[quote=gzz]The photos made me dizzy. Why is the front door tiny and open to a long thin corridor?[/quote]
Those are normal corridors (fire/building code mandates it). I have noticed that realtors are really pushing the rectilinear wide angle lens boundaries to the ‘max’. This distorts the center field making it look deeper but the side effect is objects in front might also look narrower/smaller.
In other words, the use of the wide angle made the hallway look longer than it really is, but also makes it look narrower. Those floorboard are probably around 8″ wide, I count 7 (almost 8) across at the narrowest. That makes the opening at the narrow portion 56″ to 64″. If the boards are 6″, the opening is 42″ to 48″(which would be a little narrow – but not as narrows as one’s impression looking at the photo). The door is 6.5 boards wide; at 8″ makes doorway 52″, 6″ wide boards make it 39″(min entry door size by code is 36″). The cropping also doesn’t help.. opening up the photo to full size looks better.
From the outside, the photo of the front door is odd – it is offset from the arch in front of it. (feng shui? to prevent evil energy from entering?? dunno)
That semi room at the side (dining room?) with the chandelier is a little odd. You can see how from one view, it looks really long and narrow, but the photo that is about 30 degrees oblique, it does not look so deep.
On the outside(back yard) on edge photos, you can see how the building looks like it might be 50 to 70 feet on the edge.. but may actually be about 30 (see straight on photo).
The down the edge photo of the kitchen (2nd photo) really shows it.. and you see that the far wall looks like it is over in their neighbors back yard..
I have a 12-24mm lens that creates this type of effect. Good for some landscape, but you have to be careful of side effects for interior.