742 Evergreen Terrace
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742 Evergreen Terrace is the street address of fictional Simpson family in the American animated series of the same name, created by Matt Groening. The street of Evergreen Terrace is in the city of Springfield.
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[edit] Design
The house is shown as a pink-orange two-story detached house with an attached garage, basement, and loft. On the ground floor, the front door leads straight into the hallway, with one arch in the wall to the left, leading to the living room, one to the right which leads into the dining room, a small cupboard and the stairs to the first floor. The sitting room and the dining room have bay windows. At the back of the house is the living room and the kitchen, with stairs that lead to the basement.
The second story of the house has Marge and Homer's bedroom (with an ensuite bathroom), Bart's bedroom, Lisa's bedroom, Maggie's bedroom, a bathroom and some 'empty' rooms, often shown in inconsistent places in different episodes. On the landing, there is a hatch which leads to the attic.
The kitchen features a side corridor leading to the back of the garage and a rarely seen second living room, sometimes referred to as the "rumpus room." Homer was seen relaxing in it during the episode "Three Men and a Comic Book", where he could see the boys fighting in the treehouse.
The back garden of the house is surrounded by a wooden picket fence and a low box hedge, and features a patio and the treehouse that the Simpsons' annual Halloween specials take their name, "Treehouse of Horror", from.
An episode set in the future shows a wooden add-on to the second floor, built (rather poorly) by Homer. It functions as a guest bedroom, but Homer warns Lisa and her fiancee that "if the building inspector asks, it's not a room it's a window box".
[edit] Features and furniture
According to the Simpsons "Treehouse of Horror VI" episode, there is a portal behind the bookcase in the sitting room that leads to the Third Dimension. This is a reference to the Twilight Zone episode, "Little Girl Lost". Since its only appearance was in one episode, it should not be considered canonical. In Treehouse of Horror IV, the famous Dogs Playing Poker painting appears above the sofa.
The basement always includes a washing machine and a clothes dryer and a large Olmec statue of a head, which was a present from Mr. Burns after Bart donated blood to him. However, the appearance of other features such as a furnace, ping-pong table, air hockey set and water softener vary from episode to episode. The basement is often used as a "secret lair", where Homer has brewed alcohol to beat prohibition, hid his superhero operation and where Marge hid during a spell of agoraphobia.
[edit] Current state
The house is now five miles away from where it was first built due to "Plan B", where, to avoid pollution and landfill, the entire city was moved down the road, as seen in "Trash of the Titans". This is believed by some fans to explain some inconsistencies such as the layout of the basement. Also, in a few earlier episodes, in the old location, the address was 724 Evergreen Terrace.
The house itself is often shown as dilapidated; the walls are painted with lead paint, the roof leaks and in one episode, the kitchen was so badly damaged that it needed to be rebuilt. A running gag is that whenever the camera pans between floors or rooms, the interior of the walls are shown to be filled with dangerous and unusual items such as asbestos, toxic waste, hidden treasure and baby dinosaurs. Even the family cat, Snowball II, is seen in between the walls from time to time. However, it is usually kept neat by homemaker Marge. In one episode, it was described as a palace by Frank Grimes. In another episode, Moe Szyslak observed that it contained no silverfish.
The house frequently suffers major damage due to attacks, accidents and negligence, including:
- Abraham Simpson crashing through the sitting room window in a car
- All furnishings being stolen by an angry mob
- At several times, being set ablaze by Homer including while burning his high school diploma and while skipping church.
- The house's interior trashed by the Hell's Satan motorcycle gang, in the episode "Take My Wife, Sleaze."
- A taxiing airliner crashing down the living room wall.
- Frequently being in a ridiculously untidy and disorganized state (Aligator stuck in the toilet, footprints on the ceiling, ETC...).
The phone number, according to "A Tale of Two Springfields", is 555-0113, with the new area code of 939, as opposed to the old one of 636 (636 555-0113 seemingly contacts Mr. Burns). In Season Four, titled "Mr. Plow," their number is supposedly KL5-3226.
[edit] Trivia
"742 Evergreen Terrace" is used as the example address for the reverse address lookup feature on WhitePages.com
The house's address was inconsistent in earlier seasons, being 94 Evergreen Terrace, 1094 Evergreen Terrace, 723 Evergreen Terrace, and 430 Spalding Way.
[edit] See also
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Characters: | Homer Simpson · Marge Simpson · Bart Simpson · Lisa Simpson · Maggie Simpson · Other characters | |||
Production: | Cast members · Writers · Broadcasting · Awards · Songs | |||
Media releases: | Episodes · Tracey Ullman shorts · The Simpsons Movie · Complete list of media | |||
Seasons: | 1 · 2 · 3 · 4 · 5 · 6 · 7 · 8 · 9 · 10 · 11 · 12 · 13 · 14 · 15 · 16 · 17 · 18 | |||
Hallmarks: | Opening sequence · Chalkboard gag · Sax solo gag · Couch gag · Halloween episodes · Recurring jokes · Guest stars | |||
Locations: | Springfield · Shelbyville · Capital City · 742 Evergreen Terrace Springfield Elementary School · Springfield Nuclear Power Plant · Moe's Tavern · Kwik-E-Mart · Krusty Burger |
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Publications: | DVDs · DVD sets · DVD Commentaries · Video games · Simpsons Comics · Bart Simpson Comics · Other publications | |||
Miscellaneous: | Portal · Neologisms · Vehicles · Products · Do the Bartman · Homer's jobs · Homer's lifelong dreams |