Author Topic: I built a lil house in the suburbs  (Read 3012 times)

I was doing an open neighborhood project and this is probably one of the best structures I've built considering I simply have zero motivation

landscaping on fleek



I don't know what the forget I was thinking with the brick on the top, but I did the roof like two or three times so y'know

it's got 3 huge ass bedrooms and 3 bathrooms and a bunch o' other rooms too

looks pretty nice
you should show the interior too

here's pretty much every room that matters:

living area


kitchen


dining


laundry??


downstairs bath


downstairs bedroom


lovey lawnmower


"master" bedroom


"master" bathroom


other upstairs bedroom

9.9\10 (no ineterriors)

no man there are definitely pics of them up there

omg I remember this

I built the few pieces of furniture in the living room :D

the windows really irks me


too many props

pls if you could, you would make an entire house a prop



the windows really irks me
too many props
I agree with these.  Also I think you should change the tile colors in the bathroom because they are hideous.  Try to have the different floor types match throughout the entire house.  Same carpet, same hardwood flooring, and same tile.

For example, the master's flooring should match the laundry room's, the bathroom's floor tiles should match, and so on.

And please for the love of god don't have green carpet

-snip-
thanks a bunch actually, I had a lot of fun laying out the house itself but I have no interior design experience and so I just kind of ended up winging it

pls if you could, you would make an entire house a prop
I'm positive there's someone out there trying to convert a whole map into a brick

7/10
I really like it as far as Blockland goes, but just from my architecture experience having brick, light shingle, and dark shingle all split up like a grid with white trim isn't exactly appealing. Especially if brick is on the second floor above shingle. Typically stone stays to the bottom part of a house - hardly ever even a full story - because building it higher looks unbalanced architecturally. Stone chimneys or elements, like in modern houses a tile insert that extends above and extrudes beyond a house, are exceptions because the stone or brick or tile is a piece of emphasis. Architecture aside, yeah its a cool neighborhood house, a darker roof like a grey may look a little better.