ᐅ Children's room with floor-to-ceiling windows

Created on: 19 Apr 2017 12:44
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Hendrik007
Hello everyone,
we are moving into a newly built ground floor apartment and have the choice between a room of 13.5 m² (145 sq ft) with floor-to-ceiling windows or a 15 m² (161 sq ft) room with regular windows to use as a bedroom or children’s room.
The larger room would fit the big bed and wardrobe better, but I don’t find floor-to-ceiling windows with doors opening to the garden ideal for a children’s room (ages 4 and 1).

What do you think?
Thanks and best regards
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Hendrik007
19 Apr 2017 17:19
Lamp, clock radio, mobile phone
RobsonMKK19 Apr 2017 17:25
Lamp = wall outlet
Mobile phone = USB in socket
Clock radio = only socket needed
11ant19 Apr 2017 19:52
Hendrik007 schrieb:
But also to pull them out individually for tilting/ventilation...

I know the lockable handles as being able to prevent switching from tilt to turn mode.
https://www.instagram.com/11antgmxde/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/bauen-jetzt/
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Hendrik007
20 Apr 2017 09:48
RobsonMKK schrieb:
Lamp = wall outlet
Cell phone = USB in socket
Radio alarm clock = only necessary outlet

I find wall outlets unnecessary and inflexible. What is the advantage here, and if the room is used differently later, I won’t need them anymore.
USB sockets don’t have an advantage compared to a USB charger, do they? They usually charge even more slowly, and who knows how long USB in this form will remain the standard.
RobsonMKK20 Apr 2017 10:03
Hendrik007 schrieb:
I find wall outlets unnecessary and inflexible. What is the advantage here, and if the room is used differently, I wouldn’t need them anymore.

The same applies to the set of three sockets spaced about 2.10 meters (7 feet) apart. And you rarely change a bedroom.
Hendrik007 schrieb:
USB outlets don’t have an advantage over USB chargers, do they? They usually charge slower, and who knows how long USB will remain a standard in this form.

USB outlets deliver 3 amps, just like a large charger. After all, I need to be able to charge an iPad, which doesn’t work with 1.5 amps (a standard phone charger). USB will remain a standard for a very long time; it will just keep evolving. USB has already been on the market for over 20 years, and even though IT changes quickly, these kinds of standards tend to be slow to change.