
6 kids 2 bedrooms one bath
Makes one think about hiring him,
That's what I'm remembering as well. And you have to remember that there were outhouses in this country well into the 40's and 50's. Having 2 bathrooms (like having 2 cars) for a family was considered a luxury. Heck, even having 1 and 1/2 bathrooms for a three bedroom home was considered modern in the 50's and 60's.Google the brady house floor plan and it shows the floor plans. 2 bathrooms, one in the master bedroom and one between the kids rooms. Alice had a room downstairs and it shows a bathroom downstairs.
That's what I'm remembering as well. And you have to remember that there were outhouses in this country well into the 40's and 50's. Having 2 bathrooms (like having 2 cars) for a family was considered a luxury. Heck, even having 1 and 1/2 bathrooms for a three bedroom home was considered modern in the 50's and 60's.
The Brady house was designed to be upper-middle income in the 70's. Most families shared a bathroom and it was considered normal.
Mike was obviously a great architect if he could afford a wife, six kids, a maid and two cars (one a convertable).
"Oh my nose!"
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I've seen quite a few houses, IRL, that look very similar to the Brady's house. That look/design must have been pretty popular back in the late 60s, early 70s.
What they had was typical of the times. One bath off the parent's room and one for the kid's bedrooms. What was unusual was having a maid's quarters off the kitchen. If he had build a split level house, that would have been even more typical.
What bothered me the most was the street photo was the opposite of the actual floor plan. It had the upper rooms on the left as you faced it...when the rooms upstairs were all to the right of the entrance.
What they had was typical of the times. One bath off the parent's room and one for the kid's bedrooms. What was unusual was having a maid's quarters off the kitchen. If he had build a split level house, that would have been even more typical.
What bothered me the most was the street photo was the opposite of the actual floor plan. It had the upper rooms on the left as you faced it...when the rooms upstairs were all to the right of the entrance.