Preferred Laundry Room Location: Main Floor or Basement?

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daveamkrayoguy

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Which is most practical? Do you have a large slab of real-estate that you can save yourself climbing stairs, or is your basement the best place for your washer & dryer, regardless? (And, plus you get the exercise!)

 

 

-- Dave
 
Close to the Bedrooms

<span style="font-family: verdana, geneva;">My preference is as close to the bedrooms as you can get given those rooms generate the majority of the laundry.  This house has a utility room off of the kitchen so that's where I do the laundry these days.  I'm not opposed to the basement if I had one but it just seems more logical to me closer to the bedrooms.</span>

 

<span style="font-family: verdana, geneva;">My house is built on a slab so it would be a big deal to move them.  I could get close to one of the bathrooms for plumbing but the quote I got was about $5K to dig into the concrete and add the plumbing so I can live with it where they are.</span>
 
The laundry is in a closet off of the kitchen here and that's pretty convenient. I would prefer a full laundry room with a utility sink and all and to do that in this house would involve taking over one of the downstairs bedrooms that's off of the family room (a junk room now) which would be perfect as a laundry room. Doing it wouldn't be the hardest either as all the necessary utilities run right beneath the room (gas, water, sewer).

Having the laundry in the basement would be a giant PITA for me.
 
The houses I grew up in were either one floor with basement laundry (and a chute) or the typical 4 level split with the laundry room on the ground floor next to the garage and family room.  Our current house is a 4 level split like that..  I'm getting tired of the stairs.. 20/20 hindsight I should have known better

 

Our first house in Calgary was a two story with the laundry in the basement.  A long trek  because the first flight of stairs landed at the front foyer and then you had to circle around down the hall to the basement stairway, then trek across the rek room to the laundry at the back of the house.  Would have been much better with the laundry on the top floor, which most new houses have or at least off the kitchen.
 
My preference would be to have the laundry on a concrete floor with a floor drain. The solidity of concrete and the protection from disaster is my reasoning. If that happened to be next to the bedrooms that would be very handy. If not stairs are required.

Perhaps in 15-20 years I may sing a different tune. But for now I personally wouldn't place laundry on a framed floor if I could avoid it.
 
I prefer the basement in case of disaster as well. However, as I'll likely be working (at least part-time) well past retirement age I'd prefer to save my energy for work & play, not household chores:-) So given a choice I'd like my laundry room/closet somewhere between the kitchen and bedrooms.

Jim
 
In mild-winter climates, there is another option: the garage. It may get cold (40F/5C) in the garage, but it doesn't freeze inside. Garage offers several advantages: no height/depth constraints, unless overhead cabinets have been installed; noise not an issue; heat stays out of house in summer; if flooding occurs, it is confined to garage which normally is 6 inches/15 cm below house floor level {newer garage slabs are sloped toward street so water flows to outside}. About the only negative is that it's likely a longer trip to the bedrooms and bathrooms. Tolerable in a single story design but possibly not in a two story home. True basements are rare in California. A basement elsewhere offers most of the benefits of a garage location, though Californians don't have to deal with basement steps with a garage laundry.
 
as I get older and the knees are not working as good as they should, I prefer everything on one floor.  I have a ranch home with a finished basement and basement laundry room. However, my plan is to move the laundry into one of the spare bedrooms or into the kitchen.  I was looking at the compact electrolux laundry if I do that.
 
We have a shared laundry room in the basement. It's ugly, dirty and cold. But... at least the well water is free so I can use as much as I want (although it's cold as f__) and the condenser dryer benefits from the cold ambient air and won't overheat our living space in the summer. There's also no noise.

Still, I'd love to have one of these American laundry rooms that you see in the magazines. Since our houses here are made of concrete and washers have anti-flood devices built-in, it doesn't matter on which floor you put the LR.

I like this idea as well: w/d as part of the closet.

logixx-2016011817022907507_1.png
 
My abode

is slab-on-grade thus the utility room is right off the kitchen, on my way to the garage. About as far away from the bedrooms as one can get, but at least I am not climbing stairs as I did at the condo.
 
sure the most practical thing would be to have one's front loaders in their walk in closet...... but where's the fun in that?

And I've built a house with two laundry areas: one in the upstairs master closet and another laundry room on the main floor. Blahh.

The most fun was adding faucets to the basement utility sink and setting up a third laundry area in the unfinished portion of the basement.

The most desirable: a traditional Midwestern, 1960s basement laundry room complete with painted cinder block (preferably a 60s pastel.) slightly sloped cement floor that may be painted or tiled, some paneling (either painted over or bare), exposed utility lines, a nice laundry sink for use with a very necessary sud-saver, porcelain socket lighting, surface mounted 1960s electrical, a floor drain for the inevitable leak, cotton print curtain custom fitted to the small windows, possibly a couple lines of rope clothes lines hanging precariously.

And the furnishings: an old dishwasher, refrig, and stove, all connected and working, a kitchen table, an air drying rack for my delicate items, a metal kitchen cabinet or two to sit next to the machines and hold detergents and scrub brushes, a couple of wall shelves that are nothing more than a 1 by 12 piece of actual wood with metal brackets, some old wood accent tables in rough shape, old fuzzy bathroom rugs on the floor, a wood framed laundry chute hanging from the ceiling....
Oh, and a pink rotary dial wall phone, in case the radio station calls to let me know I'm a winner of the daily prize.

delaneymeegan++1-18-2016-19-05-53.jpg.png
 
Depends on what sort of basement we are talking about.

A fully finished job that is dry and well ventilated in summer/heated in winter is fine for doing laundry. My parents along with countless other family and friends homes all had finished basements complete with second kitchens and "living rooms". Used to stay down there all afternoon with the TV on doing wash and ironing.

Where this isn't possible am happy with laundry appliances on the main floor. Only place one truly objects to is bathrooms. Having spent much time in Europe it still puts one off to see a washer and or dryer in the loo.
 
Preferred......Master Bedroom Closet or Bath.....

although would love for it to be in the kitchen....this is where I spend the most time, and can monitor all things at once.....

right now its located in the hall bath at one end of the house, not much of an issue for living alone, or with a partner......toss in guests or kids, and that bathroom sees so much traffic while trying to get to the laundry.....thankful for full laundry room in the basement as well, at this point, its an escape, especially on holidays....

the only bad thing for a dryer in the living quarters, is its blowing out all that conditioned air.....like leaving a window wide open when it is in use...unless its in a location that can be closed off, and a small window opened to exchange air...
 
delaneymeegan-- God, that basement photo is SO Minnesota. Absolutely spot-on. Also: My nephew and his wife have an LG set in the walk-in closet of their master bedroom in Bloomington.

I appreciate a washer and dryer on concrete, as does Phil L. However, my knees would vote main floor, damage and vibrations be damned.
 
Our house is one level with a concrete foundation, and the laundry room is in the hallway leading to the guest bedroom and office. It's away from the living room and kitchen area enough that with the door pulled-to there's no noise disturbance, but it's also smack in the middle of the house for the most part, so I can still enjoy hearing my machines when I want to. I've loved not having any vibration at all from the washer because of the solid tile-on-foundation floor.

Not sure I ever want laundry in the basement or garage. I like having it on the main floor so long as the floor is plenty reinforced. In the house I grew up in, our washer was in the corner of the kitchen, and the dryer was on the "back porch" as we called it, but it was an enclosed sun room of sorts. No insulation at all, so wearing shoes and a sweat shirt or jacket was required when taking the clothes from the washer or folding. That kind of ruined any non-indoor installation for me. The floor under the washer was also not in good shape with the age of the house, so the washer had to be set just so that it would shake when spinning but not enough to walk.
 
Like most California homes, this one has no basement. But having been built in 1941, it does have a crawl space that I've become quite familiar with.

 

Current laundry closet is in a hall area between the kitchen and family room. Since the home is single story, that's fairly centrally located. The laundry hampers are kept in a large master bath, and it's really not an issue shlepping them the 35 feet or so to the laundry area. The laundry closet hosts the Neptune 7500 pair.

 

I also have a washer collection on a slab in a detached workshop on the property. Currently only two Miele washers are hooked up out there, and generally I only use one of them, for whites once a week.

 

Water from the washer in the house hasn't been an issue, other than a slow drip from leaky hoses and/or wall faucets. Plus the flooring underneath the washer is sheet vinyl so it tends to limit the water penetration, if any, into the framing.

 

I actually would like to have a home with a basement. And I'd probably put some washer/dryers down there.
 
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