When Basic Common Sense Goes Out The Window
The Devils in the Details: How Bali’s Construction Industry Fails at the Basics
Let’s talk about the real shit that makes living in these Instagram-perfect Bali villas an absolute nightmare. Forget the cracked tiles and leaky roofs for a minute. Let’s dive into the daily frustrations that make you question whether the people building these places have ever actually lived in a house.
Light Switches: A Case Study in Stupidity
Picture this: You walk into your brand-new Bali villa bathroom. The door opens to the right. Where’s the light switch? Behind the freaking door. Every. Single. Time.
You’re standing there in the dark, fumbling around the wall like you’re playing some twisted game of hide-and-seek, while the door is literally blocking your access to the switch. Common sense says if the door opens right, put the switch on the left. But apparently, common sense isn’t so common in Bali construction.
And don’t get me started on the switches placed so low in some places, you have to crouch to reach them, or so high you need a step ladder. Who approved this? Did anyone actually test these placements? Or did they just slap them wherever the electrical guy felt like drilling that day?
The Great Electrical Outlet Mystery
Here’s another gem: electrical outlets placed in the most useless spots imaginable. You’ll find them behind furniture, under counters where nothing can reach them, or in the middle of walls where they serve absolutely no purpose.
Want to plug in your phone charger next to the bed? Too bad. The outlet is on the opposite wall, behind the dresser that’s bolted to the floor. Need to use a hair dryer in the bathroom? Hope you like standing in the hallway, because that’s where the closest outlet is.
And the height? Sometimes they’re so low you need to get on your hands and knees to plug anything in. Other times they’re placed at shoulder height for no apparent reason. It’s like they threw darts at a wall to decide placement.
Refrigerator Doors: The Daily Struggle
This one makes my blood boil. You walk into these kitchens and the fridge door opens directly into the wall, the counter, or sometimes into another appliance. You can barely crack it open, let alone actually access your food.
The fridge is crammed into a corner with zero clearance. The door hits the wall at a 45-degree angle, so good luck getting anything larger than a can of Bintang out of there. And when you ask the contractor about it, they shrug and say, “It opens, doesn’t it?”
No, it doesn’t. Not properly. Not functionally. Not in any way that makes sense for human beings who need to actually use the damn thing.
Faucets Without P-Traps: The Smell That Never Leaves
Let’s talk about the mysterious sewer smell that seems to follow you around these villas. You know what that is? It’s because half the faucets in Bali don’t have proper P-traps.
For those who don’t know, a P-trap is that curved pipe under your sink that holds water to prevent sewer gases from backing up into your house. It’s plumbing 101. It’s been standard practice for over a century. But in Bali? Optional, apparently.
So you’re brushing your teeth while breathing in sewage fumes. You’re washing dishes with the delightful aroma of everyone else’s waste wafting up from the drain. And when you complain, they act like you’re being unreasonable for expecting basic sanitation.
Loose Connections: The Flood That’s Always Coming
While we’re talking plumbing, let’s discuss the loose connections that plague every single property. Pipes connected with what appears to be hope and prayer. Fittings that come apart if you look at them wrong. Connections that hold for about six months before they start dripping, then leaking, then full-on flooding.
You turn on the tap and water shoots out from three different places you didn’t know existed. The shower head falls off mid-rinse. The toilet rocks back and forth because someone forgot to actually secure it to the floor. And when you call for repairs, they show up with electrical tape and act like they’ve solved the problem.
Stairs: The Ankle-Breaking Adventure
Now let’s talk about stairs that seem designed by someone who’s never actually used stairs before. Each step is a different height. Some are 6 inches, some are 8, some are 10. It’s like a fun obstacle course, except the prize for losing is a broken ankle.
You’re walking down thinking you’ve found the rhythm, then suddenly there’s a step that’s twice as high as the others. Down you go. And when you mention this to the builder, they’ll measure and say, “Yeah, they’re all within 2 inches of each other. That’s close enough.”
No, it’s not close enough. Your muscle memory expects consistency. Your brain calculates the next step based on the last one. When every step is different, you’re basically walking down a trap.
Railings: The False Promise of Safety
Speaking of stairs, let’s discuss railings that are more decorative than functional. You grab onto them for support and they wiggle like a loose tooth. The brackets are held in with screws that are too short, too few, or driven into material that can’t support any weight.
I’ve seen railings that literally pull out of the wall if you put any real pressure on them. The mounting points are into drywall with no backing, or into concrete that wasn’t properly drilled. And the height? Sometimes they’re so low they’re more likely to trip you than help you.
The worst part is when they install these beautiful, expensive-looking railings that can’t actually hold a person’s weight. It’s all for show. Pure aesthetics with zero regard for the fact that railings exist to prevent people from falling and breaking their necks.
The North American Standard Reality Check
Look, I’m not saying we need to follow every ridiculous North American building code. Some of that stuff is complete overkill. But when it comes to basic common sense – like putting light switches where you can reach them, or making sure stairs are consistent heights – maybe we should pay attention.
These aren’t arbitrary rules created by bureaucrats. They’re standards were developed over decades of people getting hurt, frustrated, and fed up with buildings that don’t work. They exist because someone, somewhere, got tired of walking into dark rooms and breaking their neck on uneven stairs.
The Common Sense Solution
Here’s the thing that drives me crazy: none of this is rocket science. It’s basic human ergonomics. If a door opens to the right, put the switch on the left. If you install a fridge, make sure the door can actually open. If you’re building stairs, make them all the same height. If you’re installing a railing, make sure it can hold weight.
This isn’t about following foreign building codes. It’s about using your brain for five seconds to think about how people actually live in these spaces.
The Real Cost of Cutting Corners
These aren’t just minor inconveniences. They’re safety hazards. They’re daily frustrations that compound over time. They’re the reason people move out of these “luxury” villas after six months, fed up with basic functionality that was never considered.
And the worst part? They’re completely preventable. Every single one of these issues could be avoided if someone just thought about the end user for thirty seconds during the design phase.
Wake Up, Bali
So here’s my message to every developer, contractor, and designer building in Bali: stop treating your projects like photo shoots. Start thinking about the people who have to live in these spaces every single day.
Test your designs. Walk through them. Actually use the switches, open the fridge, climb the stairs. Ask yourself: does this work? Not “does this look good?” but “does this actually function?”
Because what we’re seeing now isn’t just bad construction. It’s a complete disconnection from reality. And people are starting to notice.
The Instagram likes aren’t worth it if your building falls apart – literally and figuratively – the moment someone tries to live in it.
Building in Bali? Here’s a revolutionary idea: try using common sense. Your tenants will thank you.
