https://youtu.be/ATjMxH3-e4Y
Couple of things I noticed...
1) Many older American houses that I'm aware of have the washer and dryer in the kitchen. Just from the looks of things, this is because the houses may have been built before running water, or back in the day before people had clothes washing appliances. The kitchen often has at least hot and cold water lines, and drainage available thus making the addition of a clothes washer possible without having to add on an extra room. These older houses may or may not have a dryer as the older houses were probably only set up with a small 60 amp electric service which doesn't afford the capacity for an electric clothes dryer. Often times, folks who live in those houses will hang their clothes out on the line. I had a neighbor in Pulaski who spliced a dryer outlet off his electric range outlet. He just knew not to run them both together. This is very illegal, but hey... what ever works for him.... More modern houses that I've seen have the washer and dryer in a mud room, or basement. Single wide trailers (mobile homes) often have the washer and dryer in the kitchen, those I've seen some older ones with a place for them in the hallway by the back door. Doublewides normally have a separate room for clothes washing appliances.
2) Regarding the "bathroom", again in older houses an "indoor outhouse" was normally added on over the years. When the house was first built, there was probably an outhouse somewhere in the back yard. Baths may have been taken every so often in a wash tub normally in the kitchen. The modern day standard seems to combine the bath tub, toilet, and vanity sink all in the same room.
3) By code, all of our electrical outlets are three prong, a hot (120v) a neutral, and a ground. In kitchens and bathrooms, they are supposed to be GFCI protected. However once again, in older houses, it's not uncommon to find ungrounded two prong receptacles.
--One question I've always wondered about you fellas over there... my understanding is you all have 230volt outlets. Is this 115 volts on each side? (measured to ground) or is it 230 volts straight up on one side to a neutral?
The little switch that turns the outlet off is pretty neat, although we'd probably just get in the habit of leaving them on.
4) Separate hot and cold taps are common in older buildings, also some businesses seem to like them. Personally I can't stand them. They offer no means of temperature regulation.
5) On air conditioning, as far as I can tell, pretty much all modern houses are built with central air now. Older farm houses were typically built under enough shade trees to help keep the house cool. They also had large windows that could be opened to allow for cross circulation. Modern suburban houses in the concrete jungle are a little harder to cool naturally, thus enter the world of artificial air conditioning. Window AC units are normally employed in older homes without central air. Still running on that 60 amp service, people have figured out that they can run 60,000 BTU's worth of air conditioners on one 15 amp circuit with the help of a well placed penny... and we've got the burned down houses to prove it!

