Pretty neat, some hand drawn floorplans of some TV/Movie apartments/houses

John Connor

Lifer
Nov 30, 2012
22,757
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I have always wondered what the floor plans look like in certain homes. Family Guy or That 70's Show would be interesting. How about The Brady Bunch?
 

alkemyst

No Lifer
Feb 13, 2001
83,769
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I have always wondered what the floor plans look like in certain homes. Family Guy or That 70's Show would be interesting. How about The Brady Bunch?

I believe that artist takes requests for a fee. The work she has been commissioned to do is what I believe is available.

They have a great eye for detail and can fill in even some rooms that never got shown, but you sort of know they must exist because of the floor plan that is shown.

However, a lot of these floor plans already exist:

bradybunch-upstairs.jpg

bradybunch-downstairs.jpg


another rendition:
brady-house.jpg


The 70's show is on this page:
http://pixgood.com/that-70s-show-house-layout.html
 

mcurphy

Diamond Member
Feb 5, 2003
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Haven't there been "impossible" houses on TV shows in the past? Where the rooms shown on the show just wouldn't realistically be able to be set into any kind of viable floorplan? I am pretty sure I've heard of this in the past, but I can't think of any examples off the top of my head.
 

IronWing

No Lifer
Jul 20, 2001
71,882
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Haven't there been "impossible" houses on TV shows in the past? Where the rooms shown on the show just wouldn't realistically be able to be set into any kind of viable floorplan? I am pretty sure I've heard of this in the past, but I can't think of any examples off the top of my head.

The Brady house is the archeotype of architectural impossibility. They would do okay except that the outside shots have no connection to the inside shots. South Fork, the house from Dallas, has a similar problem as well as being far larger on the inside than outside. The Cunningham house in Happy Days has a weird free floating TV room.
 

alkemyst

No Lifer
Feb 13, 2001
83,769
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Haven't there been "impossible" houses on TV shows in the past? Where the rooms shown on the show just wouldn't realistically be able to be set into any kind of viable floorplan? I am pretty sure I've heard of this in the past, but I can't think of any examples off the top of my head.

There have been. Many of these 'houses' are just multiple sets. Only some of the shows use a real house and/or have a floor plan they keep in mind.

Even those shows will occasionally add in a 'room' that would not exist.
 

alkemyst

No Lifer
Feb 13, 2001
83,769
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The Brady house is the archeotype of architectural impossibility. They would do okay except that the outside shots have no connection to the inside shots. South Fork, the house from Dallas, has a similar problem as well as being far larger on the inside than outside. The Cunningham house in Happy Days has a weird free floating TV room.

If you are going to google, it's be nice to share what the details are.

This is the Happy Day's house

cunningham_drawing.jpg


Dallas' Southfork Ranch:
index.php


index.php
 

mcurphy

Diamond Member
Feb 5, 2003
4,150
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The Brady house is the archeotype of architectural impossibility. They would do okay except that the outside shots have no connection to the inside shots. South Fork, the house from Dallas, has a similar problem as well as being far larger on the inside than outside. The Cunningham house in Happy Days has a weird free floating TV room.

Yeah, the Brady house came to mind, but the floor plan was so well done in the images posted, I didn't notice anything too terribly out of place. Thanks for the examples.
 

Fritzo

Lifer
Jan 3, 2001
41,920
2,161
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That is pretty cool :D I can't imagine having that much free time to make these though.
 

vailr

Diamond Member
Oct 9, 1999
5,365
54
91
The Judge's house and ranch hand barracks in Wyoming from The Virginian.
Ward & June Cleaver's house from Leave it to Beaver.
The Cartwright's ranch house in or near Virginia City, Nevada from Bonanza.
Darren & Samantha's Bewitched house.
Major Tony Nelson's house in Cocoa, Florida from I Dream of Jeannie.
The shack dwellings from Gilligan's Island.
 
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alkemyst

No Lifer
Feb 13, 2001
83,769
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The Judge's house and ranch hand barracks in Wyoming from The Virginian.
Ward & June Cleaver's house from Leave it to Beaver.
The Cartwright's house in Virginia City, Nevada from Bonanza.
Darren & Samantha's Bewitched house.
Major Tony Nelson's house in Cocoa, Florida from I Dream of Jeannie.

Leave it to Beaver:
article-2192882-14AB90BB000005DC-328_964x649.jpg


Bewitched:
enhanced-buzz-19358-1345744247-21.jpg


I Dream of Jeannie
major_10.jpg
 

Drako

Lifer
Jun 9, 2007
10,697
161
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I want to see Jesse Pinkman's house from Breaking Bad.

It seemed to change configurations multiple times. :biggrin:
 

Childs

Lifer
Jul 9, 2000
11,313
7
81
I thought the house from Up would have more than a 1 bed 1 bath.

EDIT: Actually, it looks like 2 bed 1bath. The second was small...probably for the child they never had. This movie makes me sad even when I don't watch it!
 
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vailr

Diamond Member
Oct 9, 1999
5,365
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I want to see Jesse Pinkman's house from Breaking Bad.

It seemed to change configurations multiple times. :biggrin:

One Breaking Bad house (where Pinkman's girlfriend is shown as choking to death) can be seen on Google Street View (and on zillow.com). It's in S.E. Albq., NM and is actually a single-family home, not a double as portrayed on BB. I think the TV show camera shows the actual "real life" cross-street street signs.
 
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T9D

Diamond Member
Dec 1, 2001
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They had two guest bedrooms but still made wally and beaver share a room? Wow, lame
 

Drako

Lifer
Jun 9, 2007
10,697
161
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One Breaking Bad house (where Pinkman's girlfriend is shown as choking to death) can be seen on Google Street View (and on zillow.com). It's in S.E. Albq., NM and is actually a single-family home, not a double as portrayed on BB. I think the TV show camera shows the actual "real life" cross-street street signs.

I'm talking about his house. The one that Jesse "bought" from his parents. The house they were using the first two seasons got sold, so in later seasons they used a studio for various rooms, that did not really seem to match the real house. :biggrin:
 

vailr

Diamond Member
Oct 9, 1999
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I'm talking about his house. The one that Jesse "bought" from his parents. The house they were using the first two seasons got sold, so in later seasons they used a studio for various rooms, that did not really seem to match the real house. :biggrin:

Those were 2 different houses. The first one (where they had the "bathtub problem") got foreclosed on in the storyline, or something. The second house (where Jesse & Walter had a fistfight) was a completely different property.
 
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Drako

Lifer
Jun 9, 2007
10,697
161
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Those were 2 different houses. The first one (where they had the "bathtub problem") got foreclosed on or something. The second house (where Jesse & Walter had a fistfight) was a completely different property.

I thought it was supposed to be the same house. :hmm:
 

Red Squirrel

No Lifer
May 24, 2003
69,684
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www.betteroff.ca
It's actually neat that the authors of the shows typically make sure to keep things consistent. Especially for cartoons as they could easily just change stuff to make a particular scene easier but they don't. Great attention to detail.

The scene when Jesse buys the house from his parents is priceless. I loved how he just walked on the property and they're freaking out on him and he just opens the door.

Then there's the safe house. Huell is still waiting there to this day. He probably lost a lot of weight.