![]() please empty your brain below |
Ironically the 1956 room (at least from that photo) feels like it'd fit in today much better than the 1978 room.
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Nicely done, I will revisit.
It's a shock, but not a surprise, to note that my 2024 home still contains a large number of items from the 2005 presentation - with a few too many 1978 touches! |
I accidentally skipped a sentence so thought that the 2049 flat had a view of a 'pelican museum' and was instantly more excited / intrigued about the future!
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Don't miss the downstairs, it's an exhibition about what "home" means to different people and it's much better done than the way these rather vague themes are usually dealt with. And the back garden's wonderful.
dg writes: see 2021 link in first paragraph. |
All the flats look too big to be real British homes
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Thanks geezer you have excelled your descriptive talents with this one and I'm impressed the museum has selectively spotlit London society's 20thC variety. And no number plates.
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I'm sad to see the 1998 Loft Apartment go... and can't help but notice the story they've left behind on their website differs very much from the one on the board that was on site pre-refurb.
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Love this Museum. Went in January on the day before it closed so am excited to see the changes.
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Thank you, I loved the neighborhood. The Neolithic, Assyrian, Roman and Middle-Age rooms would look quite similar too. But to stay modern, my children's rooms in their flatshare are at 1950 standard, plus electonics.
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Thrupples (a variety of polycule) - the new way of helping with the housing crisis
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Flat screen monitor in 2005 is a tad upmarket for that set-up
But the "computer desk" from Argos or rymans is spot on. |
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