My wife asked me, why do so many of these homes have the washing machine/dryer in the kitchen? I have no answer for her. I have never lived in a home like this. Is it only in the UK? Can any one explain a reason.
Larger houses have these rooms and so the washing machine is not in the kitchen.
Bathrooms are not big enough to put the machines in there and anyway, most of them are upstairs and the thin floors would result in a lot of noise when the machines were on a spin cycle.
From a practical standpoint there needs to be available plumbing, with electricity - lecky in the bathroom is a bit more of a no-no, than here, and often they're not big enough. Most British homes don't have cellars, so in the majority of cases, they end up with the wash m/c in the kitchen.
That program doesn't really reflect "real people" anyway (just a wanabe schedule filler). They all seem to own existing properties, already worth a fortune in the big smoke, and wish for some kind of idyllic country retreat, that may not exist in the real world (hence there is seldom a purchase outcome).
With the passing of the years, the copper was replaced by a washing-machine and the 'drying outside' by a tumbler, but the Brits, keen on their traditions, kept everything in its accustomed place.
Only the Swiss, with their passion for mountains, would put the washing machine in the cellar and then fix lines for drying the washing in the attic (in a four storey block of flats).
Grieves me to death to have to move this Thread after writing all that, but non-Swiss is off-topic.
Were we had alot of sunshine, to hang the washing outside.
Here we hang it in the celler, Takes along time to dry, ( Also the smell of the farmers sh1t tank.. I like my kitchen for cooking.
What I've been wondering, as there aren't any laundry rooms in British apartment blocks, where do people hang up their laundry to dry?
(Hubby said in his student times he distributed the laundry on the radiators.
Which doesn't really work if you have a family with tons of clothes to dry - so how does the British housewife manage to dry all those clothes?)
Otherwise, if it's a lot of clothes or bedding and they don't have adequate facilities at home, people often use launderettes which are pretty cheap to use and are widespread in cities.
In the old days, it was always hung outside - I still have images of my mum trying to hang it up one-handed, whilst struggling with an umbrella in the wind, with the other.
Now, I s'pose everyone has a tumbler.
And yes TiMow 230v outlets in bathroom are illegal in the UK if they are closer than 5m or such from any sink, shower, bath or WC and then they have to be high IP rated RCDs.. thus no washers or dryers...