Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Like many on here, we thought the 6,000 sft new build craftman were gaudy and too large, boy did I turn out to be wrong.
I just had our number two and my son is now 3 year old. Even with a nanny, DH and I are absolutely exhausted on the weekend from running repairs and meeting contractors for all sorts of work that needed to be done all over the place. We had our fridge and oven break over the course of the same month, our fridge installation had some issues because the waterlines were setup poorly in the house. Overtime, we found moldy spots in the carpeting and had to just live with it because putting hardwood floors is an investment we would never get our money back on. There were multiple leak on the roof that had to be patched. Our water heater had some issues despite being just 5 years old and our AC system had shorts, which we found was possibly due to the way the wiring is done in the house. If I had to do it all over again, I would just bite the costs and live in a new/new-ish build.
I am really on the verge of losing it even with a nanny. I feel like even having a full butler won't make up for the headache of owning these old homes. My husband tried to convince me to go for a new build but I wanted to budget some cushion for our retirement and vacation. Boy do I regret it now.
If you have young kids, i repeat, do not, ever buy an old house. You are better off renting in an apartment with repair on 24/7 standby or even a new townhouse. If you can stretch it, just buy a new build, the peace of mind of things working at least for the next 10 years is worth your sanity.
We live in a hundred-year-old house, but it was properly cared for over the decades. In the time I've lived here I have no regrets. I had previously owned a new build but my sense was the builder used high-end finishes but cut costs other places wherever they could. For example, they didn't bother with green board in the bathrooms but used Carrera marble tile. My old house, however, was built to last. We don't need green boad because the floor beneath the tile in the bathrooms is concrete.
You're an idiot, green board doesn't go under the floor. Don't ever comment on anything about house quality or build you know nothing and are making everyone around you dumber.
Anonymous wrote:Considering my brother was just hired to dig a foundation of a "new custom build" in Arlington where the people are surely paying well over 2M for the home and he has never in his life dug a foundation, I'm not too confident in new builds. I wouldn't allow my brother to remodel batheoom let alone dig a foundation. I have zero faith in new construction in this area. It is so hard to find workers to do anything, thr criteria is a heartbeat and that's all.
Anonymous wrote:I'm sitting here literally laughing at the new build pundits.You couldn't pay me to buy a house thrown up by Pulte, Dan Ryan, Ryan Brothers, Toll Brothers etc.
They are garbage.
I'm an inspector for a county I won't name and I'm onsite with the project managers Tues-Thurs every week signing off on permits. It's about 45% of he time when they actually do something right. The months-long delays your new house has had? You can thank me.
It's because your builder used combustibles in the chimney chase, or had non GFCIs in wet locations, or didn't have dedicated circuits for sump pumps or used 2x4s in load bearing walls, or didn't install any felt on the roof decking, or had exhaust venting into wall cavities, or had live outlets buried behind new drywall, or used all the warped lumber on 'your' house because it was a spec build and not built for a buyer.
It's garbage. If you want quality by old (older than 70 years) and retrofit the major systems.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm sitting here literally laughing at the new build pundits.You couldn't pay me to buy a house thrown up by Pulte, Dan Ryan, Ryan Brothers, Toll Brothers etc.
They are garbage.
I'm an inspector for a county I won't name and I'm onsite with the project managers Tues-Thurs every week signing off on permits. It's about 45% of he time when they actually do something right. The months-long delays your new house has had? You can thank me.
It's because your builder used combustibles in the chimney chase, or had non GFCIs in wet locations, or didn't have dedicated circuits for sump pumps or used 2x4s in load bearing walls, or didn't install any felt on the roof decking, or had exhaust venting into wall cavities, or had live outlets buried behind new drywall, or used all the warped lumber on 'your' house because it was a spec build and not built for a buyer.
It's garbage. If you want quality by old (older than 70 years) and retrofit the major systems.
Thank you for what you do! Can you close yourself and send some to DCRA????
Anonymous wrote:I'm sitting here literally laughing at the new build pundits.You couldn't pay me to buy a house thrown up by Pulte, Dan Ryan, Ryan Brothers, Toll Brothers etc.
They are garbage.
I'm an inspector for a county I won't name and I'm onsite with the project managers Tues-Thurs every week signing off on permits. It's about 45% of he time when they actually do something right. The months-long delays your new house has had? You can thank me.
It's because your builder used combustibles in the chimney chase, or had non GFCIs in wet locations, or didn't have dedicated circuits for sump pumps or used 2x4s in load bearing walls, or didn't install any felt on the roof decking, or had exhaust venting into wall cavities, or had live outlets buried behind new drywall, or used all the warped lumber on 'your' house because it was a spec build and not built for a buyer.
It's garbage. If you want quality by old (older than 70 years) and retrofit the major systems.
Anonymous wrote:I bought a house built in 1995 and in the last 10 years I've had to:
replace AC unit
replace furnace
replace water heater
get a new oven
replace windows
that's general run of the mill type stuff for ANY non-new construction house. Don't see the big deal in OP.

Anonymous wrote:This person is FOS:
I have all of that and more in my McCraftsman built in 2018, and it was all designed into the house. I also have sound dampening insulation in every room.
How would you have old growth trees and shrubs within one year?! And where does one build such a SFH house within walking distance to a Metro station? There are some houses that sort of meet this criteria with brick on all sides at New Hampshire and Rittenhouse, NW and sort of walking distance to Ft. Totten Metro. But those are townhouses, not SFH, and they don't have mature trees or plantings. They barely have yards or room for a deck. They have a paved driveway, but those driveways are about 15' feet long because they just attach the garage to the alley.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Like many on here, we thought the 6,000 sft new build craftman were gaudy and too large, boy did I turn out to be wrong.
I just had our number two and my son is now 3 year old. Even with a nanny, DH and I are absolutely exhausted on the weekend from running repairs and meeting contractors for all sorts of work that needed to be done all over the place. We had our fridge and oven break over the course of the same month, our fridge installation had some issues because the waterlines were setup poorly in the house. Overtime, we found moldy spots in the carpeting and had to just live with it because putting hardwood floors is an investment we would never get our money back on. There were multiple leak on the roof that had to be patched. Our water heater had some issues despite being just 5 years old and our AC system had shorts, which we found was possibly due to the way the wiring is done in the house. If I had to do it all over again, I would just bite the costs and live in a new/new-ish build.
I am really on the verge of losing it even with a nanny. I feel like even having a full butler won't make up for the headache of owning these old homes. My husband tried to convince me to go for a new build but I wanted to budget some cushion for our retirement and vacation. Boy do I regret it now.
If you have young kids, i repeat, do not, ever buy an old house. You are better off renting in an apartment with repair on 24/7 standby or even a new townhouse. If you can stretch it, just buy a new build, the peace of mind of things working at least for the next 10 years is worth your sanity.
Clearly you have a vagina and have not had to work for anything
If you want to successfully troll you have to make your comments slightly less ridiculous.