Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cul de sacs are all the rage amoung families I know. It's a lot safer and kids can play easier. The other streets are thoroughfares of traffic and it can be dangerous. There's usually a social island, too. Farther away from everything? No. I have no idea what that means. What does that even mean. I get out just as easy as on any street.
A lot of city families became suburban families in these last 2 years. And suburbia is great. I can PARK, lots of kids, sense of
community, amenities like parks, playgrounds, pools, sports fields, paths for walking and riding, dogs, and there's shopping where I need it.
Yep, you definitely sound like a cul-de-sac kinda person.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Open first floor. I need rooms to retreat to, and I want my kitchen apart from the living room. I know I'm in the minority here.
You’re actually not. Open concept was cool in the late 20th century. Walls are being built all over the “old” new builds.
Anonymous wrote:Open first floor. I need rooms to retreat to, and I want my kitchen apart from the living room. I know I'm in the minority here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bamboo, streets or neighborhoods with the word plantation, streets named after confederate soldiers, no garage, no backyard (doesn't have to be big), no basement, average to below average school cluster, unattractive neighborhood. Basically, things that you can't easily change.
Your McMansion on MLK Jr. Street isn't fooling anyone about your privilege.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Deal breakers -
Pipe stem driveway
No driveway
Busy street
No sidewalk
More than 3-4 steps to enter the main door
Yards or driveways with retaining walls, terraced back yards
Neighbors with dilapidated homes, messy unkempt landscaping- either it’s a have for rodents and wildlife or it’s a target for a tear down and I’ll have to live in a construction zone.
If it's no more than 3-4 steps to get to a houses front door, the driveway would be of similar length, rendering it useless as a driveway. The car would be sticking out into the street, or at a minimum blocking the sidewalk.
I don't think you've thought this through.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Deal breakers -
Pipe stem driveway
No driveway
Busy street
No sidewalk
More than 3-4 steps to enter the main door
Yards or driveways with retaining walls, terraced back yards
Neighbors with dilapidated homes, messy unkempt landscaping- either it’s a have for rodents and wildlife or it’s a target for a tear down and I’ll have to live in a construction zone.
If it's no more than 3-4 steps to get to a houses front door, the driveway would be of similar length, rendering it useless as a driveway. The car would be sticking out into the street, or at a minimum blocking the sidewalk.
I don't think you've thought this through.