I've been watching a lot of British TV for a while and I've noticed something that I just now figured out what it is, British kitchens seem to have their washing machines built into their kitchens under the counter. They seem to be side loaded and smaller than what we have. Why is this? Do flats not have a "laundry room" like we do in America? Where is the dryer?
I've never seen a house here with a "laundry room". Most houses here either have a washer and dryer in the kitchen or a washer in the kitchen and a dryer in the bathroom.
This reminds me of a question I have from the time I lived in England, perhaps I already know the answer but I'd like to confirm.
In the US we usually have at least one outlet in the bathroom by the mirror, usually one that turns off automatically if it detects a surge. When I traveled around Ireland, Scotland and England I noticed that this was never the case. In fact there was usually only one outlet in the hotel or dorm room. I can understand in the bathroom at least it's probably too dangerous to have the higher voltage current anywhere near water at all, but why the lack of outlets in the rest of the living space?
There's many regulations around the placement of sockets. Immediately around baths/showers/sinks you can only have pull-cord switches for hard-wired appliances like showers, extractor fans and lights and around a metre away if I recall, you can have isolated shaving sockets. Normal sockets have to be at least 3 metres away and must have their own circuit breaker if I recall. You can however, have normal sockets right next to the kitchen sink for some reason even though you can't have one next to the bathroom sink, at least when my house was built

A lot of flats have drying greens in the UK, although not the big multistorey jobs. People don't use dryers so much over here because they eat up electricity.
We use our dryer almost 24/7, wash everything at 90 degrees, turn our immersion heater on every time the hot tap isn't scalding and we still rock an old-school oil burner for our central heating (which is cheaper than gas in the long run anyway because a full tank lasts for a decade and costs less than a decade of gas bills, and you only need it on for half of the year or less weather permitting). SCREW YOU HIPPIES!