Our last house was a big Victorian semi, in a prominent position overlooking a large traffic light controlled junction. The house could be seen clearly by people stopped at the lights. At first floor level there were three evenly spaced large sash windows
In broad daylight on a summers evening, someone shinned up a drainpipe at the front of the house then managed to edge their way across the front of the house, their feet on a narrow decorative row of bricks, that stuck out of the wall a few inches.
When they reached the centre window, where the top sash window was, accidentally about an inch or so open, he pushed the bottom sash up and climbed in.
When the police arrived and we showed them the open window and trainer foot print on the radiator below it, they refused to believe that anyone would have risked getting in that way, where they could be seen by so many people, and then searched the rest of the house looking for the alternative route the burglar had used, without effect, every other window and door was closed and locked.
So kittylester, do not believe the police. If a burglar thinks your house would be worth a visit he will, whether the lay out is unusual or not.
By the way, our burglar was really wasting his time. All he found upstairs worth taking was the spare door key and when he went downstairs he set the burglar alarm off, leaving him only time to grab the video player and tv remote control before running for the front door, unlocking it, leaving the key in the lock and scarpering