The bar chart illustrates the proportions of English females and males of various ages who lived independently in 2011, and the pie chart shows the figure for bedrooms in these one-person households.
Overall, it can be seen that the percentage of people aged 35-49 years old while the opposite was true for the age group 85 and over. Furthermore, the number of 2 bedrooms in one-person households was the highest in total bedrooms.
In detail, the percentage of adults aged 16-24 took up over a half while people aged 25-24 spent up 62%. Besides, the figure for citizens aged 38-45 was the highest at 63%. Moreover, the percentage of people 50 and over is less common than adults with 50% of the group aged 50-64; 38% of 65-74; and 35-49 was the lowest and took up a half that figure for people aged 35-49.
On the contrary, the figure for 2 bedrooms was more preferred than the remaining number of bedrooms with 35.4%. In comparison, 1 bedroom and 3 bedrooms became the second, and third-largest number of bedrooms, whose figure was around 28% and nearly three-tenths, respectively. Furthermore, the percentage of 4 bedrooms took up 5.4% while 5 or more bedrooms account for just 1.4%, remaining the minority of several bedrooms.
