Che succede con tutte quelle docce aperte in Bulgaria? Anche guardando appartamenti e case che costano oltre 2000BGN al mese e la maggior parte degli hotel che ho visto a Sofia, Plovdiv e Burgas (anche quelli che costano oltre 80 € a notte) li hanno.

    Come lo fai? Servemente inondano l’intero bagno ogni volta che fai la doccia? Non lo capisco perché i separatori di vetro acrilico sono comunque abbastanza economici … sembra assolutamente scomodo e strano.

    Nota: sembra che la maggior parte di voi non sappia davvero a cosa sto pensando. Voglio dire docce come queste: https://www.theglassconcepts.com/images/product4/6.jpg

    Non quelle piccole scatole di plastica da 1m².

    Open showers
    byu/Blutfalke inbulgaria



    di Blutfalke

    Share.

    7 commenti

    1. justarandomguyBG on

      Open showers are easier to clean, less prone to mold and on top of that you are not boxed in a 1 by 1 plastic box… To each his own i guess…

    2. Ok-Toe1010 on

      i have been to couple of hotels with the showers you desire so it’s not that uncommon i’d say.

    3. Turbulent-Ad5437 on

      Can be cultural thing. Like the English. Not even owning a shower there is a common thing.

    4. Bathrooms are typically quite small here, we try to make the most of every square cm in an apartment. So very often it’s a matter of space.

    5. Radiant-Safe-1377 on

      i’ve never seen a proper bathroom here. my best explanation is no one (except maybe for people that spent most their lives abroad) ever saw a proper bathroom and we ended up with the monstrosity of “yes I’ll just squeeze myself here in this angle between the huge ass water heater and the laundry machine , that’s definitely an easier cleanup!”. it’s not even a money thing, i’ve seen people who spent fortunes on making their houses boujee af but then they have a shower head attached to the wall that sprays all over the vanity, toilet etc.

    Leave A Reply