Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All of these 40s-80s are the low quality tract homes of the poors, very rarely are there any worth saving but those are probably Mansions of the wealthy of yesteryear
Pre-40s homes are solid. You can move interior walls if you want and easily upgrade the windows. Exterior real brick and interior plaster with real wood trim.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Improvements in construction materials and methods can be a good reason for a teardown, but windows are a terrible example of this. Windows are designed to be replaced, and are a small fraction of the cost of most houses.
Insulation and modern heating and cooling technologies are better examples. Its much easier to be energy efficient with new construction, and retrofitting new tech onto old houses can present real problems.
Architecture is subjective, but the bigger issue is that we should really aim to build buildings to last, and we don't always do it. Our architecture choices, construction methods, and urban planning should be done with the goal that most things will still be in use in a couple hundred years.
Do you really want to live or work in a building that is 200 years old? I doubt most people would like that.
Anonymous wrote:All of these 40s-80s are the low quality tract homes of the poors, very rarely are there any worth saving but those are probably Mansions of the wealthy of yesteryear
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As someone who renovated and lives in a 1940s house, I get that fixer uppers aren’t for everyone. But I agree, the new builds these days are just hideous. I don’t love some of the 2000s-2010s McMansions, but at least they look like houses. A lot of the stuff I see going up near me in Arlington looks like a warehouse or storage center or something. I really hate the industrial/modern look, it doesn’t even look like a home.
Why don’t builders make center hall colonials anymore? Those were the best in my opinion. You could still make it large, but just with better aesthetics.
And I’ll add that I hate all the houses with garages as the ground level where you have to climb a huge staircase to get to the front door. They look even more like a monstrosity next to the original homes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Improvements in construction materials and methods can be a good reason for a teardown, but windows are a terrible example of this. Windows are designed to be replaced, and are a small fraction of the cost of most houses.
Insulation and modern heating and cooling technologies are better examples. Its much easier to be energy efficient with new construction, and retrofitting new tech onto old houses can present real problems.
Architecture is subjective, but the bigger issue is that we should really aim to build buildings to last, and we don't always do it. Our architecture choices, construction methods, and urban planning should be done with the goal that most things will still be in use in a couple hundred years.
Do you really want to live or work in a building that is 200 years old? I doubt most people would like that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Improvements in construction materials and methods can be a good reason for a teardown, but windows are a terrible example of this. Windows are designed to be replaced, and are a small fraction of the cost of most houses.
Insulation and modern heating and cooling technologies are better examples. Its much easier to be energy efficient with new construction, and retrofitting new tech onto old houses can present real problems.
Architecture is subjective, but the bigger issue is that we should really aim to build buildings to last, and we don't always do it. Our architecture choices, construction methods, and urban planning should be done with the goal that most things will still be in use in a couple hundred years.
Do you really want to live or work in a building that is 200 years old? I doubt most people would like that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Improvements in construction materials and methods can be a good reason for a teardown, but windows are a terrible example of this. Windows are designed to be replaced, and are a small fraction of the cost of most houses.
Insulation and modern heating and cooling technologies are better examples. Its much easier to be energy efficient with new construction, and retrofitting new tech onto old houses can present real problems.
Architecture is subjective, but the bigger issue is that we should really aim to build buildings to last, and we don't always do it. Our architecture choices, construction methods, and urban planning should be done with the goal that most things will still be in use in a couple hundred years.
Do you really want to live or work in a building that is 200 years old? I doubt most people would like that.
What suburban cookie-cutter, brick front vinyl siding, cul de sac hell hole do you live in?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Improvements in construction materials and methods can be a good reason for a teardown, but windows are a terrible example of this. Windows are designed to be replaced, and are a small fraction of the cost of most houses.
Insulation and modern heating and cooling technologies are better examples. Its much easier to be energy efficient with new construction, and retrofitting new tech onto old houses can present real problems.
Architecture is subjective, but the bigger issue is that we should really aim to build buildings to last, and we don't always do it. Our architecture choices, construction methods, and urban planning should be done with the goal that most things will still be in use in a couple hundred years.
Do you really want to live or work in a building that is 200 years old? I doubt most people would like that.
Anonymous wrote:As someone who renovated and lives in a 1940s house, I get that fixer uppers aren’t for everyone. But I agree, the new builds these days are just hideous. I don’t love some of the 2000s-2010s McMansions, but at least they look like houses. A lot of the stuff I see going up near me in Arlington looks like a warehouse or storage center or something. I really hate the industrial/modern look, it doesn’t even look like a home.
Why don’t builders make center hall colonials anymore? Those were the best in my opinion. You could still make it large, but just with better aesthetics.