- Feb 13, 2001
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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?
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.
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.
Just show me Kelly's room from married with children.
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.
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.
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.
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 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: