21 Home Features That Were The Height Of Luxury In The Old Days But Are Now Obsolete

Once upon a time, homes had all sorts of features that were considered the peak of convenience and style—think built-in phone nooks, dumbwaiters, and laundry chutes.

These home appliance and design trends were often seen as the latest in modern living, making everyday tasks a bit easier (or at least more interesting).

But over the years, these once-beloved additions have quietly disappeared, replaced by newer trends and technology.

In this gallery, we’re taking a look back at home features that were once all the rage but have since faded into history.

Whether they spark a bit of nostalgia or just make you wonder why they ever existed, these details give us a glimpse into how home life has changed over the decades.

2. Phone nooks.

6. Living rooms with 1-3 steps down.

9. Central vacuum. I always thought there would be a clog in the pipe inside of a wall somewhere which would render the whole machine useless. I never had one but I had friends who did. Interestingly, though, I’m seeing these videos on instagram now showing people using them and all the comments are like the people just discovered fire. “WOW!! What a great idea!! No more lugging a vacuum around. Brilliant!!”.

12. High-fidelity radios in the walls of each room. Saw that once in one of the richer towns in the SF Bay Area. Thing is that they were all early ’60s models and by the ’80s they were dated and sort of beside the point.

13. Plate racks built into the wall.

14. Glass brick —very desirable in the 1950’s.

15. Bread warming drawers.

16. To show you how poor I grew up: fold away ironing boards. Ooh la la!

17. Maybe not particularly fancy, but the house I grew up in (from the late 1950s) had an incinerator in the basement. You could just throw in burnable items and *POOF* they were rendered into ashes.

18. Floor outlets.

19. I was surprised to see a motor device embedded into a friend’s house kitchen countertop. They said it’s a built-in blender motor that was there when they bought the house. Seemed like a super fancy thing.

20. Knotty pine. Our 1950s house has Knotty Pine kitchen cabinets and flooring throughout. We didn’t know about the knotty pine floors when we bought the house, as the owners had them covered with carpet. The floors were in pristine condition, as they had always been covered since the house was built. We kept all the knotty pine. One other oddity was every closet in the house was cedar-lined.

21. A bar in the home. They are *wildly* impractical unless you are entertaining (aka giving out free alcohol) a few days a week, at which point you’re just throwing away your money.

H/T Bored Panda

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Stefanie

Stefanie Mustian

Stefanie is an architect with 15+ years of working both independently as well as on teams of some of the top Architectural Firms in the country located in Atlanta, Washington D.C. and New York. She currently runs BoardBatten.com a coastal architecture and design service in Port Aransas, Texas. She is also the wife of the dude who runs Pleated-Jeans.