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Answer: 140 m² = 1506.947 ft²
3 square meters equals 32.29 square feet. That is not a house size. Not even a room size. It is large enough for a small bathroom or a fairly large closet.
At least 24 feet high, based on 8-foot ceilings. If the 3rd floor is built into the roof, the building will be shorter than if there is a separate attic under an angled roof.
1200 sq ft (if it only has one floor level)
The average thickness of an American house floor is about one inch. This would include the subfloor and any time of other floor covering.
do you mean floor square foot or actual wall sqare foot?...as a rule of thumb here in Ok, I usually charge about 2.50 (floor sq ft ) as a ballpark estimate for complete repaints (walls and ceilings)
In northern Upstate regions, Yaros Painting charges $2.85 per square foot of floor space in rooms with 8ft ceilings, provided that the walls and trimming do not require extensive preparatory work. This covers all of the preparation, priming, and painting of walls, trim, and ceilings.
That's going to depend on how many rooms there are in the house, and how high the ceilings are. Neither of those numbers can be calculated from "2500 square feet".
A square metre is a square metre, there is no difference when you are measuring floor space in a house.
It varies depending on the building. In a house it could be 9 feet from floor to floor. In a building that requires a deeper floor structure and higher ceilings, it could be 10 - 12 feet or more.
The White House has 55,000 sq. ft. of floor space.
That would depend on how tall it is. For example, a house with 8 foot tall ceilings and 4000 square feet floor space, would hold:(4000 ft2)x(8 ft) = 32000 ft3If it had 10 foot ceilings, then: (4000 ft2)x(10 ft) = 40000 ft3
Tiles are the "square things". Altogether, the tiles make up the floor.
In order to figure that out, you also need to know the height of your ceiling.The volume of your house is: (2500) multiplied by (the height of the ceilings)(Sure hope they're all the same, or this simple method won't work.)The number of cans you need for the whole house is: (the Volume) divided by (4000).=======================================A slightly easier way, after we did even more of the math for you:The number of cans you need is: (the height of your ceiling) multiplied by (0.625).Example: If the ceilings in the whole house are 8-ft high, then you need 5 cans.
The ideal location would be close to the floor, but the house structure limits location. It is common to see air return grilles on walls or ceilings.
Answer: 140 m² = 1506.947 ft²
In my house there is. I call it "my arm". If you have really high ceilings, I suppose you could use a pole of some kind.