PRAGUE APARTMENT TOUR (American lifestyle in a Prague flat)

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  • Опубликовано: 25 авг 2024

Комментарии • 321

  • @DreamPrague
    @DreamPrague  2 года назад +6

    Go to nordvpn.com/dreamprague to get the two-year plan with an exclusive deal PLUS 4 bonus months free. It’s risk-free with NordVPN’s 30-day money back guarantee.

    • @iPE_ZA
      @iPE_ZA 2 года назад

      hi bb

    • @carkawalakhatulistiwa
      @carkawalakhatulistiwa Год назад

      @@iPE_ZA Soviet microdistrict vs USA Suburban

    • @carkawalakhatulistiwa
      @carkawalakhatulistiwa Год назад

      7:53 where is the rice cooker

    • @marcokoehler8832
      @marcokoehler8832 Год назад

      @@carkawalakhatulistiwa What, soviet??? 🤦

    • @marcokoehler8832
      @marcokoehler8832 Год назад

      @@carkawalakhatulistiwa The rice cooker is typical more for asian houses. Most European or American households do not use this appliance.

  • @wellbi
    @wellbi 2 года назад +105

    I was born and raised about 5 blocks from where you live and I am just surprised that there are no second levels in any of your rooms. Pretty much everyone I knew had a second level with a bed, storage spaces, or a "false attic" constructed under the ceiling.

    • @OlaffLudwig
      @OlaffLudwig 2 года назад +3

      Exactly, pretty much a "must have", if you have kids. They sleep above their desks (I did). Especially if you want to cram more than one into a room...

    • @aleshak
      @aleshak Год назад

      Why would you put second level in a flat 3+kk/3+1 that is occupied by 2 people? Just nonsense. I saw a few flats with second levels and it's pretty awful. Makes sense in small flats (under 80m) with 2+ kids.

    • @anniefranke
      @anniefranke Год назад +1

      @@aleshak because that’s how flats are in Prague. Very expensive so young families have to come up with other solutions

    • @aleshak
      @aleshak Год назад +4

      @@anniefrankeFlats in Prague are expensive last 6, maybe 8 years, not last 30-40 years. These modifications (second levels) were always popular, no matter what the rent was.

  • @tiffanymarie5948
    @tiffanymarie5948 2 года назад +26

    Thank you for posting these videos! My husband, myself, our newborn and two pets will be moving to Prague in February. Your videos have been super helpful for painting a realistic picture of what to expect. We're coming from living in Beirut for the last two years so we're looking forward to more green-space, good food/drink, trains, travel opportunities and more!

    • @machr01
      @machr01 2 года назад +3

      So i think thats exactly what you are gonna get :)

    • @rev.buttons2482
      @rev.buttons2482 2 года назад

      WHY would anyone do that ;-) ??!

    • @marieblahoutova2544
      @marieblahoutova2544 2 года назад

      ​@@rev.buttons2482 Waiting for a train? Because České dráhy (our main railway company) always comes late with their trains.. Several hour delays are quite common unfortunately XD

    • @marieblahoutova2544
      @marieblahoutova2544 Год назад

      @Easy Business Jee, tak to nemůžu posoudit.. (naštěstí :DD)

    • @vasekhudsky5663
      @vasekhudsky5663 Год назад

      @@marieblahoutova2544 several hours are only common on international connections, or when there is a really large storm, on normal links which don’t go into other countries (or only one other like between germany and czech republic, you usually don’t get over 45 minutes

  • @j.a.1721
    @j.a.1721 2 года назад +26

    Here in Austria bathrooms were often shared, so there was one bathroom for the whole floor. With higher living standards this obviously wasn't so popular anymore and a lot of bathrooms were built where there was already water supply: the kitchen.
    And in previous times they probably did have less clothes and those were also stored in wardrobes and chests. The wood from those wardrobes would also help to keep bugs away.

    • @Pidalin
      @Pidalin 2 года назад +7

      It was the same even here in late 19th century or even first half of 20th century. You mostly had shared toilet and in some cases, there was only running water down behind main door, so people had to go there and fill some buckets and take it to their apartments, you can still see these sinks in some buildings. People don't realize how modern communist apartments were after war compared to these old buildings from Austria-Hungary time. Ofcourse, all apartments already have bathrooms and toilets now, I remember one person who still had shared toilet like 20 years ago, but that building was demolished many years ago and new buildings stand there now.

    • @trirain146
      @trirain146 2 года назад +4

      May be but also in the early communists era they were dividing the big old flats into smaller ones, so someone ended up with the original toilet, someone with the bathroom, someone with the kitchen and the rest had different solutions, when my parents bought the flat I saw a lot of things, a bathtub in the kitchen and a toilet that you went to from the living room

    • @marcokoehler8832
      @marcokoehler8832 Год назад

      @@Pidalin Modern apartments with a bathroom are definitely not a communist, post-war thing. En-suite apartments became a common standard in the 1920's.. and in the 1930's, apartment buildings with district heating, elevators and all amenities were quite common in Prague. The Communists didn't surpass this standard during the entire 40 years of government.

    • @Pidalin
      @Pidalin Год назад

      @@marcokoehler8832 Ofcourse buildings built in 30s already had bathroom, but many people in that time still didn't have even running water. My grandma has nice big apartment from 30s, but back in the day, it was apartment for rich people, there is even room for maid, normal people didn't live like that in 30s, such level of comfort became standard in like 60s, minus maid ofcourse. 😀

    • @marcokoehler8832
      @marcokoehler8832 Год назад

      @@Pidalin Sure, but that were all apartments from the end of the 19th century. New buildings from the 1930s had all own bathrooms, also the apartments for poorer people.

  • @harekparas9464
    @harekparas9464 2 года назад +22

    Dear Jen, thank you for letting us in on an excursion! :-) I think having a "mess room" is another very Czech characteristics! :-) About the vent in your koupelna - mabye there is some device above your heater? Sometimes the turbine gets broken, but can easily be replaced. Also, if you feel like having too much things you don't need, you can try to sell them on some online "bazar" on in an auction. :-)
    Thank you for sharing your experiences with us! It's both fun and educative! :-)

  • @jantchakonig
    @jantchakonig Месяц назад

    I bought an apartment with a large hall for one reason - I use it as a workshop and the like. This makes the space, which is easy to maintain, priceless.

  • @Alex-df4lt
    @Alex-df4lt 2 года назад +13

    Room and apartment size depends on who built it and lived in the house. If it was built as a rental house then rooms will be more modest, these apartments originally didn't even have a bathroom. Old luxurious city apartments have really large rooms, double doors.

  • @martinamcmayo3826
    @martinamcmayo3826 2 года назад +3

    As a Slovak (born in former Czechoslovakia) now living in USA, your Czech is very good. I miss my country (Slovakia) and Czech people are my people. Ironing towels...ha, ha, ha...I remember that. I really appreciate the drier. Love your channel, I am now a Subscriber.

  • @schink01
    @schink01 2 года назад +7

    I also live in an old apartment with no washer, dryer or other modern conveniences. But what I miss most is a pretty basic pantry. Just some storage space for food, but also other non-daily necessities. A friend of mine has now moved into a big old apartment. When he showed me around, he showed me the first pantry - it has a 3D printer in it... the second pantry, where he keeps the components to print, and finally the third, where, to my surprise, he's currently putting together a second liquid 3D printer. O tempora, o mores

  • @goodstorylover
    @goodstorylover 2 года назад +8

    Oh, you have just taken me back to my first years in Prague (1986 :o)) I moved to Vinohrady from a district town in Moravia growing up in quite a modern flat with central heating and was really shocked by the flat my husband inherited from his grandma - no hot water, only one sink in the whole apartment (so no bathroom at all; we later built one in the kitchen - sounds familiar ? 😆), wc used to be on the common balcony ("pavlač"), so no heating there - we used to heat it with a kerosene lamp to prevent it from freezing over, only one coal stove in the whole apartment etc. etc.
    And boy were we happy to have a place to stay at all!

    • @marcokoehler8832
      @marcokoehler8832 Год назад +1

      O byty byla v Praze vždycky nouze (a za totáče ještě mnohem větší než dnes, protože se žádný byt nedal legálně pronajmout, natož koupit) a tak byli lidi vděční i za tu IV.kategorii, co popisujete.

  • @zoejanotova3871
    @zoejanotova3871 2 года назад +7

    Hi jen. The vent in your bathroom is really important. Because when you have water heater in your bathroom it can brake and cause carbon monoxide poisoning. And the vent is there to prevent it. So if it’s happens the carbon monoxide is not trapped in the room and it can slowly escape 😅😅

    • @harekparas9464
      @harekparas9464 2 года назад +7

      Not the case if they have an electric boiler :-)

    • @JanaVanana
      @JanaVanana 2 года назад

      They would better drive it slowly so it doesn't have to brake too much 😅

    • @kmartyCZ
      @kmartyCZ 2 года назад

      @@JanaVanana Hodinky, holinky. No bóže 🙂

  • @afiiik1
    @afiiik1 2 года назад +15

    Towel tip: adding dissolved citric acid (1:10) instead of fabric softener will make the towels a lot softer. You can buy citric acid in the Bez Obalu shops or they sell 1kg packages in some of the "green" shops but they call it "odstraňovač vodního kamene" from Tierra Verde.

    • @standaertl6496
      @standaertl6496 2 года назад +2

      The towel problem: I add plain fermented vinegar from the grocery store to the soak instead of fabric softener. It doesn't have to be wine vinegar. (It will have a similar effect to citric acid). Don't worry about the smell - it will disappear. The way it is hung also has an effect - better if the towel is hung loosely and allowed to dry more slowly. So no radiator, no direct sun.
      May it succeed... It's always a bit of an experiment ;)

  • @vladimirskach
    @vladimirskach 2 года назад +4

    Thanks Jen for the tour of your apartment.
    I'd just like to point out that all those curtains are actually extremely Czech in style. When I was growing up in Czechoslovakia in the 70's and 80's, everyone had curtains like that. On their doors and everywhere else.
    Actually, your problem with the shelves in the kitchen could be solved by installing curtains on them :)

  • @peterinvestor
    @peterinvestor 2 года назад +13

    I love it, you guys are complete opposite of me. I need as less stuff as possible. I like empty shelfs just in case i will need to buy something so I have a room where to place it. Also i am telling my wife as soon as she buys something new, she needs to get rid of something old. Less stuff we have, I am happier. Great video. Out of curiosity, would you be able to buy your own place or is something blocking you legally?

  • @VrseckyMartin
    @VrseckyMartin 2 года назад +70

    Vestavěný nábytek nebyl v Čechách nikdy běžným standardem. Takže vaši předchůdci v roce 1850 měli stejně velké skříně jako vy. 😉 A koupelna v kuchyni také není nic neobvyklého. Možná byla právě vytvořena na místě bývalé spižírny, protože tehdejší byty obvykle nemívaly koupelny. 😉 Kouzlo starých časů. 🤷 Jinak moc pěkné bydlení.

    • @dmiora3385
      @dmiora3385 2 года назад +4

      Taky možná ani neměli co dát do těch skříní. A je to tak, jsou i byty co neměli spižírnu a sprcha šla udělat jedině vedle kuchyně.

    • @veronikanavratilova1930
      @veronikanavratilova1930 Год назад +2

      @@dmiora3385 tohle tozhodně nejsou byty kde bydlela “chudina” za kuchyní obvykle býval pokoj pro služku.

    • @marcokoehler8832
      @marcokoehler8832 Год назад +1

      @@veronikanavratilova1930 Tady u toho bytu si netroufám určit, pro jakou společenskou třídu byl ten dům stavěn, protože podle těch komunistických dveří byl ten byt dost pravděpodobně razantně přestavěný- měnily se dispozice, z obrovského bytu se dost možná udělaly dva menší. Ve vnitřní Praze jsou ale časté i domy, kde bylo spousta malých bytů - 1+0 až 2kk, které původně neměly vůbec koupelny a toalety byly společné na patře pro několik bytů. Tyto malé byty se pak často spojovaly do větších a budovaly se koupelny a WC v bytě. Paradoxní je, že takové domy, které měly tyto malé bytečky bez příslušenství, mívají často bohatě zdobené fasády a tolik se zase neliší od činžáků, kde byly od začátku velké, komfortní byty s koupelnou.

    • @CZpersi
      @CZpersi Год назад

      A co koupelna v kuchyni? Moje prateta měla kuchyň v koupelně! To byl teprve bizár.

    • @marcokoehler8832
      @marcokoehler8832 Год назад +1

      @@CZpersi Nic tak výjimečného dřív. Prostě ty hodně staré byty (stavěné v 19.století) byly často jen místnosti zcela bez příslušenství, i pro vodu se chodilo ke kohoutku na chodbu mimo byt, stejně tak na záchod společný s dalšími byty. Teprve postupem času si lidi na vlastní náklady dělali různé úpravy, aby ten nízký standard trochu vylepšili. Vždycky ale nebylo možný postavit plnohodnotnou koupelnu, z různých důvodů- málo místa, špatné stoupačky atd.

  • @juliebrown3657
    @juliebrown3657 2 года назад +3

    With those nice tall ceilings, you could install a pulley-operated ceiling dryer/airer. We're lucky enough to have a tiny utility room where ours hides, but you could put one in your záchod. Wet washing is out of the way, and dries in no time because, well, hot air rises! They come in different types. (Ours has one string per rod.) I thought my Czech partner was mad when he suggested we install one in our renovated flat, but it's brilliant.

  • @michalulvr9813
    @michalulvr9813 2 года назад +2

    As it turns out, my grandmother lived not far from you in one of the side streets, the noise was not as bad, but it for sure was something to get used to. But aside from the noise, the location of your flat is just perfect - metro, tramvaj, obchody , kousek od centra ... zvolili jste perfektně.

  • @karenkay5324
    @karenkay5324 2 года назад +5

    I had to laugh about the baseball cards. My mom got rid of my brothers' cards and my eldest brother who is 63 years old still hasn't forgiven her. The one time he dared to complain, she growled at him, "Get over it." (She's 50% Czech.)

  • @jirijetel3624
    @jirijetel3624 2 года назад +13

    To prkno na Vinohradech za skříní je super 🤣🤣👍

    • @Pidalin
      @Pidalin 2 года назад

      tak maj tam Vltavu ne, tak se to využije 😀

    • @breznik1197
      @breznik1197 2 года назад

      @@Pidalin Jen musej dokoupit plachtu, vlny jsou na Vltavě moc malý.

    • @Pidalin
      @Pidalin 2 года назад

      @@breznik1197 tak to je jasný, plachta je potřeba 🙂

  • @romanl309
    @romanl309 2 года назад +17

    Zajímavé video :) a taky zajímavé vidět jak žijete :D u nás se tomu říká kramáři :D vzniklo od slova krámy (zbytečnosti nebověci nepoužívané léta) :D Já myslel, že Honza je Čech narozený v LA :)

  • @czechaoife5124
    @czechaoife5124 2 года назад +8

    When I came to Prague from my much smaller czech town, I started by living on Narodni. And I was fascinated by these flats! Later I was told that originally, when these houses were build, there usually were no kitchens and toilets were common for two/three/four families. I once have visited a flat on Narodni which was not after any kind of reconstruction. Actually the whole level was before reconstruction. And really there was only one toliet for two flats and there was a bath in the kitchen. Unseparated. You entered kitchen and there was a kitchen with a bath. :) Owner put only a curtain there so you didn't shower the floor. And you had to go through the kitchen both to the living room and to the bedroom. Fascinating. :D I've been wondering how it looks today, as it surely is already reconstructed and very expensive. :D

    • @czechaoife5124
      @czechaoife5124 Год назад

      @Easy Business obyvatele toho bytu take nadseni asi nebyli. Ale co meli delat, kdyz byli radi, ze vubec bydli? Ale co se tyka hygieny, tak si nemyslim, ze je az tak nehygienicke myt se ve stejnem prostoru, kde se vari. Jen je to slozitejsi, neprakticke a nevypada to pekne, ... ja jsem jen chtela rict, ze dispozicne ty stare byty byly puvodne vybavene opravdu vselijak, jen ne podle dnesnich zvyklosti. Mnoho bytu v centru napr. puvodne nemelo ani kuchyni, protoze do nich jidlo donasela pani, ktera se o obyvatele a jeho bydleni starala.

    • @CZpersi
      @CZpersi Год назад +1

      Bathroom in a kitchen? Oh that is nothing. I remember kitchen in a bathroom.

  • @karelschiller1087
    @karelschiller1087 2 года назад +5

    Hello, I live near Prague and instead of a guest room, I have a couch in the living room that can be folded into a bed.

  • @adriennecooperman190
    @adriennecooperman190 Год назад

    We lived in Italy from 1963 to 1968. I’m sure before you were born. A lot of what you said brings back many memories.

  • @paulselinger6658
    @paulselinger6658 2 года назад +20

    Thank you for letting us peek into your home, Jen! So what that Honza has a surfboard in a land-locked country? I have winter jackets from Sweden in my closet in SoCal. I bet it's more likely for Honza to surf in Europe than for me to travel anywhere that cold in the winter!
    When I was buying my house here, the realtor pointed out that I may need a larger house to have a guest bedroom. With prices north of a million, I'd rather pay for a hotel for everyone who ever comes to visit and I'll still come out on top!

    • @Pidalin
      @Pidalin 2 года назад +1

      you can see plenty of surfers on our ponds and water dams, especially on the biggest water dam Lipno in south bohemia, it's not Atlantic ofcourse, but I guess it's good for start

    • @paulselinger6658
      @paulselinger6658 2 года назад

      @@Pidalin windsurfing maybe, but surfing? Honza's board is quite sizeable, so it looks more like a paddle board than a pro surfing equipment (no offense to Honza! 🙂)

    • @kubeek
      @kubeek 2 года назад +1

      Honza can surf on the Isar river in Munich, just 400km away :)

    • @Pidalin
      @Pidalin 2 года назад

      @@paulselinger6658 I am Czech, I don't know what's the difference between windsufwing and "normal" sufting. I don't want to know that. 😀

  • @petrsabaka6304
    @petrsabaka6304 2 года назад +61

    Víte, co vám chybí k dokonalosti typického Čecha? Zahrádka v zahrádkářské kolonii. Moc vám fandím. Děkuji za každé video.

  • @mareksamberger9890
    @mareksamberger9890 2 года назад +3

    Narodil jsem se na Vinohradech.Vaše videa mají pro mě velkou informační hodnotu tak jsem vám chtěl ťimto způsobem poděkovat a také moc oceňuji vás téměř vegetariánský jídelníček a také recyklaci.Jen tak dál.

  • @vojtechpribyl7386
    @vojtechpribyl7386 2 года назад +1

    Předsíň used to be quite handy when everyone wore coats. Winter and late autumn would make a place to hang wet and heavy coats long with the shoes handy. Also tall ceilings could make a good place for hanging things if there is enough draft in the room. to answer the question where do you put all your things then the flats usually have an associated space in the basement or under the attic and it's part if the reason why having a weekend house is this popular. Having all manner of stuff on chata is perfectly acceptable for thigs that you hardly ever use.

  • @gabethet8458
    @gabethet8458 2 года назад +2

    Sklep. 1,2x1,2 m can pack so much of your hoard. On the plus side it can get broken into so you have more storoge if they steal or break your stuff in there.

  • @cynthj
    @cynthj 2 года назад

    My flat looks a lot like this too. We have just huge kitchen, bedroom and living room.... it's tough now with a new baby because those are the only three options for baby to sleep in... but I do love the character of these old flats!
    Here's a recycling hack we learned the hard way over many years (and we noticed Czechs doing this too!): Keep all the recycling in a shopping bag (don't sort anything), and once the bag is full, take it down to the recycling bins on the street. This way it takes up much less space and by doing it more often it seems less stressful!

  • @barbuchastardust
    @barbuchastardust Год назад

    Your bathroom is probably in the place of the original pantry, because when these houses were built, it was not common for each apartment to have its own toilet and bathroom. the toilet and bathroom were therefore probably built later during the reconstruction. before, it was common to have a common toilet in the corridor and people washed in the lavatory (into which water was collected and brought from the sink in the corridor).

  • @hladovakniha2997
    @hladovakniha2997 2 года назад +4

    Někdy je fajn mít velkou předsíň, třeba když v domě není kočárkárna a je třeba někam postavit kočárek 🙂

  • @Kverchi
    @Kverchi Год назад

    I love your sunny californian attitude and positive vibes 🌞💕

  • @Cz-De-Lifestyle
    @Cz-De-Lifestyle 2 года назад +3

    Im glad you mentioned the no ventilation in the bathroom in a lot of Czech apartments, its not even thing here. Im in one now and have been to many and I think its gross. Everytime somebody shit, shower and pee, the smell could linger on for hours. I have to put a fan in it and open the windows in the next room to cycle the air out all day.
    The industrial kitchen is kina cool. If ya love cooking and picky at eating, better to make yourself than getting hosed with high prices at a restaurant. We shipped a big 20 ft container from Canada, and its mostly unique kitchen tools and devices that were very unique and unreplaceable. We were willing to give up living in the city life of convenience , full amenities ,locations , just so we can have more space, cook better meals , store more foods.

    • @Pidalin
      @Pidalin 2 года назад +2

      These are old apartments which originaly didn't even have bathroom and toilet, by modern rules and laws, there must be ventilation, but people added bathrooms and toilets to that apartments decades ago. It's much better in first republic apartment building which was already constructed with toilets and bathrooms, you always have ventilation there, but older buildings from 19th century, that's problem.

  • @mimziemimz
    @mimziemimz Год назад

    Your towels will be soft and smell great if you use fabric softener like Lenor or similar. You can get those in any drugstore, I get mine from dm usually. Where I live the water is very hard so I also buy an anti calc for washing machine which you use every time you do the laundry.

  • @BorisKosarenkov
    @BorisKosarenkov 2 года назад +1

    Thanks for the tour, nice flat. So glad though I didn't get one of those when I moved. I also had this idea of how nice it would be to live in an "old Europe flat with tall callings". Wasn't able to find anything to fit my budget and requirements in Vinohrady. Ended up in a modern building in Karlín and absolutely love it. It is quiet here, but not boring. Lots of places to go.

  • @mspluciekarna7860
    @mspluciekarna7860 2 года назад

    "Vinohrady" was built approx 1890 - 1910. It wasn't common to have bathrooms in this times. (In small towns there was built new detached houses without bathrooms even in 1930's.) Most houses in Vinohrady was planned for middle (or upper middle) class tenants, and every flat had toilet and running water at least. In the "Žižkov", which is part for working class near Vinohrady, a flat typically consists from kitchen and one room only, no "předsíň", no pantry, no toilet, ... There was shared toilet and sink with faucet for several flats.
    Yout shower room was probably a pantry, originally.
    The bedrooms was big, because you typically have a set of bedroom furniture in it: two big beds (one for husband, one for wife), two nightstands, huge wardrobe (sometimes even two wardrobes - two-doors wardrobe for husband, three-doors wardrobe for wife), chest of drawers (for underwear), and vanity with a chair. In addition, usually a crib and beds for childern were in the parents bedroom as well.
    In "předsíň" shoes, boots, coats etc. and often other things (cleaning supplies, seasonal items, ...) was stored in wardrobes and commodes.

  • @ondraondra6731
    @ondraondra6731 2 года назад +3

    I live in a similar flat and we have washer, dryer, dishwasher :D I can't imagine living without any one of those miracles :D

  • @zlatakelembet3680
    @zlatakelembet3680 2 года назад +2

    I don't know. I may be spoiled. but I didn't like living in the old Prague house. I am just too used to central heating and elevators that actually stops on your floor and not in between (a real pain if you have a kid in a stroller).
    However a lot of people don't like living in a typical Sídliště, and I absolutely love it. 😀

  • @ludmilakovarova2614
    @ludmilakovarova2614 Год назад +1

    Přijde mi hrozné, že jsou v bytě použity ty nejlevnější dveře - původní dveře v takových bytech jsou krásné, často s leptanými skly. Zřejmě majitel upravoval byt tak, aby to pro něj bylo co nejlevnější, a hodně tím pokazil celkový dojem.

  • @pavlinaseberova2992
    @pavlinaseberova2992 2 года назад +6

    Je vždycky zajímavé sledovat, jak lidé různě žijí. Já bych se asi brzy zbláznila v takovém bytě. Jsem už moc rozmazlená velkým domem. 😀 Ovšem teď kvůli cenám energií budu brzy závidět kamarádce, která má byt o velikosti mojí kuchyně. 😀

    • @marcokoehler8832
      @marcokoehler8832 Год назад

      Tak tento byt určitě není malý a pochybuju, že máte v tom domě tak vysoké stropy. Jinak je to o preferencích a tom, na co je člověk zvyklý. Vy se cítíte rozmazlená v rodinném domě, ale je velká spousta lidí, kteří jsou velmi rozmazlení na to, aby bydleli "kdovíkde" a metry čtvereční podlahové plochy bytu navíc by jim ničím nevynahradily ten diskomfort neustálého dojíždění do města... nemluvě o úplně jiném životním stylu na vesnici či maloměstě, kde si všichni čumí do talíře.

    • @pavlinaseberova2992
      @pavlinaseberova2992 Год назад

      @@marcokoehler8832 Souhlasím, že je to o zvyku. Já jsem bydlela ve dvou bytech, než jsem si koupila dům. V životě by mě do bytu už nikdo nedostal ani párem volů. 😁 Už jsem si tak zvykla na to naprostý ticho tady, sousedy neznám a to tu bydlím 5 let. Tenhle božský klid bych nikdy už nevyměnila za ruch velkoměsta. Ale každý má jiný preference. Já zase holt musím do kina dojet 40 km, na nákup 10 km a tak.

  • @petraskorepova2837
    @petraskorepova2837 2 года назад

    For the hard towels, try washing them with a bit of apple cider vinegar, it should keep them nice and soft.

  • @chrisdunn1155
    @chrisdunn1155 Год назад

    If you live in a panelák, the balcony becomes a greenhouse when the sun shines (if you have glass panels). All laundry gets dried in minutes!

  • @dirkschwartz1689
    @dirkschwartz1689 Год назад

    cardboard towels: Since I changed to hanging clothes to dry (after my dryer ceased working), I switched to micro fiber towels. Much cheaper than a new dryer and still very fluffy after air drying.

  • @daniellem6933
    @daniellem6933 Год назад

    Girl you need to invest in some tall stand alone cabinets with doors. Your mind will feel at ease when you can close the doors and not see all the mess. Plus you can take them with you to your next place. ❤️

  • @veronikabrozova
    @veronikabrozova Год назад

    The flats originally didn’t have a private bathroom. Only later they became a standard. Your bathroom is a pantry. Unlike servant’s rooms that are now otherwise utilized within some adjacent flat.

  • @adamtanaepotter7391
    @adamtanaepotter7391 2 года назад

    We moved to Prague in July 2021 for 6 months (we planned to be there permanently but it didn’t work out right now 😢) and we left everything in the US except clothes and some of our kids toys. My favorite thing was getting to start over with all our “stuff” and a empty flat!

  • @PavelSutner1945
    @PavelSutner1945 2 года назад +1

    Finaly, I couldnt wait to see a new video!!!

  • @Oumegi
    @Oumegi Год назад

    Moved to Prague 5 years ago, for a job from the other side of the country. Lived in Vrsovice/Vinohrady border, but honestly, I moved from there, not to deal with all the quirks these old buildings have. It felt like a huge downgrade in every aspect, except service availability :D And I come from a border town of 1500.
    P.S. - We have two windsurf boards in our barn. Yea... it's ...a landlocked country.

  • @miroslavaklimova4597
    @miroslavaklimova4597 2 года назад +3

    Hello Jen, interesting video - again.
    about your problem with towels, have you ever tryed to used fabric softener (in cz.l.: aviváž)? I´m sure it will help you.

    • @miroslavaklimova4597
      @miroslavaklimova4597 2 года назад

      @@peterl0815 really??? the same way as washing powder isn´t good for environment.
      I use vinegar for washing collor-unstable-fabric only. I never realised it´s softer, but I always realised it smell vinegar.
      Jen, I´m sure as vegan/bio/animal friendly... washing powder exists, than vegan/bio/animal friendly... fabric softenerv exists too.

    • @miroslavaklimova4597
      @miroslavaklimova4597 2 года назад

      @@peterl0815 thanks for your offer, but I already believed in one God. ;-)
      = I´m not going to join your environmental sect.
      btw, I don´t care about the smell of the fabric, Jen has problem for 10 years with hard towels. Listen more carefully.

    • @standaertl6496
      @standaertl6496 2 года назад

      @@peterl0815 Agreed. Still free to hang and definitely not in direct sun or radiator.

  • @ajanewton2197
    @ajanewton2197 Год назад

    Jen, Jugoslavska 27 :) it's sometimes busy, but if you're lucky enough to have an apartment off the tram route, it's quieter, or if it's directed into the inner block.

  • @mporvichova
    @mporvichova 2 года назад

    I am originally from Pilsen and I have lived there in some pretty interesting flats. Some very old, so in one of those we had a (luckily frosted) windod in our toilet that led to the communal hallway of the building.
    I have read somewhere that these really old flats were back in the day (18th century and prior) rented per room to familier and when times were very bad there were sometimes more familier sharinf the bigger rooms, which might be why some building have interesting layouts.

  • @Meetluciebella
    @Meetluciebella 2 года назад

    Hi! Jen. Thanks for your videos. I’m married to a Czech man and this inspired me a lot to see myself in Prague in the near future.

  • @LindaPalkova
    @LindaPalkova 2 года назад +1

    In 1850 they had the exact sized closet (I would say wardrobe for some reason) as you have. Wooden and massive. My grandma used to have it too

    • @yanweide5560
      @yanweide5560 2 года назад

      Taky. Babička navíc používala i ve videu zmíněné přehozy. Jenže taky často dávala deky (v zimě duchny) na parapet, aby se provětraly.

  • @Terinka14
    @Terinka14 2 года назад

    regarding cardboard towels: if you flick them (hold one short end and shake a couple of times like you would a picknick blanket to get rid of crumbs or grass, repeat on both ends ideally) before you hang them, they will feel softer :) not so soft as if they are from a dryer, but not like cement infused either.

  • @jansebesta3112
    @jansebesta3112 Год назад

    Very nice, the Union Jack dresser is great. We have a Union Jack carpet in the living room. I also needed it that day and now it reminds me how fashion changes :)

  • @michellemaine2719
    @michellemaine2719 2 года назад +2

    I have been living in the UK with my husband and daughter for the past 4 years. I really wish I had a toilet separate from the bath. I have considered acquiring an emergency chamber pot a few times 😳

  • @lenkamaresova4116
    @lenkamaresova4116 2 года назад

    My grandma solved the open shelves in kitchen (weekend cottage) by some nice fabric curtains hanging from a string. It worked, it was washable and cheap.

  • @CZpersi
    @CZpersi Год назад

    Předsíň serves as an “airlock” between the dirty outside and clean inside. It is also used to store bikes, strollers etc., because they are bulky and also came in contact with the dirty outside and frankly, who wants to hang a dirty bike in a bedroom?

  • @Pidalin
    @Pidalin 2 года назад +6

    4:13 - if you don't want to waste your space, just but bed there 🙂 In some old apartments, there was little kitchen behind door
    10:55 - people didn't have bathrooms and toilets at all in 19th century, you have "hajzl na chodbě" and umyvadlo pod schodama. 😀

    • @marcokoehler8832
      @marcokoehler8832 Год назад

      To ovšem není nic speciálního, tak to bylo v 19.století úplně všude...🤔

  • @sandrastrakova7024
    @sandrastrakova7024 2 года назад +2

    I would love to to hear more about the 3 years you spent in Japan!!!!

  • @petrklic7064
    @petrklic7064 2 года назад +1

    "hoarder" is another part of czech mentality. It is necessary to have one room filled with things you didn't use for 10-20 years, and probably never will.
    Surf board fits there perfectly.

  • @lalala5646
    @lalala5646 2 года назад +2

    Haha. No, Europeans do not use flat sheets. We wash the duvet cover every time we wash our bed sheet and pillow covers. In this former socialist part of Europe the vast majority of ppl didn’t even know dishwashers or dryers existed until the 90s and one was lucky to have a washing machine hence no to very little space now to accommodate these appliances. And taking off 👞 at entrance is common in all Europe too :)

  • @jiriboucek593
    @jiriboucek593 2 года назад

    The old photo of Masaryk? Made me so proud 🥰 Thank you!

  • @KateLate____
    @KateLate____ Год назад

    Yes! I'm confused about people not using flat sheets. Washing a top sheet is so much easier!

    • @veronikanavratilova1930
      @veronikanavratilova1930 Год назад

      You have to still wash everything you sleep in, right? So how is it supposed to save time?

    • @KateLate____
      @KateLate____ Год назад

      @@veronikanavratilova1930 I don't wash my doona (quilt) for months at a time. Because I don't directly touch it. I find it quite annoying to remove the filling, wash the cover, then put the cover back on. Definitely an activity I'm happy to delay.

  • @eliskarehorkova3831
    @eliskarehorkova3831 2 года назад

    Hi Jen, good video as always! Just a little tip-for the humidity in your bathroom try to search for Ceresit humidity capsules, it works pretty well:)

  • @miriamfalisova3596
    @miriamfalisova3596 2 года назад

    Did you ever think about a tabletop dishwasher(Stolní myčka nádobí)? They are great for Prague apartments if you have a washing machine in the kitchen. By doing this you can have both a dishwasher and a washing machine.

  • @dobruselukasova6884
    @dobruselukasova6884 2 года назад +1

    When I moved away from my family with my boyfriend and we hardly had money to afford the price of safety deposit and first three rents, we bought every piece of furniture (except of bed and mattresses) on Facebook Marketplace. I vividly remember, when we moved 80kg, 2 metres high fridge up to spiral staircase. One corner of the fridge ended up going through a window with my own hand. Luckily I have only one small scratch, but I swore I would never move anything this heavy again.

    • @mortisCZ
      @mortisCZ 2 года назад +1

      I moved 11 times before buying an old house. Your comment brought many old scars to life.
      As the saying goes. It might be better to have your place burn down than to move. 😆

  • @robinsebelova7103
    @robinsebelova7103 2 года назад

    You should check the term "Správná výrobní praxe (SVP)", Jen. You just do not use the same cutting board for meat and vegetables... along with other things. And is there a possibility to convert your surf board to windsurfing one? You could use it on Lipno or other big water mass.

  • @amigator7789
    @amigator7789 2 года назад

    Czech here. Those old houses have some genius loci in them, but they are not very practical for modern way of living. They have awkward bathrooms with bad ventilation, super high ceilings which costs you a lot of money for winter heating (all warm air will accumulate very high under the ceilings, so you have to heat much more to have acceptable temperature 2,5-3 meters lower at you body height, it can be difficult to hang heavier stuff on the walls because of very old, crumbly bricks, if you want to ventilate your flat you have to open 2 sets of windows EVERY TIME etc. Idk... some people have nostalgia for living in this kind of old houses, but I'll prefer living in modern houses/flats any day... it's just way more practical.

  • @NetAndyCz
    @NetAndyCz 2 года назад

    The kitchen and the shower room share the water supply so they were often built together (sometimes even with the toilet, but there is a rule now that new apartments need to keep certain distance between kitchen or toilet and separate them with at least two doors, or something like that I do not remember it exactly).

  • @Petrovjan
    @Petrovjan 2 года назад +3

    I bet that the cabinet's decoration at 11:22 has raised a couple of your guests' eyebrows...

    • @Yinmaru
      @Yinmaru 2 года назад +2

      I am sure it did. :D tho, I believe it is called "Manji" as it is a symbol commonly used in Buddhism as well afaik,... with totally different meaning than we are used to here in Europe or western world. (-:

    • @Pidalin
      @Pidalin 2 года назад

      I think most of poople realize that symbol is much older than nazism and it's used in almost all cultures over world.

    • @TakeruDavis
      @TakeruDavis 2 года назад

      I wouldn't be surprised if the cabinet was made before a muggle equivalent of You Know Who ruined it

  • @adeleschenk5610
    @adeleschenk5610 Год назад

    Ok I'm an American living in Czech and firstly, I wish I could ship furniture here! I can't find the styles I want.... But also, I will share my two cents about duvet covers and flat sheets - I hate flat sheets! And I'm so glad they don't use them here! It's slightly more work to take the duvet out each time but it's so much easier to make the bed!

  • @jendak7921
    @jendak7921 2 года назад

    If you want to use your sewing machine or another 110V equipment just buy stepdown transformer. Its in small metal box with american sockets check BLOW PRT-500 500w is enough or something similar but not sure what motor your sewing machine use if no problem with diferent frequency 50hz instead 60hz.

  • @aleshak
    @aleshak Год назад

    We lived in an apartment on Vinohradská Street opposite the "Vinohradská tržnice" for 6 years. It was a corner apartment, all 3 rooms facing a busy street. 3.5 meter high ceilings, huge windows and double doors between rooms. We loved that apartment, but hated it at the same time. Too noisy (trams, lots of cars), black dust from traffic, windows in poor condition, impractical layout for a family. I would have loved to live in Vinohrady but on a quiet street with a green yard. Such flats are extremely expensive nowadays. Sad fact: the price of an apartment in Vinohrady in 2015-16 is equivalent to the price of an equally large apartment in a "panel building" on the outskirts of the city in 2022. It's also sad how many these "yards" in the city center are getting concreted surfaces for cars.

  • @danielazdrazilova5252
    @danielazdrazilova5252 Год назад

    I just love this channel 🥰 I am Slovak with a Czech husband and some Czech ancestry.. and I just LOVE watching your videos

  • @senseofnothingness
    @senseofnothingness 2 года назад

    Hello Jen,
    I have a tip for you about that peeling ceiling in the "shower room". You have to peel it of and paint it with a paint that contains latex (for example Prolux Latex UNI bílá). We used that in our bath room when dealing with the same issue and it worked perfectly. :)

    • @machr01
      @machr01 2 года назад +1

      Dík, zrovna s tím mám doma problém 😁

  • @sukubann
    @sukubann 2 года назад +1

    using a (bigger) floor fan for drying your wet clothes saves tremendous amount of time (more than a half, could be almost a quater of time)

  • @nayemsinha788
    @nayemsinha788 2 года назад +1

    I'm planning to move Prague from Dhaka (Capital of Bangladesh). Your video helping me a lot, keep it up.
    Love from BD, hope to meet you someday.

  • @miguelangelsandoval9850
    @miguelangelsandoval9850 2 года назад +1

    Tortilla press?! 🤔
    I'm really impressed. 👍😂

  • @nextghost
    @nextghost 2 года назад

    Actually, that sink in the hallway wasn't part of some flat. That used to be the *ONLY* source of running water for everyone on the floor for decades. Water pipes going to individual flats probably got first installed sometime between 1930s and 1960s.

  • @siriusczech
    @siriusczech Год назад

    The ornamented cabinet at 11:21 really brings up chuckles and I can imagine all kinds of stupid questions from "so-intelligent-friends" based on it. And I am pretty happy I do not see those in your comment section (and neither this video blocked/banned for it).
    Cool stuff with interesting historic symbol that was misused a lot. And definitely an icebreaker for conversations! :)

  • @JanaVanana
    @JanaVanana 2 года назад +1

    The surfboard cracked me up! 🤣

  • @user-vd1ec2nz9q
    @user-vd1ec2nz9q Год назад

    add simple coocking vingar to the washing machine. Does magic to the cardboard towls, and the smell disappears in the washing...

  • @JanHurych
    @JanHurych 2 года назад

    People in 1850 sure had enough clothing. And they had enormous heavy wooden closets for their pants, coats and stuff. You said that your bedroom is big enough? Sure not big enough for those closets :-D They were often very stylish - wood carvings, paintings etc. And they most likely had more than one. I can remember the smell of those closets at my grandmas. They had very thick coat of paint on them and smelled of combination of that paint and naphthalene, which was there to combat the moths that eat fabric.

  • @Work4819
    @Work4819 2 года назад

    Hi Jen I hate and so I do not iron at all …. A basic drying machine used for 40 min. on cold air cycle This softens and remove any loose lint from already dry washing That is only If you would have a room for it.

  • @6WireBender
    @6WireBender 2 года назад

    Thanks, Jen. Beautifully candid!

  • @HallaDita
    @HallaDita 2 года назад

    thanks for the tour

  • @toruvalejo6152
    @toruvalejo6152 2 года назад +3

    Hi Jen, the Old Quibbler at your service once again... ;) I have a feeling for your hoarding and I am no American so no need to feel ashamed - UR not alone in this world! :D Besides people in 19th century (and first half of 20th) really kept less clothes (except for dandyish ones) but their closets were more masive than your IKEA thing and had less space for hanging inside - most things were put. And when it comes to guest rooms - in times when distances were long and transportation sparse the guest rooms in Czechlands were nothing unusual (in houses civic duty in fact) - your apartment is rather result of comunist rule as they "solved" shortage of apartments for "the peoples" by dismembering big apartments into several smaller ones (thats why there is sink at the corridor between apartments on your floor - before it was corridor inside of apartment to be used by house-maid - I think we discussed it few years ago). The style-mix of the furniture pieces seem quite playful to me - but your collection of kitchen tools really put me in awe - no surprise if U had a church wafer press... ;D Thank you for interesting video and CU soon! Keep up good work! ;)

  • @karinabashmakova2271
    @karinabashmakova2271 2 года назад

    Dream Prague-You are the best!

  • @monikacechova6890
    @monikacechova6890 2 года назад

    You could consider getting a table dishwasher, it’s kind of perfect size for two people

  • @data00entity
    @data00entity 2 года назад

    Holy smokes!!! An At the drive in sticker !!! I applaud your taste!!

  • @mishkacz
    @mishkacz Год назад

    Very interesting video. Greetings from the neighborhood.

  • @viktordostal5929
    @viktordostal5929 2 года назад

    Hi Jen,
    you can use the surf board even in landlocked Czech Republic on an artificial wave in Brandýs nad Labem. Maybe one will be built even in Prague - Štvanice. Search for: umělá vlna

  • @JanPavlikdr
    @JanPavlikdr 2 года назад

    Jen, the surfboard was soooo funny! The same here, in the living room for maybe 3 years without using it until I finally sold it - and I actually could use it here in DR 😀

  • @pavelhusar2857
    @pavelhusar2857 3 месяца назад

    V Čechách môžete surfovať na Slapech s plachtou, windsurfing. 👍😉

  • @ajanewton2197
    @ajanewton2197 Год назад

    We don't have flat sheets, we are Czechs. Not everybody has to have them, but yes, most households have flat sheets. Yes I think that American people like pack rack (accumulate things) more more :)

  • @joebrouillard565
    @joebrouillard565 2 года назад

    Thank you for the interesting tour!

  • @vashcz7280
    @vashcz7280 2 года назад

    Your bathroom appearently used to be storage room. And the appartment had no bathroom which was probably somewhere at ground level together with laundry room. Go and try to search for it.

  • @MrSonofsonof
    @MrSonofsonof 2 года назад +2

    I know what American homes look like because I grew up on Tom and Jerry cartoons. I know that American homes commonly have an anvil and some sticks of TNT in the closet.

  • @m134dragon
    @m134dragon 2 года назад

    I like the duck tape on heater :D Feels authentic