The Griffin house in Family Guy, since Stewie has a weapons lab in his closet. And Peter’s porn stash has an amazingly big vault that houses it.
The titular box in the Futurama episode “The Farnsworth Parabox.”
Also in Futurama, Bender’s torso cavity.
Nadya Suleman’s (“Octomom”)
Some locations in Alice in Wonderland
“The Old Woman Who Lived in a Shoe”
*Twilight Zone *episode “Little Girl Lost”
Jonah in the whale ???
The original clubhouse for the Legion of Superheroes. How that tiny little spaceship sized building provided a clubhouse for 20 members always mystified me.
And Noah’s ark. Holding all the animals? Give me a break.
I don’t understand. Can you break it down?
The monolith in Jupiter orbit in 2001. 2km long on its greatest axis, but full of stars.
The Enterprise’s holodeck. It was just a room on a ship, but nobody in an adventure there ever seemed to bump into a wall.
Well-played.
I think the Enterprise’s holodecks just used the forcefield equivalent of a treadmill. You might walk for miles, but you never actually get anywhere.
Cloud City in the Special Edition of The Empire Strikes Back might qualify, with its exterior windows in interior walls.
And I’m ashamed to admit to knowing this one, but the hypno-gourds in Xanth have an entire separate world within them.
Treadmill?
Hmmm…
In the Voyager holodeck, the Renaissance era plane/glider actually flew. I think. Maybe not…
Now I’m gonna have to Netflix ST:VOY! :mad: Thanks a lot!
The tunnel in Mr. Rogers’ house that leads to the Neighborhood of Make Believe.
Captain Caveman’s fur. And his club, too.
Phineas T. Whoopee’s 3d Blackboard was much larger than the case he carried it in on “Tennessee Tuxedo and his Tales”.
I didn’t see the Special Edition so I don’t know, but perhaps they weren’t windows but just computer screens showing images from outside cameras.
Based on 2010, the monolith was able to transport material from elsewhere. I assume it wasn’t full of stars, but you could see through it to some other spot in the galaxy.
Some of the stories I’ve read about Baba Yaga describe more rooms than one would expect a “small cottage” to fit, or maybe Russian cottages are just a lot larger than I’m used to. Definitely more roomy than you’d expect from the illustrations.
When I was a teenager, my parents said I had a hollow leg. Because of how much food a typical teenaged boy can down at suppertime, you see…
Yeah, it’s a stretch (ha), but I wonder when that phrase was first used.
wasn’t there a house of this sort in John Crowley’s novel Little, Big ?
Whoville?
I think Baba Yaga’s hut is pretty much canon. I think it was at least strongly implied that the Fourth - and Tenth - Doctor’s pockets were dimensionally transcendental, given the amount of stuff that he used to keep in there. And then there was the Dalek prison ship.