iamshadow21
Amateur Forensics Geek
- Joined
- Oct 8, 2022
- Messages
- 8,274
- Reaction score
- 79,700
And as for it being a 'nice brick home', yes, on the surface, but I can tell you things.@SouthAussie what does "housing commission property " mean. They appear to be nice brick family homes
That is a postwar home, maybe 1950s. It's a seventy year old house. It still has old fashioned sash windows. Likely little to no insulation. It would be a nightmare to heat at this time of year, and hellish to try and keep cool in the summer. It would have a rudimentary galley kitchen and basic bathroom. Bathroom, singular, without a separate toilet more likely than not. I can also tell you it's probably a maximum of three bedrooms, more likely two, and small bedrooms by modern housing standards. This was a family of NINE before this tragedy. That is nowhere near enough space for that family. That said, they probably felt lucky to have it. As I said, the waiting lists for public housing are like a decade long right now, no joke.
Source - I live in Sydney, the house I spent the beginning of life in was post war construction with five rooms TOTAL, my grandad built houses postwar, including his own. I live twenty minutes from the crime scene by car, and the houses there look like the houses where I am from that era. Most of them probably have the same layouts.
MOO
Last edited: