cord through which the steam/water travels. Personally, if I want the fabric damp (to make stiff fabrics like linen easier to flatten), I use a spray bottle of water.

  • @courtneymitchell8439
    @courtneymitchell8439 9 місяців тому

    Ryan, the top triangle part is where rolls of catalogues that list store specials and rolled newspapers are placed. the bottom hole is for letters. Sometimes there will be cement (or brick) pillars that have PVC pipe for the newspaper and a box built into the pillar with a lockable door on the opposite side to the letter slot.

  • @silverstreettalks343
    @silverstreettalks343 14 днів тому

    Nice to see my former home town, Marrickville, get a mention there!
    English houses are usually about 3-5 metres from the fence line, often less; Australian houses are usually set back about 7-½ to 8 metres except in older areas. The closer to the street, the more practical the front door letterbox.
    Also the gable roof on our letterboxes makes a space for newspapers and magazines which might not fit the ordinary letterbox.
    A lot of Australian houses were built for heat exclusion until recently, with little thought to winter heating -- coal and wood were cheap, and some houses had more than one fireplace.
    Consequently houses are often cold in Australian winters, and retrofitting insulation is expensive and disruptive.
    Newer building standards require planning for energy economy, both hearing and cooling.

  • @joandsarah77
    @joandsarah77 9 місяців тому +20

    We do have winter here in Australia Ryan. Our house can be like an ice chest inside while outside in the sunshine is lovely. We have reverse cycle air conditioning, and no I would not survive 42C without it.

    • @helendunn9905
      @helendunn9905 9 місяців тому

      No snow = Not cold. I'm in Sydney and have in snow in UK and USA.

    • @kathydurow6814
      @kathydurow6814 9 місяців тому

      As someone who has lived both on Midwest USA (lots of winter snow, central heating inside) and various places in Australia, subjectively my first winter in country Australia (away from the coast) was the coldest. Why? No central heating....our house in the early 70s had the kitchen & lounge heated by wood fires & the bathroom by an electric bar heater on the wall. NO heating elsewhere, and our US winter coats were still on a very slow boat to Australia. Temperatures could be below freezing overnight, so it was uncomfortable. At least in the US everything was toasty warm inside & you bundled up a lot more outside. Now that I live on the coast a bit further north things aren't as bad and I've hardly turned on the heater this year, just lived in the sunniest rooms or added another layer to stay warm.

    • @mindi2050
      @mindi2050 9 місяців тому +1

      @@kathydurow6814 You're right. I just don't know why we don't place more importance on making sure homes are properly insulated and heated. We like our homes to look good but we seem to forget about heating. It wasn't until I lived overseas that I realized how cold our homes can be here.

    • @FM-qm5xs
      @FM-qm5xs 8 місяців тому +2

      My little fibro shack has no insulation. It might not quite freeze here but waking up in a house that is 3 degrees is bloody cold!

  • @badkitty101
    @badkitty101 9 місяців тому +31

    Sydney isn't the baseline when it comes to housing in Australia. I'm from South Australia and the housing is built so much different. Most of my town is made from limestone as its a good way too keep the warmth in during winter. Please feel free to have a look around on google maps and such. Brisbane is also loads different with housing too they have a house called a Queenslander and its a house on stilts cause of the flooding.
    Adding on. I grew up country in a rural area and most houses in my home town have fire places. And she is also wring with the air conditioning. Its not commen unless your able to afford to have one put in. She is basing her comments off of Sydney only. Where I grew up in winter the warmest days we got was 15°c and coldest was -14°c in 1993. Only new builds will have air conditioning and older houses well, your outnof luck and get a fan

    • @linesydclb8845
      @linesydclb8845 9 місяців тому +1

      Most of the houses in WA have airconditioning but our house in Victoria had no airconditioning and ducted heating. Really depends where you live, doesn't it.

    • @caroleboeder6169
      @caroleboeder6169 9 місяців тому +1

      Adelaides limestone homes are stunningly beautiful. Full of character and I love the ones with the crazy chimneys.

    • @neumanmachine3781
      @neumanmachine3781 9 місяців тому +2

      Queenslanders are on stilts mainly for air circulation under the floorboards to keep the house cool in summer. It's generally considered smarter not to build them on floodplains. Also Brisbane is very hilly so a stilted house can achieve a level platform without expensive earthworks.

    • @supergran62
      @supergran62 9 місяців тому

      Mount Gambier?

    • @bena8121
      @bena8121 9 місяців тому +1

      Most modern homes built in the last 30 years are very similar from one side of Australia to the other - a single set brick home with a double garage. Many of them are cement rendered.

  • @TallowTheQuoll
    @TallowTheQuoll 8 місяців тому +1

    6:55 idk if you realise, but the mailbox is a little house shape.
    Also the top hinges up from those front bolts so you can fit larger stuff in there than the slot hole

  • @imanafshari6128
    @imanafshari6128 8 місяців тому +1

    The triangle on mail boxes are to hold news paper as they used to and sometimes come rolled up

  • @divahc1
    @divahc1 9 місяців тому +30

    Our house is 57 years old. It was one of the first built in our street. It was a Govt. built home, built to house immigrants and young families. Basic fibro, front verandah, 4 bedrooms, small diner/kitchen, sitting room, and an outside "dunny". Now, it's an inside toilet. It's now covered in white vinyI cIadding, has an extra room at the back, a covered in back verandah, a large garage, a covered carport and a self-contained living area upstairs. It doesn't look nearly as old as some of the remaining homes. We live on the coast a couple of hours south of Sydney.

    • @donnaaussiedch8040
      @donnaaussiedch8040 9 місяців тому

      Let me guess the suburb, unanderra, Berkeley, bellambi, warilla, koonawarra?

    • @divahc1
      @divahc1 9 місяців тому +1

      @donnaaussiedch8040 Close, but not quite 😉

    • @evaadams8298
      @evaadams8298 9 місяців тому +2

      Omg mine too and I live in Milton on the South coast in a gorgeous “Fibro Majestic”

    • @judithstrachan9399
      @judithstrachan9399 4 місяці тому

      Ryan!
      The term “Fibro majestic” is a pun. There’s a hotel in the Blue Mountains, called the Hydro Majestic, that was THE absolute last word in luxury 150+ years ago. Possibly is again but it was quite run down when I lived in Sydney in the 80’s. Fibro was a building material: sheets of asbestos in cement(? My dad called it ‘Fibro cement’) that was popular because it was cheap & fire-resistant. It was also extremely dangerous to the lungs of people who worked with it & is now expensive to remove if you want to do any work on your old house.

  • @lesmor2969
    @lesmor2969 9 місяців тому +31

    Our Aussie houses are very similar to your American houses Except we very rarely have a basement.

    • @kathydurow6814
      @kathydurow6814 9 місяців тому +3

      My guess is the difference has to do with space availability. UK is more densely populated; US & Australia settled over a shorter period. US cities are also designed for cars (in the suburbs) and large flat parking lots are still an efficient use of space compared to Australia where most large shopping centres stack the parking on multiple levels.

    • @sallyariad4623
      @sallyariad4623 9 місяців тому +4

      Or an Attic.

  • @taliesinllanfair4338
    @taliesinllanfair4338 9 місяців тому +1

    Flat and unit are both used in Australia. Flats are generally one building with multiple dwellings. Units usually have a separate backyard but there is no clear rule. Units are usually separated and may share a garage wall but may not. Many units in Australia are just 4 dwellings on a 1/4 acre plot that once housed a single dwelling. The quarter acre plot used to be the standard for a house 50-60 years ago.

  • @nolasyeila6261
    @nolasyeila6261 9 місяців тому +2

    Noone says 'get under your Manchester" .. lol. Manchester is usually more the name of the department in the store that sells these items - we would say get under the sheets or blanket,

  • @56music64
    @56music64 9 місяців тому +28

    In Brisbane, I worked with a girl from Canada years ago, she was from the very north and was actually raised in an Eskimo community. She rented a 1930's flat in an old fibro block and she could not get over how cold she felt constantly during winter here. Obviously she was used to central heating. So yes it does get cold even in Brisbane. Also in Queensland, or anywhere north, it is a great idea to have, I believe, is wide eaves and to install full length louvre windows which let in much needed cross breezes.

    • @neumanmachine3781
      @neumanmachine3781 9 місяців тому +4

      In 2013 I was living in a rental house in southern Brisbane that was built in the late 1990's and had no insulation to speak of. Brisbane has very low humidity in winter and can get surprisingly cold, and this house had a poor aspect that meant it got very little morning sun in winter. I can remember the mornings were freezing inside and the internal temperature in the living room in the mornings could be as low as 6 degrees Celsius (43 degrees Fahrenheit). Brisbane also has a significant wind chill factor in winter as well so it can feel much colder than the ambient temperature - single digit (Celsius) minimums are not uncommon, which can catch out people who move there from interstate or overseas. My Russian wife was surprised by her first Brisbane winter and how cold the houses were inside. She was living in a Soviet era apartment that had 30cm thick concrete walls and floors, double glazing, central heating and double doors (an outer and inner door) and an airlocked vestibule when entering the apartment from the stairwell landing. They can be very stuffy in summer, but you won't freeze to death when it's -20C outside.

    • @Rionnagan
      @Rionnagan 9 місяців тому +3

      My grandparents house in Hughenden had full length louvre windows all around the house to catch cross-breezes, and ceiling fans and that was their sole source of temperature control.

    • @LoveratLoves
      @LoveratLoves 9 місяців тому +2

      Yep our Qld house was built in 1950 and all the front "sun rooms" which are basically a walled in porch have louvre windows. They are the best for catching the breeze. Also have the old style Queensland windows which open out. We didn't even have screens for the first year and the flies - omg the flies!

    • @56music64
      @56music64 9 місяців тому +1

      @@neumanmachine3781 How interesting Neuman, so my tale is confirmed. Let's hope we have helped anyone thinking of moving to Brisbane.

    • @56music64
      @56music64 9 місяців тому +2

      @@LoveratLoves Hi LoveratLoves, yes my grandparents lived in Coorparoo in Brisbane in a 1930 built timber home, where they had closed off the once open verandah with push out casement windows, on top and fibro on the bottom, when the weather was hot they would sleep with the windows pushed out to the max and the front door left wide open to let the breeze from the north east flow in. Perhaps the norm in the 50's and 60's but I doubt many people in Brisbane would be doing that now.

  • @bblake5116
    @bblake5116 9 місяців тому +17

    It gets quite cold down in the southern areas of Australia. Easy to get to minus temperatures every winter. Last time I lived in NSW, Armidale, -11 degrees was its coldest day. And it sleeted on Christmas Day there in 2006, December is summer.

    • @bucinsk
      @bucinsk 9 місяців тому +1

      I hear (this year excepted) that there is more snow in Australia than Switzerland.
      Even Sydney gets below freezing some nights in Winter and I agree with the video that houses here are colder than in climates where hoiuse design is for cold weather.

    • @eclecticapoetica
      @eclecticapoetica 9 місяців тому +2

      I’ve lived mainly in cold climates - Blue Mountains west of Sydney, Armidale, Canberra, now a cooler part of Melbourne region. We always had open fires.

    • @bblake5116
      @bblake5116 9 місяців тому

      @@eclecticapoetica I was born in Tenterfield, the schools had radiator heaters. Our homes had fireplaces, which kept you warm if you stood in front of them 😁. I know Armidale doesn’t let new houses have wood burning heating due to smoke pollution in the town, as it sits in a gulley. I live where it is too hot now, near Cairns. Would rather the cold country.

    • @bblake5116
      @bblake5116 9 місяців тому

      @@bucinsk I live on the Atherton tablelands near cairns, most houses here don’t have aircon or ceiling fans. I have both, I keep my ceiling fans on all year round. Rather cold than the heat and humidity. I miss the snow.

  • @pippasmith4813
    @pippasmith4813 9 місяців тому +1

    How do you survive in Australia without air-con? Firstly, build a north-facing house, sarking and roof insulation, wide eaves, whirlybirds on roof, solar roof panels (will take the brunt of the sun's heat), light roof tiles for refraction, high ceilings, garden with mature trees for shade - did not use air-con for 40 years in Sydney. In the far north, the Queenslander style, is an elevated build allowing for air flow

    • @Alicia-ij6gt
      @Alicia-ij6gt 4 місяці тому

      I don’t have air conditioning in Sydney. But then I live near the water and get sea breezes. I’ve retrofitted some insulation (what I can) and better window glazing, plus a shade sail outside to the north, but it can still get quite hot on some days. I use fans a lot.

  • @imanafshari6128
    @imanafshari6128 8 місяців тому +1

    heat switch is a light designed to get hot and let off heat to help drying bathrooms or to heat them up

  • @willco5431
    @willco5431 9 місяців тому +19

    The pool thing is funny because we have both versions. We are not all rich.

    • @mehere8038
      @mehere8038 9 місяців тому

      to be fair, I"m not sure we do lol. I've got a blow up pool, but mine has just a blow up top rim & is much higher & nicer looking than that UK picture one!

    • @7thlittleleopard7
      @7thlittleleopard7 9 місяців тому

      @@mehere8038 IDK, those flimsy ones were pretty much a part of my childhood and early teens. XD Granted, if you've got six kids and a small backyard, you're going to spring for the cheaper option. We also had those tiny shell ones for my baby sister and brother. Those ones were a lot more solid but a lot smaller.

    • @mehere8038
      @mehere8038 9 місяців тому

      @@7thlittleleopard7 How long ago was that? When I was a kid, yes, that was the norm too, but nowadays the more durable ones seem much more common in my experience. Just looking at what's for sale, Kmart tends to have the best range & prices, but interestingly they've so far only got in the cheap & nasties, but they always get the better ones in, must just be a few weeks off arriving. Theirs range from $10-$25 for the cheap & nasty.
      Big W has the mix in & I think from memory what they have now is about their entire range. $29 for a 6 foot (so adult body lenght), 50cm deep pool with just the blow up rim, which means very little to blow up & rim then rises when water is added & few worries with leaks too, I mean water can leak, but not air & a small water leak really doesn't cause any dramas, unlike an air leak.
      Big W goes the whole way up to $700 4 metre long pools! Those are also uncommon I think, cause caught with that & no fence & it's massive fines & just too much work (and water) to be filling & emptying all the time. The 6 foot one is what I used for my hydrotherapy during covid, I could fill & heat to body temperature within 3 hours, use & then empty & hang over the railing between uses. They discount them down to about $14 at the end of the season too (ie January or early February).
      Shell ones are a good idea too imo, the ease of filling & emptying & storing upright to keep clean between uses makes them worthwhile & I doubt they'll ever go out of fashion with really little kids

    • @7thlittleleopard7
      @7thlittleleopard7 9 місяців тому

      @@mehere8038 As recently as ~10 years ago (bought one for the nephew and nieces to play in when they were staying over some summers back. Mum broke it when she slipped and fell on the wall. She was fine since it was set up on grass, but the poor pool was not XD), but for my own childhood, about 25-30 years ago.

  • @paulwhillas6494
    @paulwhillas6494 9 місяців тому +6

    Our bathroom is small and basic but it does have the 3 switches. Extraction fan removes moist air and reduces mould Used all year round. Heat is an infra red light built into extraction fan. You stand under it, and it keeps you warm and helps you dry your hair etc.Light switch is used when bathroom is dark .
    In summer I might not use any of the switches. Just have a window open, and shower during daylight hours.
    In winter I tend to use all 3 as the window is closed, and daylight hours are much shorter.

  • @brontewcat
    @brontewcat 9 місяців тому +1

    Huge myth about Australia is it always hot. Most of it is the temperate zone. Winters in the parts of Australia where 80% of Australians live get cold. Even southern Queensland in the early hours of the morning, for a few weeks are pretty chilly. In the southern parts of Australia, it can be very cold in winter, and in the higher altitudes and in Tasmania frosts are not uncommon.
    In older houses, up until WWII, fireplaces in most Sydney houses were very common. They are still very welcome on a cold winter night. Where I come from in the Northern Tablelands, even today most houses have some sort of wood burning heater.
    We also had a sunroom (which is similar to a conservatory) on the western side of the house. It was hot in summer, but pretty nice in spring, winter and autumn.

  • @aaronleverton4221
    @aaronleverton4221 9 місяців тому

    The triangle roof on the mailbox is for your newspaper to be put in if you have it delivered. It won't fit in the letter slot, so the top triangle was created for the rolled-up newspaper to be put in.

  • @andrewhall9175
    @andrewhall9175 9 місяців тому +51

    One thing she missed is that in Australia (and USA) houses are built to last about 20 minutes and in UK they’re built to last about 30000 years

    • @cbjones2212
      @cbjones2212 9 місяців тому +2

      😅

    • @77Zamarta77
      @77Zamarta77 9 місяців тому +2

      Excellent comment - and true!!!

    • @TenOrbital
      @TenOrbital 9 місяців тому +3

      Pre-WW2 houses were built solidly and pretty much identical to UK houses. But after WW2 houses were thrown up as cheaply as possible to house the ongoing waves of migrants.

    • @mindi2050
      @mindi2050 9 місяців тому +1

      Pre-WW2 homes were definitely built more solidly in Australia with double brick etc. Although they weren't identical to UK homes. Britain had a lot of two story semi-dethatched (duplex) homes. I don't know what it's like now though in the UK. Things change.

    • @dickiesdocos
      @dickiesdocos 9 місяців тому +4

      People living in Grenfell Tower might argue that.

  • @westaussie965
    @westaussie965 9 місяців тому +10

    the only thing I miss about Oz, are the houses. We live in a semi in England, and we are having to get soundproofing as we can hear our neighbours

  • @shanegooding4839
    @shanegooding4839 9 місяців тому +2

    Some of these terms are more Sydney than Australia. Most people I know say Couch, Lounge (room not the couch), Bedding (never hear anyone say Manchester), Doona, Flat/Unit/Apartment (this last one I'd say is a pretty even split). I've lived in Perth, Melbourne and Darwin so this is what I've generally heard in these places. It might be different elsewhere.

  • @Ainzleeriddell
    @Ainzleeriddell 9 місяців тому +1

    In cold parts of working-class Australia I’ve seen people sitting in their car with the newspaper spread out over the dashboard and drinking a coffee. Brilliant as little sunrooms!

    • @judithstrachan9399
      @judithstrachan9399 4 місяці тому

      I like to sit in the car when it’s cold & sunny.

  • @nswinoz3302
    @nswinoz3302 9 місяців тому +10

    Hey Ryan, having grown up in the UK I understand both electrical systems and home designs as I’ve work for residential builders here in Oz. We tried having no eaves (overhang) in the 90s and they were quickly returned. Pre-80’s home in Sydney have poor insulation as builders didn’t have to do it. Electrical voltage and system are very similar but UK codes are a hangover from pre-RCD (80’s) residual current devices, which I personally physically tested more than once. Switch with the string are British whereas Bathroom in Oz typically have GPO’s (general power outlets) switches are for a combined exhaust fans, light and multiple high intensity radiating lights that warm your body when standing under them. This girl has only resided within 20km of the coast. As older brick homes >1930 in certain part are very similar in build to the UK before we realised what we needed to be changed for our climate which varies greatly in comparison to the UK. .P.S. Manchester term is due the Industrial Revolution period and it stuck. Oz & NZ made and shipped the raw materials to 🇬🇧 they processed it and shipped it back to Australia 🇦🇺 & 🇳🇿 NZ. Its an old term only used by shops. NSW in Oz

    • @sandrathompson1277
      @sandrathompson1277 9 місяців тому +1

      In Perth they also have Manchester departments…all bedding…quilts…which were once all made from cotton..I came here from Manchester in England where all the mills were that made the cotton into material..

    • @nswinoz3302
      @nswinoz3302 9 місяців тому

      @@sandrathompson1277 So doesn’t it sound weird that someone is selling your home town in a department store? I remember as a child growing up there (UK) that the very best tasting lamb had a circular stamp on it “New Zealand lamb”? Frozen lamb was transported from there since 1886 when commercial refrigerators were Invented through to 1973-74 when the UK joined the Common market (EEC) cutting off supply and devastating that countries economy with its actions! NSW in Oz

  • @bblake5116
    @bblake5116 9 місяців тому +7

    Our houses in far north qld have to be cyclone rated, but my house is an old timber one on stumps, it was built before cyclone Tracey, so isn’t cyclone rated. But it’s been through quite a few cyclones.

  • @erinsteer3381
    @erinsteer3381 9 місяців тому +1

    Mostly depends on where you live and how old the house is. The house I grew up in had a balcony, fireplace, bathroom heater (not the switch and the light globe) and wooden window frames. Lived in about 7 rentals since and had none of these, although one did have the UK sunroom. Also I’ve never heard anyone call it Manchester except the shops that sell it, it’s just bedding or sheets.

  • @iltc9734
    @iltc9734 9 місяців тому +2

    bungalow has different meanings. In the UK it means a single story home. In Australia it is a little extra room built separately out the back of the house and not joined to the rest of the house. I think the word originally comes from India.

  • @trig1900
    @trig1900 9 місяців тому +7

    Unlike a lot of the Eastern Coast, Western Australia tends to construct Double brick homes. That is, an inner and outer wall of bricks around the entire circumference of the house. This provides for and 'insulative' wall of air between the outer and inner walls. Again, with the walls being built out to the edge of the eaves these days, once the structure heats up in summer it will take a long time to cool down. Insulation in the roof and air-conditioning is pretty much needed now to compensate. The style of housing in Perth I would think equates, in large part, to the bungalow [single story] type of housing you get in California [climates are very similar]. Two story is becoming more common as, again, property land area gets smaller. When I was a kid the quarter acre block [approx 1000 sq. meters] was the norm. Now, you're lucky if you get 400 sq.m! Hence the need for 2 stories.

    • @shaun5552
      @shaun5552 9 місяців тому +2

      Older homes in Adelaide were also commonly built this way. Two brick layers with an air gap between them.

  • @paulwhillas6494
    @paulwhillas6494 9 місяців тому +7

    Bedding is usually just sheet, pillowcase, blanket quilt/ doona. Sheets/ pillowcases often called linen and kept in the linen cupboard.

    • @helendunn9905
      @helendunn9905 9 місяців тому +4

      No one calls it "manchester" wtf!

    • @carokat1111
      @carokat1111 9 місяців тому

      I do!

    • @mamajojo70
      @mamajojo70 9 місяців тому +2

      The only time I’ve seen / heard it called Manchester is in a catalogue or department store like Myers. It’s called Bedding everywhere else

    • @vtbn53
      @vtbn53 9 місяців тому

      @@helendunn9905 Yes we do, when it's in the shop (a Manchester shop normally) it's called Manchester, when you get it home and unpack it etc, and put it in the linen closet, it magically becomes linen. That's ok.

    • @Pucknuckle
      @Pucknuckle 9 місяців тому

      I've always seen it as Manchester being a catch-all term for sheets, pillowcases, blankets, doonas, towels, teatowels, bathrobes, tablecloths, floormats etc.
      It's a term that isn't really used in conversation because you'll usually only be discussing certain items within that overall group.
      Same with linen, which to me means just sheets pillowcases and tablecloths. Basically, the things made out of thin flat cloth.
      And bedding means sheets, pillowcases, blankets and doonas. Obviously, the stuff that actually goes on the bed.

  • @NaGromOne
    @NaGromOne 9 місяців тому

    That fancy switch is wired to a fancy combination fitting in the bathroom ceiling. It contains a normal light, a special heatlamp to warm the room in winter, and hidden above an exhaust fan to suck steam into the roof cavity.

  • @penponds
    @penponds 9 місяців тому

    I’m an expat Brit living in the Perth Hills, Western Australia, and a real estate agent (yeah!).
    What strikes me is the incredible diversity of house design here, but several things are common with what the lady observes.
    Small proportion of even new properties are 2 story - the bungalow still reigns supreme. Terraces extremely rare. Deep eaves remain popular. A “patio” is the entire roofed outdoor paved or decked area. Very rare to have a British patio which never has a roof structure.
    Pools here in outer suburbs and hills around Perth are common on properties >1000sqm. In the more “fashionable” (ie expensive) suburbs in the Hills which are half acre or more perhaps a third to half of properties have a pool which will be between 30,000 litres to 100,000 litres, and up to around 30ft long.
    About half of homes have heating in each room, provided by “ducted” a/c vents in the ceilings.
    Rare in homes older than 1990. Otherwise a select number of rooms have individual combined a/c & heating units mounted on the walls.
    Unless you have a very modern house, they are freezing inside in the winter. No heated floors, water filled “radiators” in a central heating system. Biggest negative, no question. Regularly have four layers on in my super-flimsy “architect designed” 1960s house !
    Wooden (Jarrah - a very hard wearing gum tree) floors are common. Cellars /basements extremely rare, unless your house built on side of a hill.
    Even smallest / cheapest / oldest house has a separate laundry room. Older homes (pre-70s) have more UK-style room arrangements with separate living (lounge) rooms and an open plan kitchen-diner.
    What I don’t think she mentioned was the basic size of an Aussie house compared to the UK. In my area (not inner city Sydney or Melbourne), houses are twice the size of UK, and half the price. Where I live, on just over half an acre in a 4bed 2 bath home with a large pool & double garage just 45 mins from a major city centre, I reckon would cost GBP 1.25m, but I’d probably get around $900k (GBP500k).

  • @martyjones1413
    @martyjones1413 9 місяців тому +4

    Manchester is a city in NW England
    linked to the port of Liverpool by the Manchester Ship Canal
    cotton to the mills, cloth to the world at the beginning of the Industrial Revolution

  • @jaywan5553
    @jaywan5553 9 місяців тому +3

    In Nth Qld we have houses called…….Queenslanders. The defining feature are wrap around verandahs.

  • @Alicia-ij6gt
    @Alicia-ij6gt 8 місяців тому

    That fan/heat/light switch for a bathroom is when there is a three-in-one ceiling unit, which incorporates an extractor fan for steam, two or four infra red heat lamps, plus non-heating lights. The heat lamps work instantly, they draw 250 watts each.

  • @scottmarshall3963
    @scottmarshall3963 8 місяців тому

    @Ryan, to answer your question about the letterbox. That particular style is a hinged/flip-top lid, so the bit you see sticking out is actually some mail that has jammed when the lid was being closed. The hinge is on the mail slot side, so the resident lifts the lid from the opposite side, it hinges forward, and they can the retrieve the mail by "going in from the top".
    The triangle bit servers two purposes - one, it helps divert rainwater away and reduces the amount of dust that can accumulate on the letterbox. Its second job is to hold home-delivery newspapers. The rolled up newspaper would be stuck into the triangular portion of the letterbox. This is commonly used by delivery "walkers". Most home-delivered newspapers are thrown by the delivery drivers into the customer's driveway or front yard/lawn as the delivery car or van is driving down the street.

    • @Alicia-ij6gt
      @Alicia-ij6gt 4 місяці тому

      Yes, that is a very cheap letterbox, so small that most mail doesn’t fit very well. With more people getting packages delivered, the trend is to install a secure parcel and letterbox, with a secure compartment for big packages at the bottom.

  • @peteroneill404
    @peteroneill404 9 місяців тому +2

    Here in Australia it is quite common in the bathroom to have a single unit mounted in the ceiling which is a combination of a light, exhaust fan, and heat lamps, hence the switches with labels "FAN", "HEAT", and "LIGHT". Also, we generally don't have earth leakage breakers or GFCI at the outlets in the bathroom, older houses just have one of these breakers for the whole house, newer builds incorporate these breakers as part of the circuit breaker for each power run in the house and they are located in the fuse box.

  • @margm4
    @margm4 9 місяців тому +6

    I’ve lived in Australia all my life and never use the term Manchester. It’s sheets, or pillow cases, towels, etc….whatever it’s used for. Also, it gets very cold in my house, in winter. Timber floors, timber walls, etc…that’s in Queensland. But further north in the tropics, it’s mainly ceramic tiling on floors and sometimes on walls. We have reverse cycle aircon, and a gas heater in the colder months. All the rooms will have a ceiling fan nowadays. 🇦🇺

  • @scottcarr3264
    @scottcarr3264 2 місяці тому

    Ryan, At 11:06 you ask about the Switch in the Bathroom, "Rocker" switches like that are Very common, the 3 different switches are marked "Light" for the Ceiling light, "Heat" for Heat lamps to dry you off when you get out of the shower, (not a lot of homes have it because the lamps are about 300 watts or more) and the "Fan" is for a Ceiling or Wall exhaust fan to get the steam out of the Room.

  • @deannatroy8113
    @deannatroy8113 Місяць тому

    The letter box can sometimes have two places for mail. The smaller slot is for letters and the top triangle is for bigger rolled up junk mail which doesn't matter so much if it is rained on. A fun video would be looking at all the different mail boxes maybe? There are some really interesting/creative ones, especially in rural areas.

  • @CQuinnLady
    @CQuinnLady 9 місяців тому +4

    A federation house, i think named because it was built in the time of australian federation, early 1900s. These homes were double brick, they have fireplaces and mantels. These homes are very secure and warm as well as cool in summer. When affordable housing hit the market they were made of fibro and had no insulation. I grew up in a house like this, we called them paper houses because thats pretty much what they were. Stinking hot n freezing cold. Most often in winter it was warmer outside than in the house.

    • @FM-qm5xs
      @FM-qm5xs 8 місяців тому

      I've spent most of my adult life in a fibro shacks with no insulation. I open all the windows and doors from 11am in winter because it is warmer outside by then.

  • @lynnhamps7052
    @lynnhamps7052 9 місяців тому +3

    Here in UK bathrooms we do have a socket for electric shavers, and an extraction fan to prevent condensation..our pull cords are there because our voltage is around twice as powerful as the USA. We call the spaces at the back of our homes, gardens, not yards and many have decking or patios, some are covered but many home owners fill every inch with flowers and shrubs..screen doors and over windows aren't really necessary as we get very few bugs coming in, maybe thrived annoying fly or wasp, but nothing truly dangerous like poisonous spiders and snakes like our cousins in Australia. As a side note, having visited both places often, I personally think, that although the housing may be different because of the climate, the Australian people are far more like the British than the Americans are to either of us, same colourful language, lots of similar slang and a filthy sense of humour...love aussies! 😄✌🇬🇧💖

    • @cool386vintagetechnology6
      @cool386vintagetechnology6 9 місяців тому

      The mains voltage in Australia is the same as the UK, but there's never been the requirement for cord operated ceiling switches, or isolated sockets which are only for shavers.

  • @gerrymccabe7912
    @gerrymccabe7912 12 днів тому

    In Scotland, we also have Tennament buildings that can be 3 or 4 stories high built in the 1800s of sandstone, and are still in use today. the sandstone walls can be 3 feet thick as I often had to drill through them with a large core cutter for fans or gas vents and central heating vents etc.

  • @jocelynhunter2359
    @jocelynhunter2359 9 місяців тому +2

    Central heating is common in Melbourne and so is air conditioning/evap. The bathroom switches are common, IXLtastic. We also call Manchester "linen". We also use flat and apartment, unit is usually where you have a block subdivided and split into small houses called units.

  • @supportwithspirit9440
    @supportwithspirit9440 9 місяців тому +7

    She is definitely describing a Sydney house, not like Melbourne, Tasmania and Adelaide heating.

    • @levlylove
      @levlylove 9 місяців тому +2

      Don't pin this on us! We don't do "manchester"! 🤣

  • @todjo929
    @todjo929 9 місяців тому +4

    Built my place 4 years ago.
    Definitely have central heating and cooling (I live in regional Victoria, and it gets cold). We have double glazed windows too.
    Our outdoor area is covered (and has fans), and we have a small portico at the front which is big enough for a 2 person table and a couple of chairs.
    The heated lightbulbs are super high wattage, and when you get out of the shower it's quite warm.

  • @dutchroll
    @dutchroll 9 місяців тому

    That 3-way switch for an aussie bathroom is very typical for a combo ceiling unit which contains an exhaust fan ("Fan"), two or four heat lamps ("Heat") and a central light in the middle of it all ("Light"). So you can switch on any or all of these depending on what you're doing. We can have socket outlets in our bathrooms because all sockets in a house must be protected by residual current devices under our wiring code, but there is a certain minimum distance it has to be from open sinks, laundry tubs, etc (ie, anywhere water is likely to splash around).

  • @kathleenharrison9147
    @kathleenharrison9147 9 місяців тому +1

    A sofa is more commonly called a couch
    The lounge is a living room or a lounge room (as she said)
    Bedding is rarely Manchester but linen, and when you go to bed you get under the sheet!
    A flat & a unit are one and the same.
    I guess it depends on where in Australia one is living for some of the differences that she references.

  • @jenniferharrison8915
    @jenniferharrison8915 9 місяців тому +6

    Happy Arvo Ryan! 😁 Architecture, which city? Convict built/Victorian or European migration, Australian Federation or Modern? You can do some housesitting here, or house swap, with character references! 😀 Front verandahs are normal, sloped roofs, and overhanging eaves! We increasingly have double glazing, as more people live in constricted City units, provides more privacy and peace! Separate laundries, yes! Newspapers go in the Post Box triangle! We mostly use standing fans and mobile heaters, fireplaces are more homey! Private or public swimming pools are common in most suburbs! We have underfloor and overhead heating, and fans, in bathrooms! "Sofie"! 😂 British housing? 🤔

  • @judileeming1589
    @judileeming1589 9 місяців тому +3

    I just deleted my copious comment correcting just about everything she said because NB it’s Sydney centric with references to up North, whereas down south we have everything she says she did not see. Down here, where in Winter it snows at higher elevations, gets very chilly 🥶 at lower elevations and bl@@dy 🥵 all over in Summer (think -C to 40+C), we do have air conditioning, central heating, double glazing and fire places as well as swimming pools. The three switches would relate to a combined ceiling fan/heater/light … google “Tastic 3 in 1” and comes in handy if you are only jumping in the shower and running straight off to work after getting up in the morning. Saves on heating the entire house if you are not hanging around, also, those fans are strong and they suck the cold air in under the closed bathroom door so turning on the heater lamps comes in handy when you jump out of the shower and can switch off the fan. We buy bedding and towels from the Manchester/Home Wares Department of big Stores or smaller specialty stores have their own registered business name like “Bed, Bath & Table” etc.

  • @bryndaldwyre3099
    @bryndaldwyre3099 9 місяців тому

    Ok, I live in a 2 story house in country Victoria, it's 2 stories, has 8 bedrooms, I rent one of the rooms off the owner and my bedroom is downstairs. It was previously an office to the former owner but my landlord offered it to me as a bedroom. It's great due to having a glass sliding door to the driveway as well as a door to the inside of the house and the glass sliding door is double glazed. It does get warmer upstairs but there's a split system air conditioner up there that manages to keep the top half of the house reasonably cool in summer. Downstairs is partially dug out of the ground so it remains quite cool in summer and due to having double glazed windows throughout the house, the temps here aren't too bad.

  • @chrish2277
    @chrish2277 9 місяців тому +1

    You also need the wide eaves for the heavy rain we get, especially the further north you go.

  • @inalarose7875
    @inalarose7875 9 місяців тому +8

    Ryan I think you need to do some videos about temperature ranges across Australia because you still seem to have this idea that we don't have winter with ice and snow and frost and that it's warm all the time. It's surprising given how many videos you've done.
    But just for the record - The lowest temperature ever recorded in Australia is −23.0 °C (−9.4 °F), at Charlotte Pass, New South Wales, on 29 June 1994.

    • @mummamia1967
      @mummamia1967 9 місяців тому

      Yes that would be helpful for him

    • @judithstrachan9399
      @judithstrachan9399 4 місяці тому

      He’s now watched snow resorts video & was flabbergasted at the amount of snow, lol.

  • @kitgoodyear9270
    @kitgoodyear9270 9 місяців тому +7

    I'm from Melbourne. We call Units flats and apartments here as well. The heat switch you were puzzled by is a heat lamp that is a multi light bulb unit in the bathroom cealing consisting of your normal lighting and the heat bulbs. Sometimes the fan can be part of the unit as well or seperate. Generally (Melbourne) our houses and apartments are larger than UK and we have bigger front and back yards in our outer suburbs as well. That is beginning to diminish now however, with population growth and property owners pulling down the old house and replacing it with two Townhouse style 2 story homes or ground floor unit style because our lot sizes are spacious enough. This is called Dual Occupancy where the two house addresses share the same street number, one house will have an "A" attached to it .. ie 1 and 1a or 23 and 23a, etc

    • @DpMario11
      @DpMario11 9 місяців тому +1

      Unit, flat and apartment are all different. Flats have multiple dwellings on a single title. Units and apartments are their own individual dwellings part of a strata, but if their is communal entrance into a multi story block that's an apartment. Unit is a standalone thing without shared entry

    • @dosdan
      @dosdan 9 місяців тому

      Legally, a bkock of say 3 flats is different from a block of 3 units. The flats (aka "Multi-Unit Dwelling") are all under 1 title (they can't be sold separately) and are all owned by the same person who then rents them out, whereas the units (aka "Single-Unit Dwelling") are on separate titles and can have different owners.

    • @renatewest6366
      @renatewest6366 9 місяців тому

      Also in Victoria a unit is a small house on a small block and often have several on one block of land.Flats.amd apartments are an interchangeable word.Also we don't use term bungalow for.stand.alone single story.A bungalow on Australia is a Granny Flat, In law suite or an Annex as they say in UK.

    • @judithstrachan9399
      @judithstrachan9399 4 місяці тому

      Thanks, everyone. I always thought the only difference was:
      Flat - old-fashioned term
      Unit - more modern term.
      Apartment - seen too many US movies.

  • @claudiag8097
    @claudiag8097 4 місяці тому

    the bathroom switch with three options - that may be for one of those 3-in-one exhaust fans. Includes a light, a heat lamp and the steam/moisture extractor. They work quite well, and are particularly good for smaller bathrooms where a radiator would take up space, or a good option for people that can't have central heating.

  • @jessann5581
    @jessann5581 9 місяців тому

    The triangle on top of the letter box is to put “junk mail” or “catalogs”, and the part underneath is for private mail.