Anonymous wrote:We have family members who live in a relatively desirable area, part of which is that there are many old, very tall and beautiful trees in the neighborhood. With the crazy storms that seem to have become the norm over the last decade or so, seemingly healthy trees falling onto houses has become a standard occurrence - they and five other houses within a 2-block radius have all sustained major (i.e. roof collapse, rebuilding whole parts of a house) damage in recent years. I'm curious how this phenomenon is playing into people's house buying decisions these days.
Anonymous wrote:Neighborhoods with ample trees are measurably cooler in the summer.
Anonymous wrote:I’m still going to pick an area with mature trees over one without if that’s your question
Anonymous wrote:Well maintained mature trees are amazing for resale value
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well maintained mature trees are amazing for resale value
Good to know. Most people I know don’t want to live near mature trees.
Anonymous wrote:Well maintained mature trees are amazing for resale value
Anonymous wrote:I’m still going to pick an area with mature trees over one without if that’s your question
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We took down the trees that would have damaged the house if they fell. Many of our neighbors did the same. There’s still plenty of mature trees in the neighborhood.
You can remove any tree on your property without a permit?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When we bought our house years ago we were very aware of the fact that there weren't any trees that could fall onto it, and that there weren't any trees on the property that could die and have to come down at significant expense. I'm not going to say we wouldn't have bought the house otherwise, but it was discussed.
During that storm with the crazy downdrafts or whatever they were a few weeks ago, a house 5 doors down from us was destroyed by a very old tree that was uprooted and crashed right through the house. Scary.
Was that a brick house or a wood framed one?