A 90s house with interior faux wood columns isn't anyone's idea of a classic style.
But it probably will be in 10 years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If I were you I would just look for different home. There is a whole bunch of buyers who loves the Colonials just as they are with their round columns that in many cases are an integral part of the design. It is in a way classic style that once you start changing you are destroying the integrity of it. It is just as many reasonable people put so much care to preserve certain homes be it old craftsman or tis or that style. Home is often about the consistency and integrity of overall style.
It is very possible that your chasing most modern look will be outdated in the next ten years and next buyer won't buy your home with square columns or pillars and would much rather had round ones. Since so many people really do not care or like or are not bother with the round columns, please for the sake of preservation do move to the next house that you won't need to gut for the sake of progress. It is becoming insanely wasteful, total waste of resources and very unsustainable in home industry when everything is beginning to be so outdated in five minutes.. look what is happening to marble flooring, granite countertops, beautiful wooden cabinets that are just out because everyone is starting the cookie cutter style that is gobbling anything different.There is such a thing as ugly and mismatch, but there is such a thing as thoughtful consistent design and some, lots of people would rather have this then random act of derogating for the sake of progress that is going through the motions.
A 90s house with interior faux wood columns isn't anyone's idea of a classic style.
Anonymous wrote:If I were you I would just look for different home. There is a whole bunch of buyers who loves the Colonials just as they are with their round columns that in many cases are an integral part of the design. It is in a way classic style that once you start changing you are destroying the integrity of it. It is just as many reasonable people put so much care to preserve certain homes be it old craftsman or tis or that style. Home is often about the consistency and integrity of overall style.
It is very possible that your chasing most modern look will be outdated in the next ten years and next buyer won't buy your home with square columns or pillars and would much rather had round ones. Since so many people really do not care or like or are not bother with the round columns, please for the sake of preservation do move to the next house that you won't need to gut for the sake of progress. It is becoming insanely wasteful, total waste of resources and very unsustainable in home industry when everything is beginning to be so outdated in five minutes.. look what is happening to marble flooring, granite countertops, beautiful wooden cabinets that are just out because everyone is starting the cookie cutter style that is gobbling anything different.There is such a thing as ugly and mismatch, but there is such a thing as thoughtful consistent design and some, lots of people would rather have this then random act of derogating for the sake of progress that is going through the motions.
There is such a thing as ugly and mismatch, but there is such a thing as thoughtful consistent design and some, lots of people would rather have this then random act of derogating for the sake of progress that is going through the motions.Anonymous wrote:I don't want a smaller home and we're not up for dealing with a new build. There has to be feasible way to bring up a 90s home. We are avoiding ones with the catwalk overlook over the foyer and 2 story great rooms but the others are fine from a layout standpoint. Its just that the finishes are so bad.
We've figured out how to cost most of the changes but the columns are an unknown.
Shiny marble fireplaces - replace and or cover with faux stone and woodwork (not honey oak)
Shiny marble entry way - replace with hardwood
90s kitchen -replace cabinets and counter top
Whirlpool tub and cheap walk in brass shower doors - pull out replace tub, retile, add nice wood vanities and separate mirrors
Can a general home inspector tell whether a column is structural or just decorative or would we need a structural engineer?
Go with a structural engineer. But generally it’s easy to tell if the column is real because there is a wall on the second story directly above it, or there is a visible beam.
Anonymous wrote:I just really hate columns. We are looking at larger houses and can't find any houses that have those ugly round columns all over the interior. Has anyone completely removed these from their house? How do you go about this and how much expense is involved?