Ireland vs England (or other parts of the UK differences ?
I'm just wondering if any one in England could enlighten me a bit on this.
I've moved around a bit in Ireland and I've lived in a few houses over the years and I am also familiar with most of my friends and relatives houses. I have also read a few architectural journals where this has come up as a rather idiosyncratic feature of Irish house design and I was wondering if it happens in England too.
Your average home here, particularly those build after the 1950s, tends to have a utility room on the back of the house. This is also normally the place where the backdoor is located. The original idea being that it would have easy access to the back garden for washing lines etc but, it also tends to be handy for bringing out trash etc.
Normally what you'd have in your utility room would be a short run of kitchen cabinets (often not quite as high spec as the kitchen itself). So, typically you'd have at least a work top and space for a washer and a dryer and usually a sink (this is where you'd do stuff like fill mop buckets and things that you don't necessarily want to do in your kitchen sink for hygiene reasons)
The room usually has enough space for an ironing board for your iron / steam generator etc (In our case we added an extractor fan because the steam generator produces so much vapour!)
The bit that architects consider a bit idiosyncratic is that the utility room usually contains the backdoor and a lot of the time, that will be used as the primary entrance to the house for the family with the front door being a bit more 'kept for best' so, only if you ring the door bell will you get answered at the front of the house.
The idea being that you can keep coats, muddy / wet shoes, shopping and all that stuff out of the hallway which is usually tidier / kept for a bit of showing off to visitors i.e. your kitchen could be a mess, but if the Irish version of Hyacinth Bucket or anyone else you want to impress calls around, you always have the hallway and one of two reception rooms tidy. (Most homes would tend to have a living room and sitting room at the least).
So, the utility room / backdoor keeps things like kids, shoes, grocery bags and laundry away from the 'nicer parts' of the house.
You'd also usually find that a utility room might contain some aspects of a long-term storage larder. So a lot of houses would have either a large larger freezer (height of a washer-dryer stack) or in the past a 'deep freeze' (chest freezer) was more common.
Sometimes the utility room would also contain the central heating furnace too. Although, in a lot of cases in Ireland it's actually housed in a separate boiler room / boiler house which may not even be directly attached to the house at all. There were a lot of old fire regulations around pressure-jet oil boiler that required them to be in a separate building (shed next to the house) linked by very insulated pipes underground. Oil fired boilers aren't really something you'd want in your home as they are known to get a little whiffy (oily smells, soot etc) if things go wrong. However, it's not unusual to find a gas boiler in the utility room.
The utility room's also usually the place that you'll find things like the electrical distribution panel (consumer unit / fuse board).
In some homes, the garage gets used as a quasi-utility room too instead of an actual garage.
I'm just wondering if this arrangement is common in England, Wales and Scotland too? I know Ireland and the UK are very similar in lots of ways, but when it comes to housing design we can be a little different and a bit fixated on the sprawling bungalow on an acre of land approach as the idealised way of living which hasn't really created a very "European" country in the sense that we have a lot of very scattered homes once you get outside the core of cities.
Anyway, just curious if anyone would like to comment / give a comparison vs the UK or the US/Canada, OZ and NZ etc or elsewhere in Europe.
To me though, going into a house via the backdoor and the utility room always reminds me of 'home'. There's something nice about arriving home after work or arriving home after a few months abroad or something like that and walking into warm, quaint room with a strong wafting scent of some weird combination of persil, ariel, comfort and possibly even bounce followed by stepping into a kitchen with the scent of home baking.
Always reminds me of arriving in my granny's house
She's one of those people who can still whip up a batch of fresh scones to go with a nice cup of tea all in the space of about 20 mins

[this post was last edited: 11/30/2013-04:42]