Wanted - Canadian Kitchen
Looking for the perfect rental property has become my latest Belgian challenge. Trolling through the immo websites has the feeling of an elaborate scavenger hunt and like a scavenger hunt, the clues are not always clear.
During the past few years of living in
Of course there is the typical realtor-speak to decode: charming = tiny; with character = tiny and poorly laid out; luminous = buy heavy curtains if you don’t want to wake up at 5am every day; desirable location = more expensive for a smaller apartment; convenient to transportation = noisy bus stop outside your window; close to nightlife = drunks stumble by nightly; must see = total waste of time.
Besides the universal problem of realtor-speak, there have been some other linguistic challenges. My first issue was deciphering all of the abbreviations and acronyms. It only took me a few listings to figure out that SDB was ‘salle de bain’ but some listings have been a bit more challenging to my English speaking brain – “parquet, sdb, cuis tot équ (l-v,l-l,séch.) db vitr. plac. sys. alarm.”
It seems that most of these quandaries
evolve from the kitchen. Ideally, I would like a large, well appointed kitchen
– une cuisine équipée (rather than non or semi-équipée). I have learned that a
‘cuisine American’ is what I’m looking for; although why American kitchens are
sprouting up all over
In addition to this Yankee kitchen, there are also listings for those that are hyper-équipée and super-équipée. Which is better; a kitchen that can leap tall buildings in a single bound, or one that does my dishes extra fast but may have attention span problems? A dilemma to be sure.
Problems exist in other rooms as well. While a ‘feu ouvert’ is desirable in a French house, in my English mind, an open fire conjures up images of happy campers sitting around a bonfire. This could be a problem for the parquet…
While I would love to live large, Grand Living sounded rather out of my price range until I figured out that the French have dropped the second half of Living Room… too English sounding I guess.
Finally, I remain confused about the “hall de jour” and the “hall de nuit.” In Canadian homes we don’t discriminate against certain halls by only using them at night.
Despite the linguistic obstacles, I remain committed to finding us the perfect new place to live. It should be neither too charming, or with too much character; not too desirable or convenient, with a (North) American kitchen and an (enclosed) open fire for living large in our large living room.
This could take some time…
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