BikNorton wrote:
I can think of two reasons.
They really didn't like the neighbours on the right. Hated them. Couldn't even bear to have the boundary fence in view when looking at the garden.
They got a really, *really* good deal on patio doors that were just a bit too wide.
Or third reason, the people they got to put new patio doors in fucked up the measurements and it was easier to do an extension than reorder. "No idea what you're talking about, all we did was put the new door in, must be an optical illusion"
The mystery of the triangular extension is pretty famous around here. All the neighbours know about it.
The house had two previous owners, one in 1953 (when it was built), and one in 1971… then us. I believe that the 1971 owners were the ones that put the extension in.
The neighbours either side of us are both very active women in their 60s-70s, and both knew the previous owners very well. I once asked each of the neighbours did they know anything about the extension, and they each said ‘oh, the
triangle, what on earth is that about?’, or words to that effect.
It’s nothing to do with sun glare, because the garden is north-facing. It’s just so very odd.
One thing we did discover when redecorating is that the floor used to have laminate tiles around the edge, and presumably a square carpet or rug in the middle (because they’d left the laminate tiles in place, though many had come loose). It made it clear, however, that when they decided to carpet the room they made a purposeful decision to put a different flooring type in the triangle, where they laid some tongue and groove laminate.
I had assumed it had different flooring there because it came later, but no. It was a decision that was made.
Neither of us noticed the triangle when we viewed the house, somehow. It was at the height of the pandemic and you had five minutes to look at the entire house and to be fair I spent most of that in the garden.