By: Lia Contesso
Submitted: 2010-10-25 03:49:05 | Word Count: 540
While in the ancient times people were happy to live in natural grottos, in more recent times people became more and more exigent: they started building small huts, then more and more resistant, big and accurate houses, as you can see in the ads nowadays.
Having a look at a journal with real estate ads and going to see some flats, houses or villas you can realize how important the interior and exterior environment is: the internal division of the spaces of the house is fundamental to grant comfort and functionality.
The ads of houses for sale or for rent, in fact, always include the number of rooms and bathrooms, describing the kitchen, if it’s livable or not, if it’s a kitchenette or a separate room, and naming storage rooms, terraces and garages, if there are any.
If the kitchen is separated from the dining room it allows cooking not filling the whole house with the (good or bad) smells of the kitchen, which is an indubitable good point, while the function of the storage room is fundamental to store the objects you don’t want to be visible to everyone: a richness, also (or even mostly) in the smallest houses.
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A terrace, instead, depending on its size can be a little external part of the house, where you can breathe some fresh air, or even host a table and some chairs allowing you to dime outside even though you haven’t got a garden.
The garage is a very desirable space for those who live in the city centre: parking you car can often be a problem, not considering that the garage offers a repair to it (and can also become an additional storage room), so that it won’t suffer the damages of hail and of the hurried manoeuvres in the city centre streets.
Hence, the choice depends on your habits, your desires and, of course, you financial resources: obviously prices change depending on the comfort and functionalities offered by the house and by the area in which it is situated, which is indirectly included among the comforts.
Living in the city centre, in fact, means staying near stores of any kind, and it helps to decrease the usage of the car; the choice of the city centre is suitable for those who wish to have everything at a hand, but does not mind some chaos.
Periphery, instead, is more suitable for those who love tranquillity and do not mind moving around with their car or motorcycle, or even better with the public transports or bicycles, to reach the city centre when they need it. The choice often means a change in price or size: in the city centre house are often more expensive, or smaller, and they are often flats in ancient buildings.
The houses in the periphery, instead, are often larger, or cheaper, and recently built: they are safe both in terms of robberies and electrical and hydraulic systems and possible earthquakes. The choice, then, is to be made following your preferences, habits and wallet, and your research should be patient and widespread.
Author Resource:- This article was written by Lia Contesso, with support from annunci inserire .