English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

fun means entertainment-excercise means like yoga/gym-

2007-02-01 15:43:31 · 7 answers · asked by Anonymous in Home & Garden Decorating & Remodeling

7 answers

The study is at the public library.
The exercise room is at the local gym.
The prayer room is at a church/mosque/synagogue.
The fun room is at the theater/bar, etc.

I agree, though...it would be NICE to have those rooms in our homes. We actually just bought a 100 year old home in December. It's our first home, and I love it. It has four bedrooms, a study/family room, and a "common area" upstairs where the kids can play - NOT in their bedrooms. It also has a foyer, yes, an entire room dedicated to the entry of the home.

You just don't find them made like this anymore!

2007-02-01 15:53:43 · answer #1 · answered by Meg M 5 · 0 0

The difference in structures can be very well explained.

The rooms or the structure of a house in a region depends on the climate in that area, utility, lifestyle and habits of the inhabitants.

A lot of Indian homes have Prayer rooms or so called "mandir room" in their house.

As for other rooms - Study/exercise/Fun, you won't find these rooms in tradiontally built homes. But, yes, the trend of these rooms (expecially study) is gaining speed. Lot of new self-architected houses have study rooms and a special room for gym and realxation.

Some examples of why we have the home as we have:
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
As people are becoming health-conscious, they have started getting exercise rooms.
If the people have reasing habits or they have to work late nights for completing assignments, they would prefer a study room.
Certain houses in India have terraces while some don't. Some have sloping roofs because the area they live gets heavy rainfall and if they have terracess, then water will accumulate. On sloping roofs, water would just slide down without make the the ceiling leak.

A lot of north-Indian houses have Porches at the enterance. Some have special area for gardening.

So the types of rooms depend very much on the LIFESTYLE of people.

2007-02-02 00:05:12 · answer #2 · answered by ? 2 · 0 0

Hello VRK!

It is good question. We are watching houses with Bed room, Kitchen, Bath room, Dining / Living room ‘In Cities only’. We can't find houses these facilities in villages. There are lots of reasons for that. One answer is there is not necessary for those facilities in villages. We can find those facilities in some houses of villages.

Coming to the point; in cities we have common prayer hall, Parks / Amusement Parks / Theme Parks for Fun or Entertainment facilities. For exercises, maximum of us, have Gyms, Play Grounds, even Roads. For study; we are seeing most of the students are in and around Public Libraries. You know all these facilities are for common men.

If one has enough money to spend, he can build a house with every facility he wants, irrespective of his requirement.

Regards

2007-02-02 00:42:50 · answer #3 · answered by VenuzLib 1 · 0 0

They are not in typical American homes because the typical American cannot afford to pay for the essentials plus the rooms you mention. The cost per square foot is in excess of $100 per foot and I try to build homes that people can afford to buy. As a builder, I can't even afford the homes that I build.

2007-02-02 00:20:43 · answer #4 · answered by Turnhog 5 · 0 0

Those aren't specific rooms in our traditions. They are addons to uses for other rooms. Those things are addons to our culture, but we are adapting and sooner or later they will be a part of us. But for now they are not essentials, but nice to haves.

2007-02-01 23:52:44 · answer #5 · answered by MT C 6 · 0 0

Study rooms are in Liabrary.
Exercise are in Gym.
Prayer..... Temple
Fun....... Malls

2007-02-01 23:53:55 · answer #6 · answered by GG 1 · 0 0

they are as essantial as other parts of the house.

2007-02-01 23:47:59 · answer #7 · answered by rulethisworldman 2 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers