They get to see very up close how ugly new construction can be! |
I guess taste is subjective, but I think you picked a really bad example for an ugly house. The first link is a beautiful old classic colonial design - hardly the typical McMansion with many roof lines, many different structural aspects and different materials. It is a timeless house. The only negative to me would be the siding, but I cannot tell if it is hardeeplank or something plastic. |
I definitely think this second one is the uglier of the two. They chose concrete for their driveway while the other chose really nice looking pavers. In my opinion, that concrete driveway just looks bad. |
| I live in DC & some one near me just built a new house that is all natural stone with a standing seam metal roof. Must have cost a ****ing fortune. Not all new builds are the same. |
Not only has the price of brick as a material increased dramatically as compared to other exteriors, but as labor expenses have increased, the increased labor involved in doing a brick façade as compared to anything else (which typically comes in larger units so you can cover the space much faster) has driven the price up so that covering a house with brick rather than Hardiplank can easily cost 2-3x as much. For your typical new build around here, by the time you add in the increased materials and labor costs, along with the builder premium so they make a profit, it can easily increase the price of the house by $100k, and lots of buyers aren't willing to pay that much more for brick instead of Hardiplank. Some still do brick, but it's rare, and you see it more in custom builds rather than spec houses, where the ultimate homeowner is known and willing to pay that premium. |
your reasoning is stupid and subjective |
other than the color mauve, what is wrong with the first house? |
I am not sure why we conflate all the houses from the 20s to the 60s. I think a very large number of the (surviving) small houses in this area from the 1920s are charming. I would suggest that most post war small houses are not. Though at least they are not overwhelming in scale. |
You have a survivor bias. There were just as many shitty quality homes built at the time when your house was built. But only better-quality homes have survived until today. This leads you to believe that older homes=higher quality in general. That is not true. |
I love new construction and say they are ugly. But my tastes just differ, I like a subtle 10,000 sg. ft home not a towering monolith inviting robbers. |
Your insult is vapid and lacks creativity |
That's an excellent point. We can only hope the worst of the new builds get torn down in turn. Unfortunately the economics of very large houses on small lots will make that difficult, unless these areas are rezoned for multifamily, or the areas decline to slums, or both. Which is your bet? |
Whoa. I've been arguing for charming old homes, but this seems very legit. |
I love new construction and say they are ugly. But my tastes just differ, I like a subtle 10,000 sg. ft home not a towering monolith inviting robbers. http://www.realtor.com/realestateandhomes-detail/9000-Fernwood-Rd_Bethesda_MD_20817_M65255-16488?row=1 |
I didn't notice that until you pointed it out! I like the second one, but would expect it in a neighborhood with similar houses. |