Not a problem! I’ve gotten good at this.eagle wrote: ↑Fri Feb 26, 2021 7:54 pm![]()
So, question, and I am really not trying to start something here:
What is the problem with the guest house/boat house? Is it simply dimensions? As in, is it something like this (picking numbers, since I don't know the real numbers): the boat house is 20x20x20 feet (ha), and the guest house stage is 40x40x40 feet?
Or is it something like this: The layout of the show's guest house does not match the layout of the real boat house? That is, for example: the stairs in the guest house are "here," whereas the stairs in the boat house are "there"...

The creators of the guesthouse set actually did a pretty good job of making it seem as though it could be the interior of the boathouse. Your second scenario is not the major problem, but it is part of the problem. The biggest success in the design is the stairs down into the guesthouse based on the boathouse lanai being up several steps. I think that is what convinces most people that it really exists that way. However, no competent architect would design such a structure. Imagine the only way to get into your home is to go up a flight of stairs and then back down to the level you started at?!?!?
In fact, there are no interior stairs at all in the boathouse. It is two completely separate levels, the lower level being partially subterranean on the side toward the estate entrance gate. Downstairs is simply large storage room for water equipment, hence the name “boathouse”. It has a separate entrance door below the lanai steps and also the large garage-like doors facing the water with a ramp to the sand and water. It also has several small windows on all sides for light. They are very near grade as can be seen in some scenes because it is partially submerged below grade. The upstairs consists of the large lanai, about two-thirds of the total space, and the small interior space with a bathroom and one other room. This room is counted as a bedroom in the property tax documents.
The real problem is the size, and it’s not even close. The following dimensions come from the measured drawings of the property tax records for the estate. The boathouse is basically 23x34 feet, not including the lanai stairs or the area under them. That sounds big, HOWEVER, part of that is the shed roof facing the water (7 feet wide) and the lanai itself which is 15x23 feet. That leaves an interior space upstairs just 10 feet wide by 21 feet long. That is room enough for just the 15x10 foot room mentioned above, which would be considered a medium sized bedroom, and a 5x10 foot bathroom which is just a little larger than the smallest possible full bathroom (5x7 feet).
The guesthouse set depicts the stairs, kitchen wall, dining area, and living room, though with high ceilings, all inside that 10x21 foot boathouse interior space. The bedroom and bathroom set are implied to be under the lanai. I have done drawings of the set and estimate that whole living space to be approximately 20x25 feet. So here comes the math:
Set living/dining/kitchen/stairs = 500 sq ft approximately
Boathouse room/bathroom = 210 sq ft measured
Damn math!!!



The surprising thing is that the space where the bedroom and bathroom sets are supposed to be is far BIGGER than the sets depict. I’d estimate two bedrooms and a bathroom or even two, would fit under that large lanai. Then, where is the chimney on the boathouse for the fireplace in the middle of the guesthouse? Why are there no garage doors in the guesthouse set like in the actual boathouse. Why do NONE of the guesthouse windows match the boathouse windows, just the door? You see my point.
