Differences between a US and a Danish Home

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 17 ต.ค. 2024

ความคิดเห็น • 253

  • @jettenielsen4951
    @jettenielsen4951 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +90

    You can buy fridges with dispencers for ice cubes and water here in Denmark, but they have a low energy rating, E as mentioned by another commentor. And since the electricity prizes are high here in Denmark, effiency is an important factor when buying a new fridge.

    • @mortendreier4446
      @mortendreier4446 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Also! They may not be made properly for our system. My brother had an "american" fridge and they had water damage from their fridge since the fridge and the wider system was different.

    • @BenjaminVestergaard
      @BenjaminVestergaard 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      Many of the differences he mentions are related to convenience vs. efficiency.
      Anyway, my sister has a standalone ice maker she can pull out of the cupboard and place on the kitchen table when the demand for ice exceeds the capacity of her ice cube trays. She just needs to fill the 5 liter water reservoir and plug it in.
      Being standalone, it probably also gets cleaned a lot more often than the integrated ones on average.
      Our HPFI covers the entire home, but we still don't install switches or outlets very close to the sink, possibly because it would be annoying if all the power disappears every time an outlet gets a little splash of water.
      We use radiators because it takes less energy to move hot water than hot air, so less heat is wasted if we have a single room or two that we keep cool when we don't use them.
      Those ball door handle locks don't actually lock the door, they just disable the door knob at the other side of the door... but I have to say it could be really convenient when you have a toddler that's just figured out how to lock the door... less risk of the little bastard managing to lock him- or her-self in, in the bathroom.
      I've seen "storm doors" in Denmark but only with insect nets, and only in the countryside where insects may be a real problem in summer.

    • @Outside85
      @Outside85 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Another thing is the 'how often do you use it' factor, and while if you are used to having the option you likely use it more, when you stand in the shop thinking about paying that much extra to get this... quite a few people reason they can do without this extra function.
      Not to mention, while I am sure this is also a thing in America, the ice dispenser can be a pain in the ass sometimes if just enough heat has gotten into the ice-tray and made the cubes melt into a frozen mass that wont go in the grinder or come out on its own... no other choice but to throw the whole lot into the sink and make a new batch...

    • @debbielarsen4831
      @debbielarsen4831 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Another thing is the fact that the water in Denmark is so hard, that you'd likely have a ton of problems with the calcium build up breaking the system. I've lived here 14 years so when I want ice, I just go buy a bag and stick it in the freezer. No hassle and no worries that way. But I find I use almost no ice anymore. I basically only use it if I have just brewed tea for iced tea, or iced coffee.

    • @BenjaminVestergaard
      @BenjaminVestergaard 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@debbielarsen4831 I wouldn't ever buy ice, but you've got a valid point.
      The water, especially around Copenhagen, is insanely saturated with calcium, you basically need a weekly routine to decalcify or your equipment will suddenly stop working.

  • @grethelee58
    @grethelee58 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +32

    I am Danish but have lived in California for 16 years now, and watch your videos with great interest. Your parents have a lovely home, but I have always wondered who ever invented those round door handles and thought they were the greatest hit in the world? When we bought our most recent home, it came with round door handles throughout, and the first thing we did was changing them to regular handles. Try to open a round door handle with both arms full of grocery bags or laundry. But I sure do love our icemaking fridge in the Californian summer heat.

  • @seth1223
    @seth1223 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +51

    Greetings from the US, thanks for keep making these videos for all us looking into Denmark . I’m a American Uni student planning to finish Uni in Denmark and it’s a cool treat . I’ve always been interested in the culture and county as my great grandma was a Danish immigrant.

    • @TorchwoodPandP
      @TorchwoodPandP 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      Welcome ‘back’. 🇩🇰

    • @pookiewookie7679
      @pookiewookie7679 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Please don't come.

    • @seth1223
      @seth1223 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      @@pookiewookie7679 You can’t stop me.

    • @seth1223
      @seth1223 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      @@pookiewookie7679 why even say that , I’m curious ?

    • @Christopher_Rock
      @Christopher_Rock 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

      @@seth1223 He’s probably a troll, u always welcome to Denmark.

  • @Kaizer17
    @Kaizer17 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +22

    I have never understood the need for ice at all times. I hardly ever use ice, and it’s been at least 4-5 years since I had ice cubes in our freezer. When it comes to doorhandles, the american version is impossible to open if you are using your hands for something else.

    • @TravelinYoung
      @TravelinYoung  5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      The door handle mention was more about the lock. You can also get curved door handles like are on most doors in DK - but they also have a lock on the handle versus using a key.

    • @Kaizer17
      @Kaizer17 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      ​@@TravelinYoung Ok. The lock button is pretty clever, and I wish we had that here.

    • @SsAnime1988
      @SsAnime1988 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      My thought! Haha I need to quickly open and close easily while carrying stuff in both hands often.
      And you can get a bunch of containers for ice cubes to the freezer, so you can make them yourself and easily take them from there if needed at all.

  • @finncarlbomholtsrensen1188
    @finncarlbomholtsrensen1188 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

    The Cooler/Freezers in Denmark are normally marked according to how "Energy Efficient" and Costly during use, they are: AA, A or the like! You are actually able to buy the American Type units in Denmark also, but they are marked E, F or similar😁!!
    And Danish, more modern windows also come in "tall building versions", with brackets which enable them to be turned round, so that you are able to wash and polish the Outside, from the inside. Older Danish houses many times have floors which are treated with a Laquer for many years shine!

    • @TravelinYoung
      @TravelinYoung  5 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Our new house is 100 years old this year and indeed has laquered floors. I looooooove them. They are far more durable with pets.

    • @RasMosi
      @RasMosi 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@TravelinYoung 100 years? well almost brand new then :D It really isn't just the price of electricity that inspires danes to save on electricity, more the idea of a green household. A typical american household uses (at least) 11000 kWh per year, my household used 1740 kWh last year, just saying :D

  • @iluften1
    @iluften1 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    You should compare the usage of Kwh of a common household - our your own time in US vs DK.... that will explain alot.

  • @davidpax
    @davidpax 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +48

    Looks like a lot of the differences are due to warmer weather in the US and cheaper electricity I guess. Interesting.

    • @megagame
      @megagame 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      also it is only in the last 5-10 years Denmark have startet to get does long and hot heatwaves. There was no real need for AC to cool down homes.

    • @apn42
      @apn42 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I think the difference in doors and windows are mainly due to high requirements for isolation in Denmark specified by the building code (bygningsreglementet).

    • @aluminumucumber4281
      @aluminumucumber4281 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The climate has an impact on the construction of houses in different countries.
      For example - Russia has an extreme cold/hot climate (winter -20-40°C, summer +35-45°C every year...
      Real Russia/Provincial Russia, Ordinary russian city - Voronezh city, population 1,05 mln, ethnic russians 96,9 %, average annual t° +7.7 °C. Night cycling, center old historical town *nDsjdhS-n48*
      Voronezh city, evening bike ride in Dolphin Park, Voronezh River Embankment *30DOyR9HyUU*
      Koltsovo village is suburb of Voronezh City (10 km), typical houses (middle class):
      House 120m² (first option): 10 ares (50x20m); living room 22m², kitchen 16m², 3 bedrooms:18m²,16m², 14m², 2baths, carport (without glazing) 20m²+boiler room 12m², terrace 16m²(without glazing), ceiling height 2.85-3.2m, video intercom, fiber optic Internet, cable TV, heating combined: underfloor heating and radiators, metallic fence 1.8m, metallic front door with shockproof glass, metal tile, paving slabs, mirrored windows, automatic gate. *03F0_pw9AeM* This is house cost (2023) $154,000 (house $151,250+land $2.750)
      House 120m² (second option): 10 ares (50x20m); living room+kitchen 32m², 3 bedrooms:16m²,16m², 16m², 2baths, garage 20m²+boiler room 8m², terrace 18m²(without glazing), ceiling height 2.85 *XpbkoWu4QXQ* This is house cost (2023) $164,500 (house $161,750+land $2.750)
      New Street in Koltsovo village, not completed: street lights, new saplings shrubby trees, children's playground, second wave of asphalt(road). All the houses have already been sold. *U9Jg4h3RwPY*
      The walls of the houses are claydite concrete block 20cm+insulation 10cm+decorative brick15cm=45cm, 50 winters warranty. Walls *tZ-l_Yhn62c* Windows are triple glazed. Temperature standard: +24-26°C(indoor).
      Koltsovo village, copter fly *RcxoelPxgCE*
      Chertovitsky Forest village is suburb of Voronezh city (18 km), typical houses 100-120 sqm *DJUX16dnuXc* costs(2023) $130,000-170,000 PS: The fences are not completed. With fences *5wO0HCnHzTM*

    • @aluminumucumber4281
      @aluminumucumber4281 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      *Belgorod city* (founded 1596, area 153km²), population: 394.174 (agglomeration 719.500), ethnic Russians 94,4%, Ukrainians 2,8%, migrants from former republics of USSR 0,5-1%; average annual t +8.3°C, climate Dfb; average annual t°C: summer/winter July +21.8°C (+16.6 - +26.3°C), January - 5.5 °C(- 3.4 - -8.1°C); average monthly rainy days: 7.6 - 11.2 (627mm), average monthly sunshine hours 82.7. Ecoregion: East European forest steppe. The air distance from Belgorod to Moscow - 577 km, unemployed 4.8%, crime index 29.61%, Gender: men 44.5%, women 55.5%.
      *Belgorod city* Center *Quadcopter video* *MRp6BHB9N5k*

      *Typical houses* of suburbs of Belgorod city:
      This projects is the best-selling 2020-22. Houses 100(117)m²: 10(15) ares (50x20(30)m); living room 20(22)m², kitchen 16(18)m², 3 bedrooms:16(18)m²,14m², 12(14)m², 2baths, garage20(25)m²+boiler room 8(10)m², terrace 14(16m)², carport, ceiling height 2.85m, video intercom, fiber optic Internet, cable TV, heating combined: underfloor heating and radiators, metallic fence 1.8m, metallic front door with shockproof glass, metal tile, paving slabs, automatic gates.
      *_Dubovoe(Oak)sm town_* (5km from Belgorod city, population 16,000).
      Houses 117 m²: *-PvQZ_2wjZc* *TbE48oAW9wI* *nvuM6nJGEVg* *lZrceqCI_s0*
      Houses 100m²: *r6wJEsKCinU* *9COd2gtz7YY* *pOeAXrAUDxs*
      *_The walls of the houses_* claydite concrete block 20cm+insulation 10cm+decorative brick15cm=45cm, 50 winters warranty. Windows are triple glazed. *Temperature standard(indoor):* +24-26°C
      Belgorod region - *30 activity chalk quarries:* cheapest high-grade building materials in Russia.

    • @aluminumucumber4281
      @aluminumucumber4281 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The salary in the USA of $6,000 will correspond to the standard of living in Russia with a salary of $ 1,500. Prices in Russia are four times lower than in the USA. In Russia, medicine and education are free.
      *Suburbs life of Belgorod city, Russia:*
      Dubovoe sm t *Wedding Festival* *ZXQFtQrE-Po*
      Dubovoe sm t *Dance school "My dance"* *J6anU36Gc7s*
      Military camp for schoolchildren *"Generation"* *u3b4nVvC_yM*
      Belgorod suburb *_Picnic Park_* Pines, Tertiary period. *_kcjrKOZmBM*
      Belgorod suburb *Wedding short clips,* 1min:
      Center, Picnic Park *YTDUYIsnHts*
      Fort "New Jerusalem" *epx9KSy7Dus*
      Belgorod. *Wedding service "Dynasty"* short clips, 2-3 min: *xgeLiHgA46Q* *dQSCS0d6YhU*
      *_Children's Life:_* *Camping "Forest Corner"* Sophia, Vladyslava, Alex, Mom and Dad *ETWA9KDCw4s*
      *Belgorod State University* Summer Camp *RzJ1USHUSCg*
      Belgorod *Police show* *ku0ZlQsMlCo*
      Belgorod forest steppe, Chalk Hill. Chorus of Palace of Culture "Belgorod Energo Mash Factory", *Theodora Folk - Heaven above the Water* ("I m pray to my Russia") *lN6qrEBhAL0*
      Welcome To Russia. Belgorod city - Old Capital of Anti-nomad Defensive Line of Forts (800 km, 70 forts) - *Your Home, Family, Defender, Future!*
      *The Horizon of the Future is Human Capital:* free education - new kindergartens, schools, universities; free medicine - new clinics, perinatal centers; new housing, employment, traditional family, organic foods, universal military duty. Social Clip *1OURhGlsuVQ*

  • @fortza11
    @fortza11 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Great video. We have the same type of "hot/cold" system in Denmark, if you want it. We also have the larger fridges with built-in ice cubes, but we also have ovens where you can download a recipe from the internet and then your roast or whatever it is will be exactly like the picture you downloaded. We have never needed the windows and doors before because of the environment we have here in the Nordics, but it will probably come because of global warming, so the manufacturers will probably look in that direction as it gets warmer . We abolished the mail hadge that you are talking about a few years ago because the post had to be made more efficient, so that all households had to have a mail box next to the entrense ore the hallway. The finished floors are of course also available in Denmark, you can get what you want - as a rule, a house is built with what we call varnished floors, it can be a stick parquet or herring parquet or wide plank floors (typically Nordic) .

  • @MrFtoudalk
    @MrFtoudalk 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    Hey, there you are!! I was getting worried..haha. I just recently became a dual citizen US/ DEN!
    About the flooring. When I was a kid, we had treated hardwood floors in CPH, when I was married to my first wife we had untreated wooden floors, and the house I bought after our divorce had wall to wall carpets. I think it has a lot to do with design and money really. Also, hardwood floors are easier to clean if someone has issues with allergies or asthma.

  • @twisterwiper
    @twisterwiper 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    I would LOVE to have the bug screens in Denmark. Strange they have never been incorporated into the building style here, since we have SO many bugs during summertime.

    • @annemarie7682
      @annemarie7682 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      You can just buy the bug screen , many make them in Denmark , we have had owers for nearly 12 years now

    • @slaydesaid8741
      @slaydesaid8741 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      My thoughts exactly.

  • @hoegild1
    @hoegild1 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +17

    About the wooden floors in Denmark.. in my family there is a heated debate about the pro and cons between a treated floor (varnish) or a soaped floor (washed with wood soap) floor. I am firmly in the varnish camp, since it is so much easier to keep clean, and I dont really appriciate washing floors all the time..

    • @TravelinYoung
      @TravelinYoung  5 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      We have also come to the conclusion that we are in the varnish camp. The soap treated floors are beautiful but I find them to be far less durable than varnished floors.

    • @martinpoulsen6564
      @martinpoulsen6564 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Soap finished floors aren't great with heavy traffic and such, so I'd never pick it for my kitchen or entry, but the thing is that it's very easily restorable, and almost anything comes out in the wash - even red wine stains over time. And it leaves you that silky finish that is so great with skin contact on wood. You want to touch it. Not so with the plasticky varnish surface, though some might find it pretty to look at. It doesn't have the same warmth to it. And then once there's a notch or something in it, you have to go and redo it. For the places where varnish would be required, I'd likely pick some other type of flooring, either bricks, tiles, slate, linoleum, cork or other.

    • @andersjjensen
      @andersjjensen 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The whole thing started when people decided they didn't like the poop-brown boiled linseed varnish that was so common on pine wood floors, and thus shaved it off. Unfortunately pine is not the hardest of woods, so if you give it a hard setting clear lacquer you're going to have marks the first time a lady in stilettos walk on it. That was the good thing about boiled linseed varnish: it stays flexible.
      Recent two-component epoxy lacquers solves this issue. They are both strong and flexible enough that you can use it on soft-ish floor wood, but you can still polish them to a high lustre or sand them to a matt finish, depending on your preference. They're also UV blocking, so the floor doesn't turn yellow over time (which is why we use the white pigment soap in the first place).

    • @andersjjensen
      @andersjjensen 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@martinpoulsen6564 Modern two-component epoxy lacquers don't have any of those problems. You can polish them to a mirror shine, or you can sand them to a matt finish that looks like soap treated wood. They are, however, rather expensive.

    • @martinpoulsen6564
      @martinpoulsen6564 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@andersjjensen It's still plastic and will never be anything else. Not getting near my floors. Ever.

  • @Lorentari
    @Lorentari 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    The difference between the heat pumps in denmark and the system in this house is:
    US: The air is pumped from the outside and heated/cooled while venting the system
    DK: The latent heat (energy) in the air outside is used to heat a presureized fluid that is circulating between the heat pump inside and the motor outside, which transports heat (but not air) from the outside-in. Running the system in reverse cools the room

  • @Panzerfury18
    @Panzerfury18 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    I have an outlet next to the sink in both my bathrooms. I live in Denmark. The switch to control the light is also inside the bathroom.

    • @Panzerfury18
      @Panzerfury18 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I will add though. In my parents house, which is from the 80'ies, the switch is outside the bathroom, and there are no outlets in the bathroom.
      So it might be that in older houses it's the case ? The house I have is new.

    • @heidikehe
      @heidikehe 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I have nevet lived in a House herr in Denmark without the switches inside the bathroom amd i an 60 years and norm and raised in Denmark. You Can buy whatever violer and freezer you like

  • @JokerInk-CustomBuilds
    @JokerInk-CustomBuilds 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Fun to see your old house! -btw, Just saw you Wife and daughter at Lyngby Storecenter yesterday! :) -Big world, small denmark! :D

    • @TravelinYoung
      @TravelinYoung  5 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Ha, I was probably home recovering from jet lag. That is my old house and the room where I showed the door handle was my room as a kid.

  • @FlemmingDP
    @FlemmingDP 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Very informative and interesting. The wooden floors you can also get finished ones here.

  • @cherylehret9926
    @cherylehret9926 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

    I lived in Rungsted Kyst, Denmark from 1985 to 1989, then in Buckinghamshire, and Surrey, England from 1989 to 1993. In Denmark the only wood floors were in living and dining room, tile floors in bathrooms, vinyl in kitchen, and carpet in all 4 bedrooms. In England, the kitchen and breakfast room had vinyl flooring, with carpet in bathrooms and all bedrooms. All houses were newly remodeled. Styles change throughout time. That is how money is made. I also traveled throughout many places in Europe at that time, even visiting relatives I had never met in Germany. All homes at that time had much carpet. I am an American.

    • @TullaRask
      @TullaRask 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Having carpets or wall-to-wall carpets was a fashion in all houses in Scandinavia tha fast went out of fashion when people realized how much work it was to clean them.

    • @janjrgensen6134
      @janjrgensen6134 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Floores varies in style and material according to where and when it is built. The common Copenhagerner apartment, two room, fully wooden and varnished from new, 120 years ago, but sometimea treated and now raw wood and whitewashed. The somewhat bigger, 5 to 7 room arpartment also like this from new. But as they are modernized, they can also have tiles or terazzo in the bathroom and riles in the kitchen.
      The big house outside, inside and outside Copenhagen from same period is the same, but also with terazzo in bathrooms from new. Terazzo became very popular in 30-years to 50-years. After that it became more individual.

  • @peterlarsen7779
    @peterlarsen7779 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Hey Josh! Hope you're having/had a good time at home with your folks!
    I remember the house we lived in on Long Island.... The front door opened inward to the right. Behind the door was the coat closet. Straight ahead from the door - probably about 8-9ft - was the staircase up to the bedrooms and bathrooms. The living room was off to the left from the staircase, and the dining room to the right, with the kitchen behind the dining room. Below the staircase was the staircase to the basement.
    We had a storm door with insect netting which I _really_ think is an awesome idea! I also like the insect netting on the windows (we didn't have that as far as I recall, though we did have central a/c in the house).
    In DK, you _can_ get a cassette with insect netting to install in the window here in DK. I _think_ they're about DKR2500,- each. The apartment I lived in before, we all got new windows thanks to the housing association (boligforening). We were offered to purchase the cassettes (however many we wanted - there were 3 windows that could open as you described). Unfortunately the tenants had to pay this themselves... They wouldn't assist with an installment payment for them, though they _would_ help with having them installed. .

  • @Gert-DK
    @Gert-DK 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    Hi Josh.
    Entrance: My parents build their house in 68. A one level house. We had an entrance like the one you showed, just much smaller without cupboards, but it had hooks.
    It was called a "vindfang" for the non-Danish speaking audience, it actually means "wind-catch". So get in, clothes on the hooks, shoes off, close outer door and then get in.
    I am pretty sure it was my mom demanding a vindfang, no more dirt in, than necessary.

    • @klausolekristiansen2960
      @klausolekristiansen2960 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      I would not call that a vindfang. That is an entre. A vindfang is what you find at some stores, office buildings and so on. Just a small room with doors at both ends, and nothing else, to keep he wind out.

    • @Gert-DK
      @Gert-DK 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      @@klausolekristiansen2960 I know my mom did not want shoes and dirty coats in the house. Our vindfang was used for that purpose. Yes, it was smaller than the entre we see at he's parents, but we had no stairs in it.

    • @macnof
      @macnof 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@klausolekristiansen2960We call it vindfang here on Mors.

  • @bjørnjacobsengaming
    @bjørnjacobsengaming 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

    You must live in an old house because in all houses that are from the 90s and up, there are circuit breakers and sockets in the bathroom and hpfi relays in a group panel that covers the whole house. And most houses in Denmark have wooden floors with varnish. You can buy the fridge you showed in all cities in Denmark where they sell fridges, stoves and the like. The thermostat you showed can also be bought in Denmark, the biggest difference between the house you showed and a typical Danish house that I could spot is the door handle, the switch for the light, the outer door with the extra screen door, very dark wood on the walls and furniture, most Danes want light wood, also you have 110 volts in the USA instead of 230 volts and in the USA you have 220 volts for appliances that need several phases and in Denmark we have 400 volts.

  • @eriklethdanielsen3968
    @eriklethdanielsen3968 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    In denmark we have a PHFI relay on the hole house thats cuts the power if a outlet toutches ground

  • @Novacification
    @Novacification 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    It's very possible to get a fridge that can make ice in Denmark. I have one and know several who do as well. Definitely not as common as in the US of course but if it's a feature you miss you can get one fairly easily.

    • @TravelinYoung
      @TravelinYoung  5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Yeah. Well we rented for the first 5 years and of course couldn’t replace the fridge. The house we own now has the fridge built in with the cabinets, so from a style standpoint it wouldn’t make sense.

    • @Novacification
      @Novacification 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@TravelinYoung ah, that sucks. I built a new house recently with most kitchen appliances built in but chose to take the hit on the aesthetics to put in a freezer that can make ice. If you could use more freezer space, assuming you have a 2 in 1 setup now, Siemens has a standalone freezer that can make ice.

  • @kistoars
    @kistoars 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +44

    It is not that you don't have GFCI in Denmark, it is just for the whole house instead and not only bathroom

    • @Gert-DK
      @Gert-DK 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      My parents build their house in 68. The bathroom had GFCI. Yeah, I think the modern technic is different.

    • @TravelinYoung
      @TravelinYoung  5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      We also have circuit breakers covering the entire house. But it’s also necessary to have in bathrooms and kitchens as added protection.

    • @kistoars
      @kistoars 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@TravelinYoung but breakers isn't fast ground fault protection like you have with the HPFI

    • @borisdreyer4729
      @borisdreyer4729 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      And in Denmark they are called HFI in the old days or HPFI if they are up-to-date. They became common in the 80'ties.
      In the late 60'ties some bathrooms came equipped with a special shaver outlet that would only provide 20 watt of power and not able to support a hair dryer.

    • @ThomasG092
      @ThomasG092 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      @@TravelinYoung The big difference is that in the US, GFCI is not required for the entire house, in most places only for bathrooms and kitchens, but in Denmark, it's a requirement to have a GFCI (HFI or HPFI in Denmark) at the fuseboard, which secures all circuits and not only kitchens and bathrooms.

  • @foldby37
    @foldby37 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Hej
    Tak for at du laver disse videoer, 😊

  • @poulha
    @poulha 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    So much to learn from one another. If we so choose ☺️

  • @apn42
    @apn42 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Is the electrical system 120 or 240 volts like in Denmark? Many homes in Denmark also have three phase 400V 16A which is useful for charging electric cars.

  • @bbroegger
    @bbroegger 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    danish home after a hurricane singing "iiiiim still standing!"

    • @TravelinYoung
      @TravelinYoung  5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Hurricanes aren’t coming to Denmark any day soon.

    • @bbroegger
      @bbroegger 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@TravelinYoung the ones we had didnt count i guess

    • @master8laster49
      @master8laster49 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@bbroegger Hurricanes are one thing, tornadoes are a different animal, nothing can stand up to a EF4/5 not even danish "super houses"

    • @blueeyedpunk
      @blueeyedpunk 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@master8laster49They should be able to handle more

    • @master8laster49
      @master8laster49 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@blueeyedpunk More what seconds? They throw semi trucks, nothing can withstand an EF4/5, they're 1,6 kilometers wide and they smash everything. Its better to build light, then you wont get killed by flying bricks etc.

  • @conn7125
    @conn7125 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    We miss you guys and hope to see another video soon. Maybe Maya’s graduation? And the drive through what ever city she studies in 🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻

    • @TravelinYoung
      @TravelinYoung  3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Thanks! We’ve got some videos in the works. And for sure there will be one about Maya’s graduation. It’s coming up this week!

    • @conn7125
      @conn7125 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@TravelinYoung Can not wait to see it ♥️♥️♥️♥️ and even though Mays doesn’t know me please congratulate her with her graduation. Ahhh I’m going to miss the summer with all the young people driving through town and having a blast now that I don’t live in Denmark anymore 😢🙏🏻

  • @MortenPejterRoitmann
    @MortenPejterRoitmann 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    OMG the drapes, what is happening? 😂 Thank you for the tuor. U should do one, on building materials and quality !

  • @Mark-nu3us
    @Mark-nu3us 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Most storm doors I've seen are the bottom half is glass, and the top half is glass, but is able to slide down, and there's a roll screen that comes down with the glass (it rolls into the top of the door) so that you can have just glass or screen whenever you want.

  • @jakdk
    @jakdk 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Great vid Josh. Have any of you given thought about, what are you planning on when your parrents gets older? I know you have siblings in the US, but have you giving any thought about moving your parrents to Denmark for the healthcare and "Old folks home"? Sorry, I know it's not an easy thought...

    • @TravelinYoung
      @TravelinYoung  5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Unfortunately, it isn’t possible to bring them to Denmark.

  • @thomasjn22
    @thomasjn22 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Nice details and always funny so see the small differences :)
    I vistied Boston and NYC last year and I noticed that lamps and other electronic devices in the hotel rooms always had one or two power outlets for your cell phone charger etc.
    Having lamps etc. with power outlets is that also a common thing in homes?

  • @KrashTjubang
    @KrashTjubang 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I have heard that the fireplace in many American home are only decorative. What I mean is that the chimney is blocked off and it cant be used. Is this true?

    • @TravelinYoung
      @TravelinYoung  5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I think what may have happened is that most have converted their wood burning fireplace to gas. In that case, you indeed close off the chimney because it's no longer needed. The fireplace is still used though.

  • @Congobajer
    @Congobajer 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Hi Josh, have you ever thought about getting an "American styled" refrigerator and even replacing the door so you have the two door design back here in Denmark? I know both things are sold here.

  • @assepa
    @assepa 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Going on a slightly more technical note: what fuel do you use for heating? Denmark has a lot of city heating, in the cities. On the countryside mostly "pillefyr" I think (fire stove using tree pills) or nowadays air-to-air heat pumps. And what about the walls? I'm guessing your parent's house may have brick walls, but what is most common for new houses? All-wood and drywall inside? In Denmark I think old houses will have bricks and newer ones have these aerated-concrete blocks.

    • @TravelinYoung
      @TravelinYoung  5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Natural gas. It is brick on the outside except the parts underground which would be cinder blocks - with drywall inside except one room has some old wood panels they painted white.

  • @knudsandbknielsen1612
    @knudsandbknielsen1612 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    First of all, I love you guys and your channel!
    Now, following on:
    I like those windows!
    The ice to me is inflated, overrated. Cold water is not healthy. If you have a meal in your stomach, it messes up your digestion. I believe this is likely superstition at work, created by the refrigerator industry. Or perhaps an instinct from the times of fresh water creeks...
    I like the storm door too! So much to learn!
    The door handle is nice, but I prefer the elongated shape we use in Denmark. The lock mechanism is just brilliant!
    I also prefer a switch for the ceiling light. I come in, I flick the switch to get an overview, and later I switch on the soft light near my station and switch off the light in the ceiling, because I don't need it anymore. I'm very lazy and I want to save energy.
    Many people in Denmark are using heat exchangers, "varmevekslere" which use electricity to exchange heat with cold, and as I understand it, they are energy efficient. It's the reverse refrigerator effect, and it is possible to extract heat even from air as cold as below the freezing point. I also like, that the metric system puts that freezing point at zero, and the the boiling point of water at a hundred. Øh....
    Using electric appliances while taking a bath seems to me like reading a book while riding a bicycle through a beautiful scenery - and talking on the phone at the same time. And also investing, of course, now that you mention it.
    I don't exactly know, but I think in Denmark we had a wave of love for natural floors. Something about chemicals and air quality and wood being "alive". I don't know that there is much to this, but I feel good on raw, almost untreated wood.
    I saw the curtains in the last part, where you usualy eat smørrebrød - and I suggest this English spelling: smur brode - and I have to say, curtains are nice. I don't have any. I live on the 6th floor with no close buildings across. And I just never understood their function, other than finance the curtain industry. As with so many other modern things you can buy, I see no purpose to most of them. I calculate the time spent without them and the quality of life and the result of buying them.
    I also calculate, that if you need to advertise something, it is probably not too obvious why anyone would have not already heard about them. Like the wheel, music, condoms, technology in general. So I don't endure commercials. I shut off the sound and look somewhere else. Not out of fear. Just plain disgust. Manipulation is ugly.
    I have not been to a hair dresser since 1969. Now, I simply wash it, brush it and put a band on it. Problem solved. No more action needed - unless you follow Suit. Suit is the president of Timewaste, as you know. The Com More Steal, commercial religion that says women must wear and use cosmetic products is just more ridiculous than scientology, but it works the same way. Goebbels knew that. Hitler used it without understanding, just like any comedian, and J. D. Trump.
    American women on high heels proove that arbitrary decisions are harmful. Heels destroy your feet. They make you move in inhabitated ways. High heeled shoes are a threat to the freedom of expression!
    90 % of all we do is redundant and has not been proven to work. But it creates jobs and money. Just like drugs and wars, and even wars on drugs. 90 % of our activity is ritual, not rational. And if I were an investor, I would consider all of this a great line of business.
    But we all need jobs to pay our debt to the loan sharks who by now have bought most of our planet, out living space, our biotope, our world. It is just so charmingly feudal.

  • @horisontial
    @horisontial 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    What was that thing on the wall next to the light switch in the bedroom? Is it some kind of intercom?

    • @TravelinYoung
      @TravelinYoung  5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Ha yeah. The homes in this neighborhood were top of the line when originally built and many of them had the option of having an intercom system added.

    • @horisontial
      @horisontial 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@TravelinYoung I see. I guess it is kind of futuristic and you could use it to rouse sleepy teenagers. Just out of curiosity, can you use it to listen in on another room? I have never seen it in Danish homes with the exemption of door telephones.

  • @conn7125
    @conn7125 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thank you and your parents for showing their house to the world 🙏🏻♥️
    The doorknobs and locks do you find them better in America ? Because I have always hated the europeran door handles as i must have a magnet in my body, at least I always destroy my sweaters because I get stuck. Not as easy with the American door knobs.
    In the 1980/90’s it was very popular in Danish homes to have finished wooden floor but because people wanted that yellowish colour gone it became more and more popular to have the floors that most people have now where you have to wash the floor.
    We used to have outlets in our bathroom many years ago but the were always quite high up so no water could get into it but now things have changed and most houses have outlets in the bathrooms it’s just the entire hose that have ( I can’t remember what you called it but if water comes into the outlet it switches off)
    You pretty much always see fireplaces in American homes do they work is it a real or is it just for show ?
    Please let us see the front yard and the backyard and is it true that most Americans do not use the backyard much?
    Ohhh and BTW are you filming Maya getting her hat on ? Can we see it when it happens ?

  • @team2001
    @team2001 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    What is the difference in cost regarding the heating system in the us and in your danish home - if those are even comparable due to the difference in yearly temperature?

  • @kimz6855
    @kimz6855 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Another nice video mr. Young. Once you've owned a fridge with water and ice, you never go back. Energy E or not.
    You forgot to mention the wash and dryer. US are all top-loaders, and Danish once are side loaders. All the best.

  • @dema8468
    @dema8468 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Awesome video, thanks for the look very interesting 👍

  • @mortenthorpe
    @mortenthorpe 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I think the lack of a foyer in some houses in the us, is because of climate… Southern California, Texas, Nevada, Arizona, all being hot, you nearly never drag any dirt on your dry shoes inside, so you don’t need a foyer. The water-in-fridge… not possible in Denmark, and not really needed: too much calcium in the water, will wreck the fridge quickly, and then the quality of water is so much better than in most of the US… having filtered super cold water mitigates a lot of the chlorine and taste of it in the US

  • @klausolekristiansen2960
    @klausolekristiansen2960 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    You do have outlets with switches in the US. Only the switch is not next to the outlet. Must be confusing when you move into a new house, until you get used to it.

  • @InkyRemy
    @InkyRemy 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    What state do your parents live in? Iþs different in Connecticut!

  • @flehan09
    @flehan09 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Having a hot/cold air system around the house seems better than the older waterbased radiator systems we have in Denmark (which can only heat). When you just transport air around you don't have the risk of pipes leaking water out some random place under the floor which you probably won't notice until the construction has been damaged (I know several people that has experienced this). Newer danish houses do use similar air systems combined with heated floors. The heated floor can be either electric or waterbased. The waterbased are made from plastic tubes which holds for much longer than the radiatorbased iron pipes in older houses (which starts to leak in those 50+ years old houses).
    The insect-blocking windows also seems cool. As mentioned in the video danish houses usually just have doors/windows you open. No built-in insect net. Newer houses with the air system don't really have to open windows at all. As the houses are very well insulated the air system can easily control the inside temperature no matter the weather outside. I don't know if american houses are well insulated or if opening windows can be necessary.
    Also the air system makes sure new fresh air comes into the house which is much better for the indoor climate. I have to go around and open windows in my house every day (no matter the weather outside) to get new fresh air. I could install various systems to automate it, but it's rather expensive and I'm not sure about the effect of anything but a full blown air climate system.

    • @jbcube
      @jbcube 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I had a hot/cold air system when I was living in a 64m2 rental in Sweden (back in 2007-2009). I had vents in the ceiling. It was very inefficient and VERY expensive. I had to install fans in the ceiling to get the hot air down. The difference in temperatures (ceiling vs floor) was around 15 degrees without the fans on . I paid around 1500-2000 EVERY month in the winter. It was ridicules.

  • @surters
    @surters 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Is this in New England or down the East Coast?

  • @PlazmaBooy
    @PlazmaBooy 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I'd actually prefer the airducts to radiators, since if you build the ducts into the wall (and not the attic for instance) the loss of heat is negligible, and you could use it for cooling as you mentioned. A lot of houses in Denmark now have "varmepumper", which is essentially a air-conditioning unit with different valves, but most people have no way of utilizing it throughout their house. Maybe this changes with newer homes built, but I doubt it.
    Windows with built in screens is another thing I'd love to have.

    • @klaushougaard
      @klaushougaard 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      You can find some houses her in DK buildt in in the 1960'thies with airducts from the floor

  • @stenvalvik363
    @stenvalvik363 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    What would the energy consumption in Kwh be in a house like your parents - and what's the cost of electricity in the US?

  • @SsAnime1988
    @SsAnime1988 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    1. In Denmark it is mostly Finished wood floors also. It is not standard there isn't the right coating on. 2. The fridge thing is just because most Danish people, dont want to use more electricity for "just some ice cubes", and we call those fridges American fridges mostly, and ice cubes can lay in the freezer in easy to get containers.

  • @CRBarchager
    @CRBarchager 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I like the way you can wash the outside of the window like you showed. There are some windows in Denmark where you can flip them so you can do the same but it's a rather new kind of window as houses from the 70'es and 80'es don't have them at all. Climing a latter to wash the windows on the 2nd floor aren't fun. Might as well just pay a professional window washer to do that. Fortunately it's not that expensive.

  • @mrande913a
    @mrande913a 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    I will forever be jealous of the ice machine on American fridges!! Danes will always say "just use ice trays" but its just not the same

    • @Jacob_Junge
      @Jacob_Junge 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Fridges with ice machines exist in Denmark, and can be bought at any appliance store.

    • @mrande913a
      @mrande913a 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@Jacob_Junge True, but if you live in a rented apartment/house there is a 0% chance it will have one

  • @kris533d
    @kris533d 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Man if there is one thing Denmark lacks it is some kind of mosquito nets for windows. Can't open a window during a hot summer night without 100s of insects in your bedroom.
    I think most Danes don't have those huge American fridges that have a build-in ice cube machine, because Danish houses are smaller on average. Both because Danish houses are more expensive to build and in most areas you can't build on more than 20-25% of the house plot

    • @Randomdude21-e
      @Randomdude21-e 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I think people dont like the looks of those huge frdges. In scaninavia we want built ins.

    • @kris533d
      @kris533d 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @munteza9262 infected? What have you smoked today, sir? 😄

    • @annemarie7682
      @annemarie7682 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Just buy the bug screen , you can buy it several places

    • @janhgh3400
      @janhgh3400 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Velux makes a bug screen for their windows - Have had one just glaring at me from its box for 6 months, need to work up the energy to actually mount it :P

    • @ProgressIsTheOnlyEvolution
      @ProgressIsTheOnlyEvolution 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Yeah that is actually the only real advantage I see in American houses over Danish ones.

  • @HansMilling
    @HansMilling 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The light switches in the US is also reversed compared to Denmark. So down is off and up is on. Where in Denmark down is on and up is off. I think Norway is like the US, so also opposite Denmark, where Germany is like Denmark.
    Also the fireplace is massive compared to Denmark. The idea of Santa coming through, must originate from the US.

  • @HeatherLipinski
    @HeatherLipinski 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    This is interesting. I wonder if some of these vary on income and the age of the house. All the houses I've lived in go directly into the living room, but they have been older homes in lower/working class neighborhoods. I have an ice maker in the frig but they have much cheaper ones with no ice or water. I've also never had central air . My current home has central heat downstairs but nothing upstairs. :(

  • @jakeforrest
    @jakeforrest 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Back in the 1970’ties in Denmark, the outlets in bathrooms typically were designed so that you would not get electrocuted, as long as you only touched one of the two electrical wires. And it didn’t matter, if you touched water at the same time.

  • @sejed3
    @sejed3 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    As someone that hates having bugs in my apartment, I can definitely relate with those screens behind windows and doors.. but then again I'm certain that there are more dangerous and invasive bugs around the US than here in Denmark :D

  • @mortenb2978
    @mortenb2978 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    You probably also prefer the US tap water? 😉 What about the quality and design of the houses and the American vs Danish furniture design?

  • @wendajones9040
    @wendajones9040 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I guess your parents house is in a warm place? In Scandinavia you need a place to hang up your outdoor clothes and shoes (apart from a closet) as the streets are more often then not messy/wet/snowy/gritty etc. Ice in drinks is not so common at all. Flip windows are common unless in an older house.

  • @georgeambush
    @georgeambush 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    great episode

  • @joolsen82
    @joolsen82 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Actually, the whole icecube maker built in to the fridge thing.
    It is not an uncommon fridge in Denmark, most people just choose not to buy those refrigerators.
    Even some people, whom are building new houses...
    They cost more, they also need extra plumbing, so people just don't bother with them.

  • @karstenjrgensen9516
    @karstenjrgensen9516 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    it would also be interesting what electricity and energy costs in the US per year in general

  • @KimSchulz
    @KimSchulz 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    We do not have locks on the inner doors besides to toilet door. There is a decorative key home but it is not used.
    Why would I need to lock my inner doors ?

  • @sigrunwestrus68
    @sigrunwestrus68 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I find the fridge story funny. I have never lived in Denmark. Only in Norway, The Netherlands and now on Crete, Greece and in all my houses I have had a fridge with doors side by side, with a machine making ice cubes and crushed ice. Nothing special about that. Fridges like that from Samsung, LG and Whirlpool are sold all over Europe. All my houses have had floor heating and hier on Crete my floor not only heat the floor during the winter, but cools it during the summer.

  • @Zandain
    @Zandain 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Good video, Josh
    Door handles in Denmark/Europe are fashioned (by law) so that disability dogs can open them.
    Round door handles make this very difficult 🐾🐾
    and they are not as unlockable, as you might think (as a kid, I used my mom's bobby pins to unlock the push button in the middle and annoy my brother in the bath) 🤣
    All the air ducts, probably 'a thing' that Danes won't really embrace as a whole.
    We prefer fresh air, even with the bugs 🦟🐝🪰 (but you can put screens up on danish houses, if you want)
    Looks like your parents live in a house, designed after a European model, sprinkled with US commodities.
    It is far from the usual US aluminium, one floor/basement walk-in-to-the-living-room homes.
    Much more home-y, more hyggelig. 😉
    hello from Hundested 🌸

  • @thomaskroyer3468
    @thomaskroyer3468 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Hi Josh, Europeans in general do not consume ice cubes in quantities American does, it's a culture thing but not just eating habits, from the 70s low energy home appliances became standard, after oil crises in 1973 followed, (it hit Denmark bad at the time), so governmental action was taken to cut down on high consumption of oil, like electric home appliances from lighting, the 40W light bulb became standard, and the more efficient freezer and frizz as mentioned, but also on oil heaters to be more energy efficient! So 5 mins hot showers were recommended and "car free Sundays" in 1973!, before the mid 70s bathtubs were standard in Danish family homes, but post mid 70 showers only became the new standard to save imported oil at first, it became official policy to be more self-sufficient with North Sea oil.-in the end money. But in general, eating ice cubes in large quantities is not normal in Europe, and not recommend for dehydration since your body consume fluid to convert the cold ice to fluid and there can be a build up of bad bacteria in the ice cubes, -I know, it comes from not cleaning the ice maker. But high energy consumption makes it expensive to have a "Amerikaner Køleskab" in Denmark. I am a Dane living in the USA and I never use the buildin Ice maker at the frizz here, don't need it, don't like it.

  • @leasofie1171
    @leasofie1171 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I love the windows. It's smart that you can wash windows from the outside without putting your life at risk. The screens are also handy, you can sleep with open windows without getting any mosquitos inside. Also I don't know why washing machines are so small in Denmark. It makes no sense. Our washing machine runs all day everyday.

    • @KimSchulz
      @KimSchulz 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Are you like 10 in the household? We are 4 and wash on weekends with plenty of time in spare.

  • @1233hund
    @1233hund 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    You didnt mentioned the zink blender for all organic wast. First time in the us, i put the organic wast in the waist container in front of our house. And the racoons spread it oll over the place nest day.

  • @ane-louisestampe7939
    @ane-louisestampe7939 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Danes have watched too much Friends, Frasier and Seinfeld and too little Desperate House Wifes 😂

  • @futtejanas5690
    @futtejanas5690 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Task... for the nesx year, youll take a pic in your livingroom, same time, same place every day ..
    Would be fun to see the difference between summer and winter, regardering the sun light.
    Lets say at 4 o'clock in tbe afternoon. (4 PM)...
    Or 6PM ... at suppertime.... every day....
    Are you up for it?

  • @jenserikbech
    @jenserikbech 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    We had canals with hot air as central heating, Called "Calorifere" heating 100 years ago. They have all been replaced with radiators under the windows.
    The reason were tha bacterias in the canals. And the stench! from the contaminated air inside the canals.
    The radiators under the windows provide with the best airflow inside the room. No air condition have been of interest in the Temperate climate up til now. Floor heating has been ditched also because of no air cirkulation in the room and getting "Elephant feet" walking the floor. The refrigirator with "Ice" exists in Denmark. My pal had a Samsung freedge so called American freedge, just like the one you show.

  • @Kriegbaum1000
    @Kriegbaum1000 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    What about those garbage disposer blenders in the sink, that you see in movies? In Denmark we typicaly have a bucket for greens and fruit leftovers to use for compost, and now we hage to sort our trash in 10 categories.

    • @TravelinYoung
      @TravelinYoung  5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Good one! I should have shown the garbage disposal. Next time I’m there :).

  • @lbernau
    @lbernau 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The thermostat @8:01 to control the temperature. Is that a central one that controls the entire house / all of the rooms, or are there one in every room?

    • @TravelinYoung
      @TravelinYoung  5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Whole house. Some houses have more than 1 and divide up in zones. But in this case it is the whole house. You can modify how much air comes in and out of each vent though.

  • @CharlieIsOnTheMoon
    @CharlieIsOnTheMoon 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I, a Dane who's allergic to many insects, also wish we had the screen on the windows...

  • @user-pc7sp3xj5d
    @user-pc7sp3xj5d 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    If you start importing those storm doors to DK, I can assure you I will be a customer, I really like the idea of having a storm door.

    • @Randomdude21-e
      @Randomdude21-e 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Just looks annoying. Opening two doors everytime you are going out. Or allways having a door opent…

  • @JunkieMonkey321
    @JunkieMonkey321 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    those fridges with ice cubes on-demand are an absolute godsend, and i will never understand how/why they arent a staple everywhere. so much lost potential.

  • @earthorbiter
    @earthorbiter 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Great video. I want a freezer like that :P
    Please show us the garden layouts. It appears that all american houses are situated behind a front yard that consists only of grass and a pathway to the door..!? Often with no hedge or fence or flowers or anything. But what is in the back yard..? A mystery never shown in movies and TV... ;) ... Do you have high fences and hedges like in Denmark, or are they much like the front yards..?

    • @cherylehret9926
      @cherylehret9926 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      There are 50 states, and many different areas. So, it really depends on where one lives. I have a lot of trees, with tall, medium, and small shrubs, and lots of ground cover, flower pots and flowers.

    • @tobimobiv1
      @tobimobiv1 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Try and search mowing yards and I'm sure you'll get to see a bunch of backyards

  • @idiocracy9530
    @idiocracy9530 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I do miss some air-conditioning. Buildings in Denmark are so well insulated that it's kinda a problem in the summer.

    • @Randomdude21-e
      @Randomdude21-e 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Insulated works both ways.. keeps it cooler too

    • @idiocracy9530
      @idiocracy9530 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Randomdude21-e The thing here is that there a lot of concrete, keeps the heat. Works like a radiator, so when the sun goes down, it stays hot inside.
      Once lived in a small apartment for 2 years, brand new. In the summer the only thing that could get the temp below 30c, was an air-conditioner.

    • @Randomdude21-e
      @Randomdude21-e 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@idiocracy9530 Concrete and masonry construction materials have high thermal mass. This helps them to passively regulate a building's temperature by absorbing, storing and releasing heat slowly. The result is buildings with more stable temperatures that stay cooler in summer and warmer in winter.

    • @idiocracy9530
      @idiocracy9530 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@Randomdude21-e Well, then i don't know why.
      But regardless, air-conditioner fixed it.

    • @Randomdude21-e
      @Randomdude21-e 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@idiocracy9530 well if you let in the heat it wont go out as fast😅

  • @charleshamilton9274
    @charleshamilton9274 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Very often only the cheapest American homes have you walking directly into the home. Kinda like a mobile home, right?

  • @BjarneDuelundTV
    @BjarneDuelundTV 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    Older houses and apartments in Denmark are built with entrance foyers. It was removed by architects, as they thought it was wasted space.

    • @TullaRask
      @TullaRask 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Maybe it's not cold enough in Denmark. In Norway we like to put our dirty shoes and keep the cold in the hallway.

    • @wendajones9040
      @wendajones9040 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@TullaRaskSweden too!

    • @ls-l1518
      @ls-l1518 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      That not true. I never see a house without a entrance in Denmark. In the new houses, it's larger than in the old. I own a house in Denmark. But in Norway, you often have a tiny space before the hallway. Called a vindfang. Wind catcher.

    • @TullaRask
      @TullaRask 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@ls-l1518 Both a vindfang and a gang(hallway)? That is a bit much isn't it? It might actually be true about the 70's houses. Ithink it maybe depends on the size and layout of the house or even apartment. Most apartments I've seen in Oslo has a little vindfang for cloth and shoes.

    • @BjarneDuelundTV
      @BjarneDuelundTV 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@ls-l1518 it was more common earlier, even in small apartments.

  • @youseebootsofhaste.speed209
    @youseebootsofhaste.speed209 2 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Ok its US, but which state?

  • @InkyRemy
    @InkyRemy 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    What does the furnace run on?

  • @henningbosrensen8345
    @henningbosrensen8345 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    The door lock is smart. Wish we had it. Have lost the Keys too often😉

  • @claesmansson9070
    @claesmansson9070 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    If you have wiindows that can turn like that, horizontal axle,, it s mostly the whole window, not just half, insect net in doorframe is nice to have in the summertime, hpfi. relais in Dk is for the whole house.

  • @janetkelley8113
    @janetkelley8113 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Hope you all are doing well, it's been a while.

    • @TravelinYoung
      @TravelinYoung  4 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      We are all good! Hope to have some video content up soon, in the meantime we are all excited about Maya finishing gymnasium!

  • @soedebrit
    @soedebrit 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Hello I’m from Denmark 😂 your hoses are so cool 😎

  • @dota2gameplayvideos310
    @dota2gameplayvideos310 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    what is the communication like thing beside the switch in the bedroom?

  • @jesperfrovinjensen
    @jesperfrovinjensen 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    So - if you can tilt the lower window to polish the glass on the outside - even on the top floors - HOW do you polish the upper window??? :O

    • @TravelinYoung
      @TravelinYoung  5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      You can do the same with the upper one. It can slide down and tilt as well.

  • @BjarneDuelundTV
    @BjarneDuelundTV 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I see lot of positives on both US and Danish houses. Some differences due to the different climate and building standards.

  • @martinpoulsen6564
    @martinpoulsen6564 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Up until recently forced air heating has been too inefficient for Danish households, which is why you mainly see either water circulating in-floor heating and/or radiator panels. Older houses would get warm, but never really hot, from the sun, which is a newer problem created with large floor to ceiling glass panels and doors along with very thorough and massive insulation. A lot of houses from around 2000 and 10s will tend to overheat in the summer, thus creating a market for AC in what basically is a design flaw. Another factor in the tendency towards a waterbased heat source in DK is the power generation plants. They cannot just let out their warm cooling water into the waterways, as it will disturb the natural balance and increase algae growth and deplete the waters from oxygen. Hence they figured, why not 2 birds with one stone? Closed loop cooling system, where the consumers also gets to buy their heat, and not only the electricity from the power plant. Incidentally, this is why heating in Aalborg is some of the cheapest in the country, since Aalborg Portland generates massive amounts of surplus heat from cement production.
    Not that it is in your home, but it is fairly common to step straight into the living room in the US. That is something only very rarely seen in DK, mainly because the entry would be a weather barrier, not only to shed your outerwear, but traditionally because of lack of sufficient weatherstripping in the doors, to keep them tight. This is of course an issue that has largely been overcome, but not many are willing to give up some sort of entry anyway.
    Largely all modern American homes are platform framed, meaning the walls are stood up on a platform, if you want another level in the house, another platform is framed on top of the walls and so on. Up until the 90s it was very common in DK for the ground level floors to be detatched from the walls, then the slab on grade took over, wooden floors or not. This is why so many newer houses have those horrible click floating floors, that just go clack clack clack when you walk on them. Traditionally those wooden floors wood have been on joists and nailed in stead. In the US they're typically nailed to the subfloor. Wood house construction has greatly evolved, especially in terms of speed, in the US, very much contrary to DK, where wood house construction has been basically dead, for anything but vacation homes.

  • @gravballemandendk
    @gravballemandendk 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    you do know you can just buy a freezer that has a ice cube machine in it? plenty of people have them in denmark.. its just not that commen, due to the space they take up :)

  • @karenreimer2940
    @karenreimer2940 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I love some of your solutions! I cannot understand your drapes.. it's disgusting's that the drapes lay on the floor,- it collect dust and dirt.. you must be washing them every 14 days..

  • @maj-britt5756
    @maj-britt5756 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    If you prefer an American fridge it is possible to buy one in Denmark.

  • @madsk
    @madsk 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    You can probably also buy a refrigerator with an ice machine in Denmark

  • @wendajones9040
    @wendajones9040 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    You didn’t’ mention that the front door in Denmark, as in the rest of Scandinavia, opens outwards.

    • @TravelinYoung
      @TravelinYoung  5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Hm, ours have always opened inwards in DK.

    • @wendajones9040
      @wendajones9040 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@TravelinYoung ok. I admit I have less experience of Denmark than the rest of the Nordic countries!

    • @pilskadden
      @pilskadden 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      That is more of a Swedish thing because of the snow, I guess. In Denmark the front door usually opens inwards.

  • @PLF...
    @PLF... 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    How is two doors more welcoming than one - as a born Dane that has also lived in the US I find the American doors extremely unwelcoming

  • @sontaron7
    @sontaron7 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    About the only thing I wish Denmark had are the windows that slide up and down and the screens and storm doors.

  • @dharling97
    @dharling97 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    If you want a fridge with icecubes in, you just buy one.
    It's usually a choice you make yourself.
    This comes from someone with a fridge with a built in icecube machine living in Denmark

    • @TravelinYoung
      @TravelinYoung  4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      That’s not really an option when renting. Since buying we can yes, but it would clash with the design of the kitchen. Since it’s uncommon, the kitchen wasn’t designed to accommodate.

  • @henrickhollesen7308
    @henrickhollesen7308 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    There is a difference in the outlets. In DK you plug in and turn on/off. In US you just plug in.Sometimes when you unplug the US outlets a spark appears (small) but it is not good. I think the Danish is better as it is a safety feature. The outlets over here have always bugged me. It maybe because US is 110V and DK is 220V......

    • @MrBjornlange
      @MrBjornlange 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Actually ... According to "New" electric rules You may have outlets without breaker in DK. I think these new rules are more than 15 years old now.
      These outlets are popularly called "Pig snouts". The are very common i kitchens (which by far) is the most frequently renovated room in Danish houses.
      The power is always on and the safety is in the HPFI breaker in Your central fuse box.

    • @henrickhollesen7308
      @henrickhollesen7308 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@MrBjornlange Thank you. Learned something new. I haven't lived in Denmark for 15 yrs. ;)

    • @lukasjensen4770
      @lukasjensen4770 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@MrBjornlange Theres 5 different ways for protection, but not useing breakers for sockets is highly unlikely to say the least.

  • @UltraSuperDuperFreak
    @UltraSuperDuperFreak 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Well you can get screens for windows aswell in Denmark, just have to buy them yourself sadly. And clearly you open the screen to open then window, and htne close the screen. I bought that myself a few times. I really wish it was installed automaticly. So many flies to anoy you in the summer haha.
    And most windows where i lived i was also able to turn window for easy wash while staying inside, rest i could do from outside it was houses. But i know some of my family windows has windows that doesn, and they live on 4th level so quite high up. No way to clean it from outside, which i find wierd.
    Never hade floors needing treatment like you describe, i lived 8 places to far. Always been hardwood floor with finish on, that i maybe washed every 6 month. One house hade concret floor in a single room. where we hade washing machine and dryer

  • @dianahoffmannlaursen7263
    @dianahoffmannlaursen7263 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I think that Denmark has a better electric systems almost everywhere it is in the earth and not up in the Air like US, I think we can learn a lot off each other i love my ice cubes and cold water to , but I make the my self , we need to think off the envirement , I do wish we had Air con here in the summer , becurse off global warming it is so hot here 2 month each summer , I wish that I could live in a house , here in Denmark a lot off people live in apartments , I think there is good things both in US and DK homes tfs 😊

  • @benjaminandersen8482
    @benjaminandersen8482 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    As a Dane ... the extra door makes you feel welcome?? Yeah, we like people in our house ... but we have to screen YOU!