Single family homes may refer to many types of homes:
mansions, condominiums, duplexes, four-plexes, apartments, cottages and crawl
spaces. Really, for a property to be described as a single family home, it
needs to accommodate a single family. A nuclear family to be exact: two parents
and their children, maybe a dog or two, but no relatives from either side of
the parent's family. Adopted children count, obviously, provided that there are
two parents and the parents is the legal guardians of individuals coping with
them.
A mansion will be a wonderful single family home in the room
it'd afford all the residents. A mansion will give the chance to have a single
family home chock full of several, many children, if the parents were so
inclined to produce their very own hockey team and house them. The total amount
of space available in such a single family home will be excellent in giving
angst-ridden teenagers the room they need to hate the planet, or give younger
children the room they need to play hide-and-seek or stage reenactments of when
Canada burnt the White House to the floor in the war of 1814.
Condominiums are great for the reason that the room is small
and urges the users to think creatively to optimize their usage of space.
Shelving, pull-out beds and easy, fast, storage units will give the owners a
feeling of completely organized chaos. This kind of home would though, urge the
users to have a smaller family compared to the ones who own a mansion. When
thinking about your first single family home, be sure to think of how many
children you and your partner expect you'll have. Have that lots of children
and do not overlook the multiple kinds of birth control afterwards.
Duplexes, three-plexes, four-plexes and all kinds of plexes,
really, are excellent for single family homes to accommodate smaller families.
Not only this, but if one were so inclined, one could include relatives to rent
out another plex. This may solve matters of travelling for family
get-togethers, finding babysitters on short notice (or long notice), and
generally trusting people who share exactly the same roof, but with various
entrances and living spaces. Once the children are grown up, they can still
move out, create their very own space and learn about the daily methods for residing
in this society while still remaining very close with their parents and their
original home. The rules of a nuclear family and single family homes would
still abide because each relative includes a separate living space. Sharing
bathrooms by having an incontinent grandmother would not happen, for example,
except in emergencies.
Single family homes fall under all types of dwellings. It
merely depends on the household, income and number of spaces the household must
comfortably raise a child. There have been families that have successfully
raised eight children in a three-bedroom, 1500 square foot home. There have
been families that have unsuccessfully raised one or two children in a
mansion-like home. Sometimes it does depend on the parental units, but mostly,
this will depend on the environmental surroundings and the idiosyncrasies of
each child and parent residing in exactly the same home.
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