Wednesday is Laundry Day

Automatic Washer - The world's coolest Washing Machines, Dryers and Dishwashers

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toggleswitch

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Apr 12, 2005
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Location
New York City, NY
in the Bronx, a section of New York City.

Upon inspecitng one particular large apartment building, an extrordinarily large number of tenants were doing laundry (at least compared to my "normal" day).

Here are some pics of washers and "dryers".

I have placed this thread in this section such that we can have some fun with it and it can be flushed instead of archived.

ENJOY!

toggleswitch++5-7-2010-09-25-16.jpg
 
The large washer is missing the glass in the door!

Larry:

Unused laundry room, onsite, in basement of building.

Many landlords in rougher/poorer neighborhoods don't fight washers on premises. NYC rent-regulation laws allow a small monthly surcharge (something like $10 to $20 per month) for water use, wear-and-tear and potential floods (insurance premiums/claims).

Similarly I have seen onsite laundry rooms in such buildings that are not-in-service, or are quickly removed. The landlords fear lawsuits initated by the tenants getting hurt/robbed/raped in the basement.

The laws of NYC were blatantly stacked in the landlord's favor for DECADES. But it is finally understoond how in some cases rent-reguation laws have destroyed and blighted neighrhoods. So the pendulum has swung the other way (think of a guy in sweatpants, no underwear), and landlords have more recourse these days.

Also my understanding is that if a washing machine or a dog or cat is a "resident" (of that apartment) for 30 days WITHOUT complaints by other tenants, they are "legal" residents. The landlord may not aribtrarily remove them or force their removal. *FEH* you just keep your washer unused for 45 days after you move in and voila! YOU'RE IN!

I hate to say this, but IMHO if the landlords looks different than the majority of the tenants, methinks the lanlords STFU to avoid harassment and racial-discrimination claims.

Of course one can always grease the palm of the superintendent to play blind!

I have snuck in a washer, dryer a DW in my apt. No one complains aobut me, and I dont complain about the smell of curry and other heavy spices, fish/sea-food, peanut oil, fried food, doors slamming at all hours of the day and night, cigarettes, hash, mary-jane and God knows what else that stinks. Ditto cigarette butts tossed onto the lawn and stairs, etc.

One hand washes the other, and both together the face! [this post was last edited: 5/7/2010-12:12]

toggleswitch++5-7-2010-11-16-21.jpg
 
the second sink is under the dishdrainer and metal cover.

BTW here is a typical unrenovated NYC apartment.

At one time the law required a double sink. Shallow for dishes; deep for laundry. 2 feet (60cm) wide, each. Most often porcelain in a metal/steel cabinet.

4 feet of sink (48") and 3 feet of stove 36".
Now one normally sees 2.5 feet per appliance(stove and ref) [30 inches each] and a two foot sink. Total size, same 7 feet.

toggleswitch++5-7-2010-11-24-29.jpg
 
Interesting. Those kitchens look just like here. The one in post #433692 is almost identical to that of a friend of mine, including the items on the countertop. The only difference is that because we have front loaders, the cooker is placed on the washer so there is no need to place it in front of the sink.

What is peculiar, however, are the curtains. You will never see those styles here.
 
Hard to explain but one does see curtains more in poorer neighborhoods. The "junk" stores are filled with them! They tend to be cheap materials with mostly polyester (you can tell in that they shine in the light).

What drives me crazy is that there are curtains potentially blowing into the flames of a gas stove more often than not. [this post was last edited: 5/7/2010-13:09]
 

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