Thanks for watching! We just moved into this apartment a few weeks ago! We are still getting settled. Also, should we get a rug for the living room?? 🤔 You might enjoy our video on Home Differences (Germany vs USA): ruclips.net/video/E63IvQOOFzg/видео.html Here is our Packing and Moving Vlog: ruclips.net/video/Sz5VMKhqGP8/видео.html
You should try out my favorite café! It’s name is “Cøffee” and it’s located at the Carlsplatz in the Altstadt :)) It’s one of the best places for coffee in DDorf :D Oh and the Korean bbq!
yes, a rug is always nice in the living room, keeps the dust down and is nice in the cold mornings! i'd go dark colored rug... thumbs up #sixtynine (number six key is kaput)
@@s6scha Yes, but it is odd to me. I don't think I have ever seen a room like that in a US apartment. There is pretty much always some kind of natural light.
Where was it cozy? It was cold and kind of cheaply furnished. It makes you want to go out as you arrive. Cozy places make you want to stay and relax. This is way cold.
This makes me miss the home we had when we lived in Germany! I loved the foyer we had; it was sort of a round room with a spiral staircase that leads to the upper level, and doors that led into each of the rooms on the lower level. It was so much fun furnishing our German home, and we still have quite a bit of the furniture we bought while we were there.
First time, U.S. viewer, and this video made me very homesick for my daughter! She met a German man while in Frankfurt on a year-long au pair contract, so is living there permanently now, as they married six years ago. Your apartment is definitely similar to their first apartment - except you have a bigger entrance AND a bigger kitchen, although they had a full-size American-style refrigerator and freezer. But they didn't have that nice big pantry. Their basement storage space was JUST AS CREEPY. Also, theirs was on the third or fourth floor with no elevator. That was tough for me, and also them once my grandson came along. I found the tub and toilet very different from those in the U.S.; and having to buy your kitchen still blows my mind. I'm visiting them in June in their new apartment and can't wait to see them and it and eat at all my favorite local places! Thanks for the tour!
With a few variations for each country, this is very similar to most (older at least) apartments I have been in in Europe. Thankfully the places I have lived have all include the kitchen when you rent (UK, Sweden, Finland), however I know Italian apartments don't often include the kitchen. We are in Finland now and the "bum gun" is standard here, plumbed into the bathroom sink so you can adjust the temperature... temperature adjustment is essential in cold countries!
What kind of Italian apartments without kitchen are you talking about? I think furniture and appliances make the price. It depends on how much you are willing to pay and the destination of use. Luxurious apartments can be found all over the world. However I have never seen an Italian bathroom without bidet.
Oh my lord watching this makes me soooooo homesick 😭!!! I was born and raised in Stuttgart Germany and have been in the USA for 20+yrs . Many things are different in Germany but still very nice 😊 Just subscribed to your channel to get more of my home country.. thank you for sharing 💞
Very impressive. You did a great job organizing decorating and designing your space. It's giant size compared to anything in New York city where I lived for 9 years. Moved 3 years ago. Now live in Tampa Bay area Florida. I would just say your place is a little dark. But I did see the windows in the living room you can open different ways. Good that you can control the heat too. In new york city and boston also where I lived no control of heat and we just opened the windows in the winter when it got too hot. Nice place. Enjoy 😊😊😊😊
It's a great apartment Danna and Phil! You've made it quite cozy. It's great that the kitchen came with it. Down the road you can probably get a hanging/standing bike rack for your bikes. I think it would look okay in your foyer - so much room there. Thanks for the tour!
Loved the tour! Love your apt! Being from the U.S.A, I've never seen a "closed plan" apt. I think it's pretty cool! As far as the rug for the living room, I would definitely want one. I think rugs pull the room together and makes the room more cozy for lack of a better term. You guys did a wonderful job at decorating. I bet you're happy to finally get your own place and can "make it yours". Thanks again for the tour. I'm looking forward to seeing more of Duesseldorf and the surrounding area.
Thank you, Janice!! The "closed plan" is very common in Germany, although some newer renovations and builds are doing a more open living room and kitchen. We've seen a good amount of homes and apartments like that. Ohh yeah we were thinking teal, pink or grey for the rug, but we are a bit nervous the pink might be too much. It's hard to visualize without the rug right in our living room. We'll figure it out eventually and more videos to come from this area!! 🤗💜
Deana, no need to feel embarrassed...if that was messy for you, you are super neat and tidy. When I was living in Germany (30 years ago) our bathroom had the glass see-through door. Not ideal for company.
A wonderfully fun tour! Thank you for sharing your home with the viewers. You have been very creative with the space; no clutter, but you have what you need. I always appreciate the separate "WC," which I have seen in England and France, too. As for a rug, if you haven't bought one yet, red is a good color. It "lifts" the room, adding color and contrast to the other furniture. Whatever you decide, a rug always pulls a room together. Vielen Dank!
so glad you're back. good luck to you in your new place and looking forward to new videos. no pressure though . I'm a patient man and look forward to learn more how ever it may come.
Deana and Phil: your "front hall"/"foyer" seems to have enough room for your bicycles, instead of being in the way in your bedroom; no? yes? Suggest a grey/black geometric or abstract design area rug/carpet for your living room, in keeping with your couch/sofa/divan/chesterfield. Good luck! From Paul M. in Seattle, U.S.A.
Yeah! We were trying to figure out somewhere to put them there. The problem is we need access to the closet and we use that area to hang the clothes to dry. Maybe behind the shoe rack? 🤔 Thanks for the ideas, Paul!! We'll be playing around with different layouts. 🤗💜
@@DeanaandPhil To Phil (a personal compliment; I'm not ignoring Deana): I have been watching your and Deana's RUclips videos for some time now and I have been EXTREMELY impressed with your excellent command of the English language. You speak it and express yourself very well; better, even, than many native English speakers, and it's your second language! You were taught, and learned, very well. I salute you! : ) Paul M. in Seattle.
Hi Deana and Phil! Thanks for the apartment tour! Always interesting to see how people live in other countries 😊 You mentioned light bulbs on the ceiling and missing kitchen furniture🤪 I’ve heard from various people about this before, and even covered it in my video, explaining differences in rent compared to Moscow 😊 Enjoy the life in the new apartment! All the best to you! 😊
That was really popular in the UK before the seventies, then people started to knock the two rooms together to make more space as we were putting in showers/bidets/big sink fixtures. In those days we had very few bathroom/toilet facilities, very often just one bathroom and toilet even in a four bedroom house. So a separate loo was very useful when someone else was taking a bath!
@@TermiteVideo My last house had a separate toilet room. While convenient, at the same time not having a sink in that room(it was with the bath) to wash your hands seemed a bit...pointless.
I grew up in Europe and was used to a separate toilet room and tub room. When I moved to the USA I was appalled at having a toilet and tub room together! When I bought my current home it has a separate toilet room. Yes!!!
Nice video. I enjoyed the tour. It brought back memories. I'm surprised your windows were not equipped with rollladen. Loved those! No blackout curtains required. They also gave a sense of security.
Pulling the TV to the edge of the couch 😂😂 Congrats again on the new place, guys! Really loved the way you guys edited this video. I’ve mentioned before, but the mics are great and the light on top of the camera really did a great job for a tour like this. Thanks for the fun tour 😊
You are right 😊👍I noticed the great quality as well. Watching their videos makes me think that I have to upgrade my equipment better sooner than later 😅 Still saving 😉 But your videos are great as well!
We've debated just putting the laptop on the coffee table and watching from there! And thank you! We're happy with the way this video turned out! All of those home tour videos that we’ve watched were the edit style inspiration. haha
I would store the bicycles in Phil's work room. With two small bicycle stands to keep them straight up, there would be enough space to move around and more space in your bedroom. I keep my bicycle in the living room supported by a stand and it works for me.
Deana and Phil: What a nice apartment. So many doors but the separate rooms are used well. Like the separate room for toilet and bathtub, and really like those new light fixtures - slightly steampunkish. Yes for an area rug for your tv and Deana's work room. Will help keep your feet warmer and bum when you are eating at the table on the floor. So spacious and decorated well to use the space well. But that dungeon 😬
Looks like a beautiful and comfortable home for you both! Hope to see more videos from you exploring your new city! I would love to go to Germany someday besides the Frankfurt Airport :)
the best thing i did was buy my own little apartment 3 years ago! i changed literally everything in there, from the color of the kitchen to the doors and i love it so so so much now! i would always prefer designing your own home than having to live with the stuff u get in the us
Buying an apartment in a bigger city (or at least a somewhat urban area) is unfortunately not affordable in many regions of Germany, especially when considering that a majority of Germans does avoid taking out loans at all cost, because being in debt is frowned upon.
@@leDespicable im german, I know that lol my mom just bought a house and she's not in the city, 700k. I don't think loans are frowned upon for apartments or a house, just for other things. getting a loan for your living space is normal
That is one of the coolest setups I've ever seen! It's different, but after seeing behind the doors, I love the idea ams that entry room is very convenient. The light fixture thing is strange, nut at least you get to pick your own style.
A living room rug that had blank, grey and an accent color you like with a geometric pattern like your ceiling light. This would look nice and complete
Many of my apartments as a young adult were semi unfurnished so I had to buy light fixtures and kitchen furniture because the apartment didn't have anything but the kitchen sink and I was lucky it had that.
Last time my dad was stationed in Germany the 1st apartment we lived in was situated on 2 1/2 floors and every room had doors off the entryway. There was a couple that lived upstairs. They had to go thru our apartment to get there.
I shipped my mom's shoe cabinet and some of her other furniture to the states last year. She had a creepy basement room to but it had a door so you couldn't see inside. It took forever to go through that stuff and I cried taking the boxes upstairs. My back hated me for days. My mom had a lot of glass doors in her apartment. Her bathroom was split. One with shower and the other with toilet. We had to turn on the heater to heat the water before we took a shower. I brought all my mom's curtains especially the sheers and am looking for someone to put a seam into them so I can use them. I already have my German curtains up but then I can change them out sometimes. I shipped most of her rugs too. Gave some to both my brothers along with a few other things they wanted
Cool video. I lived in Germany many years ago. So much of what you showed is familiar to me. My favorite things are the door “knobs” and the windows. Some places we lived had rolladens. I love them.
Lived in German economy for six months so interested in this. Army supplied our furniture even though living off post. Windows were cool. We didn’t have that kind of door lock. Our toilet was also in a different room by itself. We liked that.
I love it. I would get a Red rug! I lived in Germany and I loved the separate rooms. Loved having the toilet in another room.We had a balcony that ran the whole length of our apt. From the bedroom to the end of the living room. I like the idea of moving the sofa away from the wall. You could try and see. Merry Christmas!
A detachable shower head is a must, and I live in the USA. Lol. I don't think it's even legal to rent apartments without a kitchen here. I've never had to furnish a kitchen here in an apartment. The laundry is another topic. That's definitely an option which is desirable but not required.
@@carolyngetchman4437 Good question. Now I want to go back to see if the room had space for a dryer on top(stackable). Stackable w/d are fab for saving space. Once I had a drying clothes rack that fit in tub. They didn’t mention a balcony so don’t know if they could put one there.
Very nice apartment indeed. I've always been fond of changing my accessories for the seasons, so getting different pillow covers and a small washable area rug or two would be very nice in there. Lighter colors for Spring/Summer such as you have now, and perhaps a little shag rug and some deep toned pillow covers for the cold seasons. Keeping your sofa and tables in neutral tones as you have now makes it easy to switch out those few bits of color for the different times of year, and keeps the space looking fresh.
How about a gray and white rug with pops of teal or orange? Some kind of pattern with a bright happy color thrown in. BTW-I've seen bike racks that you can attach to the wall and then you can "park" your bikes on the wall instead of having them take up floor space.
I used to have one of those vertical bike racks. The problem IME is that while it saves some space, it will also call a lot of attention to the bikes. More useful in a storage space than in a living space - just my opinion.
Rug: simple green leaf pattern. This brings an outdoor nature vibe. Tone-on-tone if you want subtle. Abstract-ish if you want more modern. Personally, I'd go with an all-over palm frond or fern design.
Hey! I was just re-watching some of your earlier episodes, and now that you have your new place, I want to see you two master your grandmother's potato salad and meatballs. Actually, I love all of your food episodes! German foods are wonderful! Wurst and Sauerkraut! Great breads and mustard! I once built a leather-working workshop for a German woman here in America, and learned about all the great dark German breads. Meats and cheeses . . . what we call charcuterie. Pickled vegetables. Olives and exotic treats from nature, YUM!!!
🥂Cheers to you guys! This is very commendable. Nowadays most people think they need this or that to keep up with latest trends. One of the most sensible people I know is a Professor @ a local university. She also had one small tv, old one very deep fr 80’s? Her home was furnished very modestly and she lived very sensibly. Never complained, outdoorsy woman, took chances, scaled mountains, very nice & down to earth. I strive to be that kind of woman. Nothing wrong w. second hand furniture or Ikea. I love IKEA! P.S. I have relatives in Elmhurst & Lake Zurich.
One thing: having a seperate toilet is definitely not atypical for German apartments. It's just not done anymore nowadays, but a lot of older apartments (especially houses built from the 60s till the 70s) have these seperate toilets. We live in an apartment that was added into an attic in the 80s, and we also have a seperate toilet. And, I'd say that doors with frosted glass windows are still very common, since their purpose is to let some natural light into the hallway even when all the doors are closed.
Move the sofa away from the wall and closer to the TV. You will get the wall space behind for other stuff (cupboard from the sleeping room, bikes, technical stuff, shelves whatever you like). I would definitely move bikes to the hall or on the wall in the living room. Fun feature. Great place and lovely done.
I actually thought the same thing…..the sofas can be moved closer to the wall….a nice carpet will help separate the area….plenty of room! I would also keep the bikes in the foyer….nice bike rack on the walls. Great apartment!
Hello, apartment dweller in the Midwest US, my 2 bedroom apartment my son and I have lived in for last 5.5 years was once a very large single family home built in 1851 ( old by US standards 😊) which has been converted into 4 lovely apartments 2 upstairs and 2 downstairs ( we are downstairs) ours came with a washer and dryer and of course here in the US a kitchen as well 😊we also have heat regulated in each room, yes it is most common to have a fixed shower head in the shower but that is easily remedied at the local big box store or Amazon ( where I ordered mine) nice to see your apartment in Germany, enjoy 😊
I am just watching this and am having major flashbacks of when I lived in Stuttgart. I was in the Army and stationed there and lived in on-post housing that looked very similar to this, to include the creepy basement where we had to do laundry because there was nowhere to do it in our apartment. The key to open the front door, the radiators for heat, the multi-open windows, the tile floor everywhere and the bathroom. Oh my. A toilet and sink in one room that was so small I could sit on the toilet and almost wash my hands in the sink (it was right in front of the toilet) at the same time they were so close together! The shower was in its own room across the hallway. Thankfully we didn't have to worry about buying appliances and kitchen cabinets and light fixtures because it was military housing, but I remember going to homes of German friends and they talked about having to buy these things. Such a foreign concept to Americans! Two things I truly miss about Germany is the awesome bus and train system and the equally awesome recycling program. I miss other things as well but those were two things I remember having culture shock with when coming back to the States. What I don't miss is the front door key situation. If you forgot your key inside while you ran out to check on your laundry, if no one else was home you were screwed. Unless you lived on the first floor and left the door to your little balcony unlocked. Thanks for putting this out two years ago! I enjoyed having flashbacks of my apartment in Stuttgart. Tchuss!
Wow you guys are lucky with a bath tube definitely get a rug, makes it more cozy. Get a gray, white with slight touches of pink in it. It will tie it all together with those pink pillows you have. Gray and white will look good too. Also black and white to keep it simple.
Crazy how much space is devoted to the entry hall... Maybe that's where your bike should live...🤔 Maybe get a projector instead of a bigger TV...🤔 (More portable /eaier to relocate)...
A nice rug with a little bit of colour. Also try putting a nice plant on the washing machine. It will help to decorate and also put a bit of colour in your bathroom.
I'm in a social housing unit in Toronto that is about 400 square feet. It's functional but a single room with a separate kitchen and bathroom. A closet that was originally supposed to be a pantry but is now storage. The kitchen is 6 x 6 with half cupboards. The main room is 17 x 22 and the bathroom is 6 x 5. But the good point is its rgi rent geared to income so is only $149 a month. Its located in the far eastern end of Toronto but is across from three shopping plazas.
As far as the carpet in the living room, I would stick with a gray color palette in geometric shapes. Maybe a little pop of color like you have the pillows with a little pink, peach, blue or green
Deine Wohnung ist so schön, gefällt mir 👍 by the way u should get a black rug for the centre table. You know why cos black is not just a color but an attitude 😉 great video guys
Glad to see you again and your doing well .👍👍yes apartments are quite different than in the US.I Lived in a apartment as a child that hat old fashioned stucco on the ceiling and a maid chamber .These folks where professors and had it all !!🙄stay safe
Great apartment and laid out so nicely. Thank you for the tour. 😊 Take care and stay safe xxxxxx 💜🖤🦇 ps a rug for the living room would really finish it off and make it feel more cosy 💕❤️
The living room rug should probably be grey with black accents. to go with your sparsely industrial style. Just make sure to get a thick under-pad for it so it feels plush as you sit on it to eat at the coffee table. Oh, and let Phil have his giant UHD TV! Samsung now has these "Crystal Vision" UHD TVs that are incredible to look at!
Thanks for watching! We just moved into this apartment a few weeks ago! We are still getting settled. Also, should we get a rug for the living room?? 🤔
You might enjoy our video on Home Differences (Germany vs USA): ruclips.net/video/E63IvQOOFzg/видео.html
Here is our Packing and Moving Vlog: ruclips.net/video/Sz5VMKhqGP8/видео.html
You should try out my favorite café! It’s name is “Cøffee” and it’s located at the Carlsplatz in the Altstadt :))
It’s one of the best places for coffee in DDorf :D
Oh and the Korean bbq!
A Rug in the Winter months can be a life changer 😂 so I would get one
@@Mrspritneybeers Ohh we've passed by it a few time, but we'll have to check it out! Thanks!
@@Germanytourandtaste Ohhh truee truee!!!
yes, a rug is always nice in the living room, keeps the dust down and is nice in the cold mornings! i'd go dark colored rug... thumbs up #sixtynine (number six key is kaput)
My relatives in Germany use the entry hall as their dining room. A round table works great.
Seems like a much better use of that space, although it is strange to not have a window.
@@norwegianblue2017 it’s in an apartment it’s surrounded by rooms so it’s be impossible to have a window
@@s6scha Yes, but it is odd to me. I don't think I have ever seen a room like that in a US apartment. There is pretty much always some kind of natural light.
Your entrance hallway is the size of a NYC studio apartment!! You guys have a great apartment, very cozy
Where was it cozy? It was cold and kind of cheaply furnished. It makes you want to go out as you arrive. Cozy places make you want to stay and relax. This is way cold.
your walls are often empty. maybe you will find a spot where you can hang up the bikes. looks cool and less in the way
This makes me miss the home we had when we lived in Germany! I loved the foyer we had; it was sort of a round room with a spiral staircase that leads to the upper level, and doors that led into each of the rooms on the lower level. It was so much fun furnishing our German home, and we still have quite a bit of the furniture we bought while we were there.
First time, U.S. viewer, and this video made me very homesick for my daughter! She met a German man while in Frankfurt on a year-long au pair contract, so is living there permanently now, as they married six years ago. Your apartment is definitely similar to their first apartment - except you have a bigger entrance AND a bigger kitchen, although they had a full-size American-style refrigerator and freezer. But they didn't have that nice big pantry. Their basement storage space was JUST AS CREEPY. Also, theirs was on the third or fourth floor with no elevator. That was tough for me, and also them once my grandson came along. I found the tub and toilet very different from those in the U.S.; and having to buy your kitchen still blows my mind. I'm visiting them in June in their new apartment and can't wait to see them and it and eat at all my favorite local places! Thanks for the tour!
@ Mimi on the move: I sincerely hope that you and your daughter find a way to live near eachother some day soon. Time goes by so fast!
You guys are amazing together. God bless you guys
With a few variations for each country, this is very similar to most (older at least) apartments I have been in in Europe. Thankfully the places I have lived have all include the kitchen when you rent (UK, Sweden, Finland), however I know Italian apartments don't often include the kitchen. We are in Finland now and the "bum gun" is standard here, plumbed into the bathroom sink so you can adjust the temperature... temperature adjustment is essential in cold countries!
Yes. You can buy a hose and sprayer and attach them to you sink faucet.
What kind of Italian apartments without kitchen are you talking about? I think furniture and appliances make the price. It depends on how much you are willing to pay and the destination of use. Luxurious apartments can be found all over the world. However I have never seen an Italian bathroom without bidet.
I am assuming the bidet?
Non ho mai visto un appartamento italiano senza cucina!
Oh my lord watching this makes me soooooo homesick 😭!!! I was born and raised in Stuttgart Germany and have been in the USA for 20+yrs .
Many things are different in Germany but still very nice 😊
Just subscribed to your channel to get more of my home country.. thank you for sharing 💞
I never understand why some people move from a place that has good healthcare for a place that has a crappy healthcare system .
@@purplelove3666 simple… you get married and you move 😉
Hahahaha. The way Deana said “this is where the MAGIC happens” was hilarious!
I love your apartment. I think if you get a rug for the living room I would find colors that match the pillows on the couch.
Very impressive. You did a great job organizing decorating and designing your space. It's giant size compared to anything in New York city where I lived for 9 years. Moved 3 years ago. Now live in Tampa Bay area Florida. I would just say your place is a little dark. But I did see the windows in the living room you can open different ways. Good that you can control the heat too. In new york city and boston also where I lived no control of heat and we just opened the windows in the winter when it got too hot. Nice place. Enjoy 😊😊😊😊
It's a great apartment Danna and Phil! You've made it quite cozy. It's great that the kitchen came with it. Down the road you can probably get a hanging/standing bike rack for your bikes. I think it would look okay in your foyer - so much room there. Thanks for the tour!
I love how the windows open in multiple ways!
Yes I’ve seen them also in US on decorating or house selling vids.
Ohh, the windows so cool!!!
Loved the tour! Love your apt! Being from the U.S.A, I've never seen a "closed plan" apt. I think it's pretty cool!
As far as the rug for the living room, I would definitely want one. I think rugs pull the room together and makes the room more cozy for lack of a better term.
You guys did a wonderful job at decorating. I bet you're happy to finally get your own place and can "make it yours".
Thanks again for the tour. I'm looking forward to seeing more of Duesseldorf and the surrounding area.
Thank you, Janice!! The "closed plan" is very common in Germany, although some newer renovations and builds are doing a more open living room and kitchen. We've seen a good amount of homes and apartments like that. Ohh yeah we were thinking teal, pink or grey for the rug, but we are a bit nervous the pink might be too much. It's hard to visualize without the rug right in our living room. We'll figure it out eventually and more videos to come from this area!! 🤗💜
I like the apartment a lot! Very nice features! Glad you're getting settled, wishing the best!!!
Deana, no need to feel embarrassed...if that was messy for you, you are super neat and tidy. When I was living in Germany (30 years ago) our bathroom had the glass see-through door. Not ideal for company.
A wonderfully fun tour! Thank you for sharing your home with the viewers. You have been very creative with the space; no clutter, but you have what you need. I always appreciate the separate "WC," which I have seen in England and France, too. As for a rug, if you haven't bought one yet, red is a good color. It "lifts" the room, adding color and contrast to the other furniture. Whatever you decide, a rug always pulls a room together. Vielen Dank!
A very lovely Apartment. Wonderful really. And I must say I love how you presented it as it was, it made it much more relatable, homely and relaxed.
Really? Lovely? Come on.
I lived in Germany many years ago. I remember the deep tubs and heavy industrial doors. I also had a tiny fridge.
Hello Maria
The separation of the toilet and bath is actually cute , but we'll call it an half bath
Not quite the same concept. Yes. We (The U.S.) has 1/2 baths with a toilet and sink, but our full baths also have a toilet.
@@lql1094 you mean a shower or tub?
toilette room has a sink and that is a Must , too many don't
so glad you're back. good luck to you in your new place and looking forward to new videos. no pressure though . I'm a patient man and look forward to learn more how ever it may come.
Deana and Phil: your "front hall"/"foyer" seems to have enough room for your bicycles, instead of being in the way in your bedroom; no? yes? Suggest a grey/black geometric or abstract design area rug/carpet for your living room, in keeping with your couch/sofa/divan/chesterfield. Good luck! From Paul M. in Seattle, U.S.A.
Yeah! We were trying to figure out somewhere to put them there. The problem is we need access to the closet and we use that area to hang the clothes to dry. Maybe behind the shoe rack? 🤔 Thanks for the ideas, Paul!! We'll be playing around with different layouts. 🤗💜
@@DeanaandPhil To Phil (a personal compliment; I'm not ignoring Deana): I have been watching your and Deana's RUclips videos for some time now and I have been EXTREMELY impressed with your excellent command of the English language. You speak it and express yourself very well; better, even, than many native English speakers, and it's your second language! You were taught, and learned, very well. I salute you! : ) Paul M. in Seattle.
I was going to suggest the same thing fir the bikes
Hang them from a bike rack?
There's also a lot of room for the bikes in the living room.
Hi Deana and Phil! Thanks for the apartment tour! Always interesting to see how people live in other countries 😊 You mentioned light bulbs on the ceiling and missing kitchen furniture🤪 I’ve heard from various people about this before, and even covered it in my video, explaining differences in rent compared to Moscow 😊 Enjoy the life in the new apartment! All the best to you! 😊
YES!! A toilet room. I hate a "bathroom" with a toilet. Hate it. Love the separation of a dirty-stinky toilet from the place we bathe.
That was really popular in the UK before the seventies, then people started to knock the two rooms together to make more space as we were putting in showers/bidets/big sink fixtures. In those days we had very few bathroom/toilet facilities, very often just one bathroom and toilet even in a four bedroom house. So a separate loo was very useful when someone else was taking a bath!
@@TermiteVideo My last house had a separate toilet room. While convenient, at the same time not having a sink in that room(it was with the bath) to wash your hands seemed a bit...pointless.
@@TermiteVideo
Ah, the good 'ole daze. Sometimes it seems moving forward moves us backward or some odd situation like that.
I grew up in Europe and was used to a separate toilet room and tub room. When I moved to the USA I was appalled at having a toilet and tub room together! When I bought my current home it has a separate toilet room. Yes!!!
@@3SpoiledDonkeys Italy is in Europe but we have toilet a bath tub/shower and of course the bidet in the same room.
No one will judge you. You have arranged things cleverly and comfortably.
I love the picture in the hallway! Great apartment!
This is awesome! Such good information for our daughter who is studying German via a dual immersion program. Danke!
Nice video. I enjoyed the tour. It brought back memories. I'm surprised your windows were not equipped with rollladen. Loved those! No blackout curtains required. They also gave a sense of security.
@@user-yb6xn3ut7o I agree! Strange.
Pulling the TV to the edge of the couch 😂😂 Congrats again on the new place, guys! Really loved the way you guys edited this video. I’ve mentioned before, but the mics are great and the light on top of the camera really did a great job for a tour like this. Thanks for the fun tour 😊
You are right 😊👍I noticed the great quality as well. Watching their videos makes me think that I have to upgrade my equipment better sooner than later 😅 Still saving 😉 But your videos are great as well!
We've debated just putting the laptop on the coffee table and watching from there! And thank you! We're happy with the way this video turned out! All of those home tour videos that we’ve watched were the edit style inspiration. haha
I would store the bicycles in Phil's work room. With two small bicycle stands to keep them straight up, there would be enough space to move around and more space in your bedroom. I keep my bicycle in the living room supported by a stand and it works for me.
Deana and Phil: What a nice apartment. So many doors but the separate rooms are used well. Like the separate room for toilet and bathtub, and really like those new light fixtures - slightly steampunkish. Yes for an area rug for your tv and Deana's work room. Will help keep your feet warmer and bum when you are eating at the table on the floor. So spacious and decorated well to use the space well. But that dungeon 😬
Looks like a beautiful and comfortable home for you both! Hope to see more videos from you exploring your new city! I would love to go to Germany someday besides the Frankfurt Airport :)
Thank you!! We hope you get the chance to see more of Germany too someday soon! 🤗💜
the best thing i did was buy my own little apartment 3 years ago! i changed literally everything in there, from the color of the kitchen to the doors and i love it so so so much now! i would always prefer designing your own home than having to live with the stuff u get in the us
Buying an apartment in a bigger city (or at least a somewhat urban area) is unfortunately not affordable in many regions of Germany, especially when considering that a majority of Germans does avoid taking out loans at all cost, because being in debt is frowned upon.
@@leDespicable im german, I know that lol my mom just bought a house and she's not in the city, 700k. I don't think loans are frowned upon for apartments or a house, just for other things. getting a loan for your living space is normal
That is one of the coolest setups I've ever seen! It's different, but after seeing behind the doors, I love the idea ams that entry room is very convenient. The light fixture thing is strange, nut at least you get to pick your own style.
Es macht einfach viel Spaß euch auf den Reisen zu begleiten !! Danke.
Grüße aus Hamburg.
A living room rug that had blank, grey and an accent color you like with a geometric pattern like your ceiling light. This would look nice and complete
This type of video makes me really excited to go and have my own place with my own style and decorations.
Ich liebe euren Flur, der ist ja riesig!!😍😍😍 Da passen auch die Räder rein!!
You two are the cutest!! You have a lovely place, congratulations!
Your Kitchenette has such a cool shape! I also like, that the two parts are not completly seperated
Such a lovely couple - it does not matter where you live - it will be an adventure
Many of my apartments as a young adult were semi unfurnished so I had to buy light fixtures and kitchen furniture because the apartment didn't have anything but the kitchen sink and I was lucky it had that.
Something similar to my Oma's house. So wonderful. Tyvm for sharing. Hugs ♥️ 🤗 Happy New Year!;😊
Last time my dad was stationed in Germany the 1st apartment we lived in was situated on 2 1/2 floors and every room had doors off the entryway. There was a couple that lived upstairs. They had to go thru our apartment to get there.
With the large entry hall, hang your bikes there. Either a pulley system from the ceiling or heavy hooks on the wall. Just a thought.
I shipped my mom's shoe cabinet and some of her other furniture to the states last year. She had a creepy basement room to but it had a door so you couldn't see inside. It took forever to go through that stuff and I cried taking the boxes upstairs. My back hated me for days. My mom had a lot of glass doors in her apartment. Her bathroom was split. One with shower and the other with toilet. We had to turn on the heater to heat the water before we took a shower. I brought all my mom's curtains especially the sheers and am looking for someone to put a seam into them so I can use them. I already have my German curtains up but then I can change them out sometimes. I shipped most of her rugs too. Gave some to both my brothers along with a few other things they wanted
RUclips recommended this to me. And I think I’m falling in love with y’all. I loved Germany when I there and I’m learning the language now.
Lived in Stuttgart 50 years ago and loved the Water Closet!!! It's perfect.
Cool video. I lived in Germany many years ago. So much of what you showed is familiar to me. My favorite things are the door “knobs” and the windows. Some places we lived had rolladens. I love them.
I lived in Germany in the 1980s, I was looking through comments to see if Rolladens were mentioned. I absolutely loved those.
Lived in German economy for six months so interested in this. Army supplied our furniture even though living off post. Windows were cool. We didn’t have that kind of door lock. Our toilet was also in a different room by itself. We liked that.
I love it. I would get a Red rug! I lived in Germany and I loved the separate rooms. Loved having the toilet in another room.We had a balcony that ran the whole length of our apt. From the bedroom to the end of the living room. I like the idea of moving the sofa away from the wall. You could try and see. Merry Christmas!
What stands out to me is the design and finishes seem much more commercial than residential by US standards
A detachable shower head is a must, and I live in the USA. Lol. I don't think it's even legal to rent apartments without a kitchen here. I've never had to furnish a kitchen here in an apartment. The laundry is another topic. That's definitely an option which is desirable but not required.
where do you dry the clothes without a dryer ?
@@carolyngetchman4437 On a clothes line. Or you go to a laundromat with dryers.
@@carolyngetchman4437 Good question. Now I want to go back to see if the room had space for a dryer on top(stackable). Stackable w/d are fab for saving space. Once I had a drying clothes rack that fit in tub. They didn’t mention a balcony so don’t know if they could put one there.
I love that the toilet is separate from the rest of the bathroom
I’m finally able to watch this video! I get very homesick. Very typical apartment! I’m happy for you! 🌸
i love the extra storage in the kitchen
Very nice apartment indeed. I've always been fond of changing my accessories for the seasons, so getting different pillow covers and a small washable area rug or two would be very nice in there. Lighter colors for Spring/Summer such as you have now, and perhaps a little shag rug and some deep toned pillow covers for the cold seasons. Keeping your sofa and tables in neutral tones as you have now makes it easy to switch out those few bits of color for the different times of year, and keeps the space looking fresh.
Friends your pantry store next to your kitchen is too good , I love it
How about a gray and white rug with pops of teal or orange? Some kind of pattern with a bright happy color thrown in. BTW-I've seen bike racks that you can attach to the wall and then you can "park" your bikes on the wall instead of having them take up floor space.
I used to have one of those vertical bike racks. The problem IME is that while it saves some space, it will also call a lot of attention to the bikes. More useful in a storage space than in a living space - just my opinion.
I am glad to see you back!!
Rug: simple green leaf pattern. This brings an outdoor nature vibe. Tone-on-tone if you want subtle. Abstract-ish if you want more modern. Personally, I'd go with an all-over palm frond or fern design.
Hey! I was just re-watching some of your earlier episodes, and now that you have your new place, I want to see you two master your grandmother's potato salad and meatballs. Actually, I love all of your food episodes! German foods are wonderful! Wurst and Sauerkraut! Great breads and mustard! I once built a leather-working workshop for a German woman here in America, and learned about all the great dark German breads. Meats and cheeses . . . what we call charcuterie. Pickled vegetables. Olives and exotic treats from nature, YUM!!!
Good place and minimalistic aproach for those who started their life together. I would like to see it filled with art and books.
Hello Eva
Yes, a separate kitchen! And with a pantry too!
Glückwunsch zur neuen Wohnung. Glückwunsch zum neuen abschnitt im Leben, die Wohnung hat potenzial
Nice video & great to watch 😊
We live in a 2BR condo near O'Hare airport. We own one small TV. We're in our 70's. Our furniture is second hand or Ikea. Tina, Al's wife
🥂Cheers to you guys! This is very commendable. Nowadays most people think they need this or that to keep up with latest trends. One of the most sensible people I know is a Professor @ a local university. She also had one small tv, old one very deep fr 80’s? Her home was furnished very modestly and she lived very sensibly. Never complained, outdoorsy woman, took chances, scaled mountains, very nice & down to earth. I strive to be that kind of woman. Nothing wrong w. second hand furniture or Ikea. I love IKEA! P.S. I have relatives in Elmhurst & Lake Zurich.
One thing: having a seperate toilet is definitely not atypical for German apartments. It's just not done anymore nowadays, but a lot of older apartments (especially houses built from the 60s till the 70s) have these seperate toilets. We live in an apartment that was added into an attic in the 80s, and we also have a seperate toilet.
And, I'd say that doors with frosted glass windows are still very common, since their purpose is to let some natural light into the hallway even when all the doors are closed.
How interesting that was a thing in houses in the US in the 60s and 70s too.
Move the sofa away from the wall and closer to the TV. You will get the wall space behind for other stuff (cupboard from the sleeping room, bikes, technical stuff, shelves whatever you like). I would definitely move bikes to the hall or on the wall in the living room. Fun feature. Great place and lovely done.
I actually thought the same thing…..the sofas can be moved closer to the wall….a nice carpet will help separate the area….plenty of room! I would also keep the bikes in the foyer….nice bike rack on the walls. Great apartment!
I'm in FLORIDA and never gave thought of our FL apartment and a typical Germany apartment but I thought it was very interesting. I like it. 👍
Love the seperate commode room
Hello, very nice video, good mood....good to see a typical apartment in Germany.
Very cute and thank you for the tour. Wish you both all the best in your new city 🤗❤️
Hello, apartment dweller in the Midwest US, my 2 bedroom apartment my son and I have lived in for last 5.5 years was once a very large single family home built in 1851 ( old by US standards 😊) which has been converted into 4 lovely apartments 2 upstairs and 2 downstairs ( we are downstairs) ours came with a washer and dryer and of course here in the US a kitchen as well 😊we also have heat regulated in each room, yes it is most common to have a fixed shower head in the shower but that is easily remedied at the local big box store or Amazon ( where I ordered mine) nice to see your apartment in Germany, enjoy 😊
Hello Kathy
I am just watching this and am having major flashbacks of when I lived in Stuttgart. I was in the Army and stationed there and lived in on-post housing that looked very similar to this, to include the creepy basement where we had to do laundry because there was nowhere to do it in our apartment. The key to open the front door, the radiators for heat, the multi-open windows, the tile floor everywhere and the bathroom. Oh my. A toilet and sink in one room that was so small I could sit on the toilet and almost wash my hands in the sink (it was right in front of the toilet) at the same time they were so close together! The shower was in its own room across the hallway.
Thankfully we didn't have to worry about buying appliances and kitchen cabinets and light fixtures because it was military housing, but I remember going to homes of German friends and they talked about having to buy these things. Such a foreign concept to Americans! Two things I truly miss about Germany is the awesome bus and train system and the equally awesome recycling program. I miss other things as well but those were two things I remember having culture shock with when coming back to the States.
What I don't miss is the front door key situation. If you forgot your key inside while you ran out to check on your laundry, if no one else was home you were screwed. Unless you lived on the first floor and left the door to your little balcony unlocked.
Thanks for putting this out two years ago! I enjoyed having flashbacks of my apartment in Stuttgart. Tchuss!
Wow you guys are lucky with a bath tube definitely get a rug, makes it more cozy. Get a gray, white with slight touches of pink in it. It will tie it all together with those pink pillows you have. Gray and white will look good too. Also black and white to keep it simple.
Hello Tracy
I love this video! Thanks for showing a window into every day German life 😊
In the USA we have door intercoms too! Not such a strange thing!
Crazy how much space is devoted to the entry hall...
Maybe that's where your bike should live...🤔
Maybe get a projector instead of a bigger TV...🤔
(More portable /eaier to relocate)...
I really enjoyed your video and all your stuffed animal "friends."
Nice place. You both look great and very happy in the new digs! Enjoy!
I really like Your apartment. You seem so much happier. Much Love
A nice rug with a little bit of colour. Also try putting a nice plant on the washing machine. It will help to decorate and also put a bit of colour in your bathroom.
The stuffed animals are so cute ❤
🐻🐻
I'm in a social housing unit in Toronto that is about 400 square feet. It's functional but a single room with a separate kitchen and bathroom. A closet that was originally supposed to be a pantry but is now storage. The kitchen is 6 x 6 with half cupboards. The main room is 17 x 22 and the bathroom is 6 x 5. But the good point is its rgi rent geared to income so is only $149 a month. Its located in the far eastern end of Toronto but is across from three shopping plazas.
That carpet you got for your office looks like it would go good in your livingroom and blend in with the furniture.
As far as the carpet in the living room, I would stick with a gray color palette in geometric shapes. Maybe a little pop of color like you have the pillows with a little pink, peach, blue or green
Yes on the rug! Color maybe neutral on the rug and use pillows and art for accents.
I had to look twice when I saw the Bulle bakery sign 😁 greetings from the neighborhood!
Deine Wohnung ist so schön, gefällt mir 👍 by the way u should get a black rug for the centre table. You know why cos black is not just a color but an attitude 😉 great video guys
Glad to see you again and your doing well .👍👍yes apartments are quite different than in the US.I Lived in a apartment as a child that hat old fashioned stucco on the ceiling and a maid chamber .These folks where professors and had it all !!🙄stay safe
I like the separete toilet. YOu two seem happy. :) Welcome to NRW.
Great apartment and laid out so nicely.
Thank you for the tour. 😊
Take care and stay safe xxxxxx 💜🖤🦇 ps a rug for the living room would really finish it off and make it feel more cosy 💕❤️
thanks for sharing this video, I'm also setting up my apartment in Berlin and wanted get an idea this video helped me a lot.
I wish separate toilet rooms were still popular. So practical. Even if a person lives alone.
The first thing I noticed was the low ceiling. I felt claustrophobic immediately.
You guys are the cutest couple and I love your banter
The living room rug should probably be grey with black accents. to go with your sparsely industrial style. Just make sure to get a thick under-pad for it so it feels plush as you sit on it to eat at the coffee table. Oh, and let Phil have his giant UHD TV! Samsung now has these "Crystal Vision" UHD TVs that are incredible to look at!