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What came after the single panes? Doubles? Triple? How many panes are "modern" windows? |
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We replaced single panes with energy-efficient windows: double pane filled with gas. |
Yes, we had one of those 1950’s split levels that are all around this area. The overall structure was okay but there was very little insulation and the windows were drafty. It also had tiny closets and bathrooms compared to modern homes. |
How does that work? |
Works fantastic to lower utility bills. |
| I dumped my old house and it felt better than selling a boat. |
Truth. A real pain. |
I've found that there were some "growing" pains in the house construction and codes around 2000's. Like they started using high efficiency heating and compact fluorescent lighting for example. These were awful. The older homes were much less efficient but comfortable. The high efficiency heating sucked the moisture out of the air and also drew in air from the outside, made the house dry and drafty. If you install a humidifier for the winter and a whole house fan for the summer and seal your duct work, it's fabulous. Oh and get rid of those compact fluorescent (which progressive thought those were a good idea.). |
What did you "upgrade" to |
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I'm not a fan of new homes because they are built with so much glue and plastic. Beams are are no longer solid wood - they are boards made out of little pieces of scrap wood glued together, and then bound together in 3's to maybe simulate the strength of a solid piece of wood. Go on a construction site during the rain and the chemical smell is overwhelming, and you see the leaks. Go around a neighborhood that was built 5 years ago and you'll see siding that blows around in the wind. None of this can be good.
I understand that this is a generalization, and some new homes may be quality - but you have to know what's in them and how they were built. Maybe custom homes built by a known contractor? All the rest seems like crap. |
This is such a conundrum to me! I have an older home, not historic but a well-built 30+ year old house, and even that seems to literally have something that needs to be done at all times. I daydream about having a new, low maintenance house, but I don't think that exists. Every new thing we get is far inferior to the old items. Just one example: the HVAC unit. The 30 year old one was actually better than the new one that seems to require an expensive repair down every season. Add to that the inferior construction materials and craftsmanship of a new build. |
And you are clearly lacking in information and understanding. Modern, engineered wood beams generally offer greater strength, stability, and load-bearing consistency than solid wood beams. They use smaller pieces of wood bonded with adhesives to eliminate natural defects like knots and inconsistent grain patterns found in solid timber. They also offer a higher and more consistent strength-to-weight ratio than solid lumber. The manufacturing process and layering increase durability and resistance to warping, splitting, and shrinking. They also support larger loads and span longer distances due to their engineered composition, allowing for more open floor plans. As for the siding, that is typically the crap vinyl siding. Fiber cement siding (brand name is Hardiplank) is made from cement, sand, and cellulose fibers and offers much better durability than wood as it is resistant to pests, rot, fire, and moisture damage. |
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Our home was built in 1972. One owner. We sacrificed space on the inside. Rooms are a bit smaller. However, it works perfectly for just us two. We also have a big lot with plenty of space in between our neighbors and the backyard -- which is rare. |