I was just going to say the same. Such privileged problem to have. Enjoy your space and don't obsess if it doesn't turn out to look like a staged showcase picture. It's ok to leave some rooms empty if you don't use them until you need them or have furniture, and it's ok if your basement just has a dingy couch, a TV and a ping pong table, or just carpet and a few bean bag chairs or a bunch of kid toys. It's a 4K sq.ft. house.. unless it's in Gtown or Kalorama nobody is really going to hold you to the uppity standards you think they will.
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Few of those 2000~2500sf houses are well designed. Quality design really matters for any size house. I have seen so many ~5000sf houses without enough storage and with lots of wasted space. Hallways can be a huge source of wasted space if the rooms are not laid out well, for example. |
With the birth rate cliff, I am happy to hear some folks are able to have a larger family. |
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Moving now is insane.
The US dollar is decreasing in value daily You are idiots |
When I read house sf numbers, more often than not those sf numbers are finished sf, not including unfinished attic space or unfinished basement space. |
Ok. You are right. Please try birth control |
Climate is huge. I grew up in a temperate climate where we often ate outside, all playdates were outside, etc. Same wardrobe all year round. We had a 2 br/2 ba for 4 people, no basement, and it was one of the larger homes on my street. DH, from this area where you are inside a lot more and need like 5 seasons of clothes, can't imagine living in my childhood home. The lack of basement especially bothers him. |
| I moved from 2000 to 6000 sq ft. Only difference was a few more bathrooms and more bedrooms. Basement was bigger. |
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We're on year 3 in our new (much larger) house. We had grand plans but so far haven't done anything major other than replace appliances that broke on us. We are enjoying the extra space - we have one room (the living room, we didn't have one of those before) that just belongs to our kids. They play there, do homework there, we play family games there, it's lovely. We honestly only clean it if someone is coming over. DH and I are loving each having our own sink in the bathroom and the kids enjoy having big closets that fit all of their clothes AND toys. We enjoy not having to go down to the basement to get our large pots and baking dishes, which is what we had to do when we had a small galley kitchen.
BUT we're taking our time with improvements/new furniture. We want to live with what we have for a while - it all looks a little mini at the moment, but I think waiting has given us a better idea of what we need. |
| I would not have gone over 3,000 sq ft with 3 kids. I would just want a well designed home. |
3000 sq ft, but with every inch designed for use. |
Same. |
I don't think people NEED more than that, but it surely is very nice to have extra space especially with 3 kids and when they get older. If you work from home you need an office, which could also be a guest room if you don't have extra rooms. But you are looking at a 5 bedr house in that case if you want each of your 3 kids to have a room and have one multi-purpose room (office/guest room). It's certainly doable with 3K sq.ft and can be quite comfortable. But if you want nice things and more comforts you need a bigger home. If you want a nice recreational space, It's about pool tables and ping pong tables and indoor workout stuff and a private movie theater, all nice to have and not necessity by any means, but if you have just a slightly bigger house like 4K sq.ft. this can become a reality. Also, things like large walk-in closets spacious bathrooms, mud room, kitchens with walk-in pantries and multiple ovens and having a bathroom for each child are not realistic no matter how well you design a home with 3K sq.ft. Ask me how I know
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