Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My friend moved into a brand new build in 2016. It was so trendy and in style, I remember being so envious.
She recently informed me she’s moving back home and put her house up for sale. Nosily, I went in search of the listing on Zillow and I was in SHOCK by how dated everything looked, and it’s only been 7 years!
We live in a nearly 100yo home that we classically updated in a transitional style back in 2009, and I’m blown away by the comparison. Those cheap builder-grade on-trend elements just don’t age well. What a shame!
I’m just trying to imagine all the modern farm houses and those black and white shiplap-style houses in ten years.
cool story. You know those "trendy" things that make farmhouse are just veneer and can be changed easily, with less effort and cost than rehabbing a 100-year-old shi!shack. In fact you admit yourself that the 100 year old shi!tshack needed rehabbing which includes core systems, building code, and you can't change things like ceiling heights, waterproofing, layouts as easily
Anonymous wrote:“Transitional” style lol. I’m not if someone who has decor resembling a Marriott is in any position to judge her friend’s interior design.
Anonymous wrote:Most new houses are going to dip in value (relative to overall appreciation in the area, just in terms of the house itself) I think mainly between 10 and 30 years or so. Finishes get dated and worn and major systems start needing replacement.
It’s especially true when there’s a big new neighborhood where all the houses are the same age partly also because you have more demographic bulges when a neighborhood is new that even out over time.
A six year old house should still look pretty new though. But if it was done poorly or cheaply of course it will still be what it is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My friend moved into a brand new build in 2016. It was so trendy and in style, I remember being so envious.
She recently informed me she’s moving back home and put her house up for sale. Nosily, I went in search of the listing on Zillow and I was in SHOCK by how dated everything looked, and it’s only been 7 years!
We live in a nearly 100yo home that we classically updated in a transitional style back in 2009, and I’m blown away by the comparison. Those cheap builder-grade on-trend elements just don’t age well. What a shame!
I’m just trying to imagine all the modern farm houses and those black and white shiplap-style houses in ten years.
cool story. You know those "trendy" things that make farmhouse are just veneer and can be changed easily, with less effort and cost than rehabbing a 100-year-old shi!shack. In fact you admit yourself that the 100 year old shi!tshack needed rehabbing which includes core systems, building code, and you can't change things like ceiling heights, waterproofing, layouts as easily
Your McMansion is gaudy and tacky. But if it makes you feel better to call my place that, I can take it. Can’t wait to see your place in 100 years!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My friend moved into a brand new build in 2016. It was so trendy and in style, I remember being so envious.
She recently informed me she’s moving back home and put her house up for sale. Nosily, I went in search of the listing on Zillow and I was in SHOCK by how dated everything looked, and it’s only been 7 years!
We live in a nearly 100yo home that we classically updated in a transitional style back in 2009, and I’m blown away by the comparison. Those cheap builder-grade on-trend elements just don’t age well. What a shame!
I’m just trying to imagine all the modern farm houses and those black and white shiplap-style houses in ten years.
cool story. You know those "trendy" things that make farmhouse are just veneer and can be changed easily, with less effort and cost than rehabbing a 100-year-old shi!shack. In fact you admit yourself that the 100 year old shi!tshack needed rehabbing which includes core systems, building code, and you can't change things like ceiling heights, waterproofing, layouts as easily
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My friend moved into a brand new build in 2016. It was so trendy and in style, I remember being so envious.
She recently informed me she’s moving back home and put her house up for sale. Nosily, I went in search of the listing on Zillow and I was in SHOCK by how dated everything looked, and it’s only been 7 years!
We live in a nearly 100yo home that we classically updated in a transitional style back in 2009, and I’m blown away by the comparison. Those cheap builder-grade on-trend elements just don’t age well. What a shame!
I’m just trying to imagine all the modern farm houses and those black and white shiplap-style houses in ten years.
What are those on-trend elements that didn't age well? Like farmhouse style shiplap?
+1 I'm having a hard time on what is so dated in only 7 years. My laptop is older than that.
Anonymous wrote:My friend moved into a brand new build in 2016. It was so trendy and in style, I remember being so envious.
She recently informed me she’s moving back home and put her house up for sale. Nosily, I went in search of the listing on Zillow and I was in SHOCK by how dated everything looked, and it’s only been 7 years!
We live in a nearly 100yo home that we classically updated in a transitional style back in 2009, and I’m blown away by the comparison. Those cheap builder-grade on-trend elements just don’t age well. What a shame!
I’m just trying to imagine all the modern farm houses and those black and white shiplap-style houses in ten years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My friend moved into a brand new build in 2016. It was so trendy and in style, I remember being so envious.
She recently informed me she’s moving back home and put her house up for sale. Nosily, I went in search of the listing on Zillow and I was in SHOCK by how dated everything looked, and it’s only been 7 years!
We live in a nearly 100yo home that we classically updated in a transitional style back in 2009, and I’m blown away by the comparison. Those cheap builder-grade on-trend elements just don’t age well. What a shame!
I’m just trying to imagine all the modern farm houses and those black and white shiplap-style houses in ten years.
What are those on-trend elements that didn't age well? Like farmhouse style shiplap?
Anonymous wrote:My friend moved into a brand new build in 2016. It was so trendy and in style, I remember being so envious.
She recently informed me she’s moving back home and put her house up for sale. Nosily, I went in search of the listing on Zillow and I was in SHOCK by how dated everything looked, and it’s only been 7 years!
We live in a nearly 100yo home that we classically updated in a transitional style back in 2009, and I’m blown away by the comparison. Those cheap builder-grade on-trend elements just don’t age well. What a shame!
I’m just trying to imagine all the modern farm houses and those black and white shiplap-style houses in ten years.