the bathroom. My one regret from remodeling our master is installing the super cool looking linear drain in the shower. Because the drain itself is tiny. It’s just the pain that is super long and massive. It’s the most disgusting thing to clean unless you clean it every 2-3 days. Huge whammy on that one.
The housekeepers come every other Tuesday to do the deep cleaning of the bathrooms, kitchen, etc.
But the real disaster is our basement. It is finished, with a family room/TV area, my wife’s sewing area, etc. My wife’s step-dad died last year and her mom moved to a managed care facility. And boxes (so many boxes!) of stuff went to (mostly) our basement for sorting. A year later, some of it is dealt with, but the remainder is still a superfund site.
The bathroom is generally going to be both the smallest and the one with the most cleaning-stuff-friendly surfaces, resulting in a remarkably quick task by comparison to the typical no-room-for-a-car garage. Kitchens tend to accumulate cruft that needs Stern Measures to remove, so I’d put that in second place behind the garage. (PPE recommended.) For those with a basement (nobody around here), I suppose it’s likely that this would be a virtual garage, with all the attendant must-shift-crap implications should a cleaning expeditionary force be assembled to attempt it.
holodeck
/showme low ranking starfleet crew member mopping the holodeck star trek tng
@zippyus Here’s the image you requested for “low ranking starfleet crew member mopping the holodeck star trek tng”
@mediocrebot @zippyus Don’t forget to purge the holodeck biofilters.
Bathroom is the easy answer but I’ve seen some kitchens that are terrifying, lol.
The abattoir. That room is a bloody mess.
@yakkoTDI hahahaha thanks. That made me proper laugh out loud.
The housekeepers come every other Tuesday to do the deep cleaning of the bathrooms, kitchen, etc.
But the real disaster is our basement. It is finished, with a family room/TV area, my wife’s sewing area, etc. My wife’s step-dad died last year and her mom moved to a managed care facility. And boxes (so many boxes!) of stuff went to (mostly) our basement for sorting. A year later, some of it is dealt with, but the remainder is still a superfund site.
The bathroom is generally going to be both the smallest and the one with the most cleaning-stuff-friendly surfaces, resulting in a remarkably quick task by comparison to the typical no-room-for-a-car garage. Kitchens tend to accumulate cruft that needs Stern Measures to remove, so I’d put that in second place behind the garage. (PPE recommended.) For those with a basement (nobody around here), I suppose it’s likely that this would be a virtual garage, with all the attendant must-shift-crap implications should a cleaning expeditionary force be assembled to attempt it.