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- My mother's basement
Seems to be going to opposite way here in the UK; here a "double bedroom" means nothing more than you can physically fit a double mattress into it and still open and close the door. My bedrooms in a post war (1951) block are bigger than most new build, and they're only 9'x11'. As to ensuite, I've long accepted I'll never be able to afford anything with an ensuite anywhere I'd actually want to live - more's the pity! My parents installed one in their place a few years ago, and it's fantastically convenient.
Over here in God's Country house sizes have fluctuated from quite large in the late 19th and early 20th centuries to a gradual downsizing until the early 1970s when houses started getting larger again. New houses are upwards of a thousand square feet larger on average larger than they were half a century ago. And that's a whole lotta square feet.
I suspect this will shift too. Many municipalities are now allowing for what in many places are called "backyard cottages" in older single-family residential districts -- freestanding structures usually occupying a 300- to 500-square four footprint. These distinct dwelling units are thought to go some way toward greater housing affordability and reducing pressures of urban and suburban sprawl.
I've long maintained that the crowding "problem" in many areas had more to do with increaing numbers of automobiles than people. Many residential districts built out a hundred and more years ago are stocked with houses meant for half a dozen or more people. And maybe one car per household, if that. Now those structures house three or four people with three or four cars. And there's but one off-street parking space per house, or maybe two.
Some are predicting the come-to-you self-driving automobile. If that comes to pass, if urbanites no longer need to own their own private cars, it could solve the automobile overpopulation problem.