Planning guest WC in new construction - How big should it be? (DIN?)

  • Erstellt am 2022-12-11 12:59:27

ypg

2022-12-12 23:08:03
  • #1
Yes, some people should not go out on the street or drive a car at all.
 

xMisterDx

2022-12-12 23:11:43
  • #2


Especially those who act according to the motto "once in a lifetime, whatever"...
 

xMisterDx

2022-12-12 23:40:39
  • #3
As long as I have 11ant on my side, you can laugh all you want ;)

Anyone who wants to pull a dead person out of the guest bathroom should contact ypg. Care included? That’s negligence in planning.

By the way. Do you put on your seatbelt in the car? Why? What will be, will be?
 

xMisterDx

2022-12-12 23:57:05
  • #4
I ask you not to pay attention to the previous post. It was not meant in a bad way, I just suddenly remembered.

Someone who has no children often lives by the motto "Pfff, if it hits me, so be it..."
You might be able to afford that as a single person, but not as a father of two children.

In this respect, the rescue option in the WC serves a function. It not only saves the dad or the mom from becoming drooling vegetables. It also ensures the supply in that case...

And... Attention ypg, this is the part to laugh at:
My father already had a stroke in the WC. Not locked, door opened outwards. That was his rescue.
That was incredibly funny, we still laugh about it today...

Oh right. Since then he rarely goes outside. Has become very frail. I assume in your sense. Driving a car is no longer possible...
 

NatureSys

2022-12-13 02:09:24
  • #5


Probably just that one time after which, due to lack of access, too much time is lost and that's why the funeral is next.
 

motorradsilke

2022-12-13 03:49:05
  • #6

I meant rather, how many people does this happen to? Sure, there are these cases. But much more often it is likely to happen that someone suffers a stroke or similar alone in their apartment/house and then cannot get help anyway.
Everyone just has to weigh for themselves how big they estimate the risk to be.
 
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