Relative to the existing homes in that neighborhood, yes. It's a good article, and it's a struggle typical to a lot of older suburbs. |
Read the post that started it all, sweetie! |
|
I dislike them because they tend to be architecturally bleak. I've always liked old buildings and old houses that have lots of details like wainscoting, crown moldings, interesting doorway shapes, unusual windows (that suit the style of the house), built-ins, etc. The houses that fall into traditional "mcmansion" definition are big without having character. they put showy details (palladian windows, etc.) on facades that shouldn't have them, and try to impress with quantity instead of quality.
And honestly, I don't see why a small family would need so much space. it's really wasteful, environmentally speaking, to pay to heat and cool (and furnish and clean) all that extra space when 2,000 SF would probably be just fine for most families. Plus it irritates me when someone puts a 5,000 SF house on a 6,000 SF lot, so there's no yard left over and the house looms over the neighbors. Save the giant houses for giant lots. Not jealous. If I sold my $600K arlington house, I could buy a mcmansion (or two) in an outlying suburb. Never. Gonna. Happen. |
The point is that you think you're enlightened with good taste, and you're just an idiot who has no fucking clue what you're talking about. |
You mean the one quoted within? I wrote it. |
That may be, but I have a degree in the field that says otherwise. And you? |
| I like the idea of everyone trying to live as economically (space-wise) as possible so we don't end up building over the entire planet. So the McMansion thing just bothers me. I guess it seems superfluous and greedy and inefficient. I would rather see cities with mass transit and lots of open parkland around them. |
Haha! Well I haven't seen many variety, co there probably are some with great rooms that everyone can use. But the central thesis of each member having their own private room(s) isolating themselves is kind of defining of McMansions. There's a reason every bedroom and bathroom are so huge, they are rooms designed to be lounged in, not functional rooms like the water closets of yore. I mean, a sitting area in your master bedroom in your own house? Do you have servants in waiting? And the movie room, as if people had trouble watching enough tv before when it was in the living room. Part of that also speaks to our post-9/11 world: we don't get out as much, spend more time at home, more time isolated. Not sure if it was fear of terrorism, the explosion of internet, or what, but mcmansions are wrapped up in that bc of their design choices. |
Page 1, post 1, toots! |
I don't understand what you are talking about. I don't see the difference, my rambler didn't have insulation between rooms, in fact there was no insulation between the interior and exterior except for newspapers stuffed better the windows. When we ran the dishwasher or talked in the kitchen you could hear it in all of the bedrooms. Or if we walked in the hallway you could feel it in the bedrooms. Where are these magical silent old construction ramblers? And doors? We had to replace all the original doors in our rambler because they were old and falling apart and chose to do hollow core because we didn't see a need to spend a lot of money when the value of the home didn't warrant the expense. Also new homes are planned and graded to fill in the lot with a central focal point. I am not sure what country you are talking about with these ramblers and new construction homes? Is this the simpsons?
|
It's an insipid article, written by under-employed historic preservation types who chafe at property rights and the fact that other people can afford more living space. They would feel more secure if everyone lived in their drab "historic," "charming" neighborhoods of houses built for proles. |
Average number of kids in the fifties was 3.8 (from Wikipedia), down to about 2.1 now. We entertain less now, too. So a large part of our enormous house size is just to house our things. |
| 13:44 - I agree with you. I thought that house was really cute and the author was getting a little overzealous in his labeling everything new "mcmansion." |
Yes, I read it before my initial post. You aren't making sense. Sweetie. |
Here is what you want, soviet style, everyone has the same amount of efficient space and mass transit
|