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Friday, November 16, 2007

Choosing an Apartment in Amman

In North America, choosing one apartment over another isn't really such a big deal. In Jordan, it is. While in North America you look at the community, schools, and ease with which you can get around, in Jordan, you look for basic comfort. If you choose wrong, you'll live in misery. Here's my advice:
  1. Don't live on the top floor. Insulation doesn't generally exist. If you live on the top floor, you'll be hot in the summer and cold in the winter. Make that very cold. Furthermore, water arrives a couple days a week in Amman. It gets stored in tanks that are typically on the roof of your home. If you live on the top floor, water pressure will drop significantly as the tanks empty out. At one place I lived in, taking a shower while someone washed the dishes was very difficult.
  2. If you're a North American family of four or more, you won't be able to live on one tank (2000 L) of water per week. You'll need to get yourself another tank. Alternatively, if your apartment has an underground tank (which they mistakenly refer to as a well (Ar. beer) in Jordan) and a pump, you can always pump water when you run out. If you're going to live with such a setup, then make sure that you have the freedom to use the pump whenever you want. If you have to get your landlord to run the pump for you, it's just not going to work in the middle of the night or when your landlord is out. Also, it's going to grate at your relationship.
  3. If you live in a tall building at the top of a hill, make sure the building has an underground tank and a pump that you have the freedom to use at any time. This is true even if you have two tanks. Water flows from the municipal reservoir according to gravity, so if you're on a hill in a tall building and the tanks are above the building, they're only going to get water when all the tanks in the lower-lying areas have filled. In all likelihood, your tanks (however many they are) won't fill up.
  4. Make sure you have an electric water heater. Having to pump diesel in the middle of the summer just to get some hot water is a drag.
  5. Apartment windows typically have shutters that help keep out the cold. Make sure you don't have an unprotected glass door in your bedroom that will let out all the heat in the winter.
  6. Don't use electric heat. Many electric heaters don't work very well unless you put them underneath your shirt. Those that do work will cost you a fortune in electrical costs. Many are also made to the safety standards of Chernobyl. I lost count of how many times my electric heater caught on fire last year.
  7. Make sure you have south and west facing windows. South facing windows ensure that you'll get sun most of the day. Just face the direction for prayer (which is nearly due south in Amman). If there are windows in that direction in most of the house, you're set. West facing windows ensure that you get sun in the late afternoon and wind during the summer. It's even better if you have east facing windows as well.

9 Comments:

  • At 1:41 PM , Blogger UmmFarouq said...

    Our electric "oil" heaters, once plugged in, used to trip the fuses each time we plugged them in. We sold them. We lost money. We didn't know.

    We also bought a washing machine that is not self-heating. We have to turn on the diesel if we want to wash whites. Not smart.

    We learned the hard way on many issues. Alhamdulillah.

     
  • At 4:40 PM , Blogger Flicken said...

    Oh yeah, I forgot about the heaters tripping the fuses.

    Another thing I should mention is to use serious, heavy-duty extension cords for electrical heaters and washing machines. I lost count of how many extension cords caught fire because they couldn't handle the current to the electric heater or washing machine. This, in turn, points out another issue: it is these two devices that use the most electricity and will drive your bill up.

     
  • At 9:02 AM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

    Salaam 'Alaikum

    Ah, but if you live on the top floor and face south, you get good air. At least, we did, so it was not that bad. (Mind you, I was gone for a lot of the summer, but it is my understanding that it was hot everywhere this summer). The winters are awful. I will never live on a top floor again. Although the view is to die for.

     
  • At 12:00 AM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

    Asalaam Alaykum

    Good, sound advice.... shame its too late- have an apartment on the top floor, with a glass door in my bedroom! ( I believe its an apartment you once had) But, Umm Zais is right... it has a view to die for.... some concillation as I scrape off the icicles every morning. And the extension leads that catch fire? nice bonfire!

     
  • At 5:09 AM , Blogger Flicken said...

    Wa alaikum assalam x 2.

    UZ: as long as you have westerly windows and don't have another building right next to you, the air situation is pretty good. Actually, I think the second floor is ideal: you're not too close to traffic (which brings noise and exhaust) and you're still insulated by the apartment above.

    Anonymous: yeah, it's hilarious how the K-Town community is so inbred. The good news is that the central heating actually works now. I know b/c my son has visited you guys and tells me the radiators actually get hot. When I lived there, most of them were just lukewarm.

     
  • At 12:19 AM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

    //yeah, it's hilarious how the K-Town community is so inbred//

    Hilariously sad.

    Anonymous: You are an inbreeder. Ha ha ha ha.

    (We are so inbred that I know who "anonymous" is based on the fact that (s)he lives in an old flat of yours).

    Sidi: You know you can control the level of the heat in the tetfiya by adjusting the heat on the water heater in the basement, right? Our haris likes to set it at about 200C, but I prefer not to get 3rd degree burns every time I brush by the heater, so we turned it down.

    -- Another Anonymous Person We All Know

     
  • At 12:55 PM , Blogger Flicken said...

    Yes, I now realize that I could control the temperature. I didn't realize at the time. However, one of the boilers did get hot, so I think the problem was with them, not with the temperature.

    When I first came to Amman, I wanted as much heat as I could get. If you've ever read The Cremation of Sam McGee you can get an idea of what I was going through.

     
  • At 12:57 AM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

    just for the record, the second and third 'anonymous' are not the same as first anon (me)..... the thread is seriously confusing.....
    Yes the radiators are working which means that the icicles melt during the day!
    wasalam
    anon 1

     
  • At 10:06 AM , Blogger Flicken said...

    Dear Anonymous 1,

    If you're looking for qualified, unique anonymity, you can always devise a screen name, like Umm Biryani or something.

     

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