Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe it partly depends how long one plans to keep the house?
Most will last 10 years. Many spec houses will have issues visible by 20 years.
Any of these homes will last longer than 10 years.
20 years? Even the most perfectly built house will require maintenance.
Not referring to routine maintenance. Any house will need routine maintenance all along.
Issues relating to build quality. It will vary from house to house / builder to builder, obviously. Impossible to predict if only looking after the house is all closed up.
Even the most perfectly built house could have issues at 20 years. I'd expect it to have something. Nothing lasts forever.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Try to get a thorough home inspection. In VA, anyone can claim to be a home inspector. I always look for one that is part of American Society of Home Inspectors (ASHI).
New builds can be tricky to evaluate. Many builders of a new house built on speculation ("spec house") focus money, time, and attention to finish items (examples: appliances, flooring, crown mould) that buyers can readily see. Many cut corners on the structure and on other things hidden behind drywall. It is important to remember building code is the minimum quality needed for safety. A really good quality house will be built better than the building code requires.
If possible, look closely at the insides of a house by the same builder that is not yet finished and does not yet have dry wall in place. That isn't ideal, but it is better than not looking at such an under construction house.
Arthitect here. Home inspectors (AsHi cert means squat) are incompetent and miss so much. A joke. Good laughs for the builders. I recommend getting specialists to inspect the most critical items. Specifically, hire PE engineers to inspect your foundation, framing, grading - these are some the most critical components and inspectors can’t discern between a benign vs ominous crack in your foundation - a structural PE will know and will stamp their seal - this means something. The builder will respect that and it holds up in court. The home inspector, not. Read your home inspector report- the “inspector” absolve themselves of ALL liability. WTF? The PE hold a state license plus years of formal education, training. It will cost a bit more but well worth it imo
We're past the point where an inspector could see framing or insulation, etc. It's all closed up. The foundation doesn't have cracks, at least anywhere visible and the rest is behind drywall or buried underground. I'm not sure what I'd be hiring them to even look at. If there was a crack, I'd have them take a look.
This. And good luck finding a PE willing to do a home inspection.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe it partly depends how long one plans to keep the house?
Most will last 10 years. Many spec houses will have issues visible by 20 years.
Any of these homes will last longer than 10 years.
20 years? Even the most perfectly built house will require maintenance.
Not referring to routine maintenance. Any house will need routine maintenance all along.
Issues relating to build quality. It will vary from house to house / builder to builder, obviously. Impossible to predict if only looking after the house is all closed up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe it partly depends how long one plans to keep the house?
Most will last 10 years. Many spec houses will have issues visible by 20 years.
Any of these homes will last longer than 10 years.
20 years? Even the most perfectly built house will require maintenance.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe it partly depends how long one plans to keep the house?
Most will last 10 years. Many spec houses will have issues visible by 20 years.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe it partly depends how long one plans to keep the house?
Most will last 10 years. Many spec houses will have issues visible by 20 years.
Anonymous wrote:. Hmm...The big three for us are location, lot and layout. Then a reputable builder.Anonymous wrote:Most people buying new homes only looking at the finishes. Builders know this and will cut corners or cover up what giddy buyers can’t see (or care about oftentimes). The structural is absolutely critical, flaws you will live with - the cosmetic is vanity and most often homeowners upgrade at 15 years or so.
Unless you do a much more expensive custom build, I'm not sure there are big differences in the structure of available spec homes in Arlington from the listed builders.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Try to get a thorough home inspection. In VA, anyone can claim to be a home inspector. I always look for one that is part of American Society of Home Inspectors (ASHI).
New builds can be tricky to evaluate. Many builders of a new house built on speculation ("spec house") focus money, time, and attention to finish items (examples: appliances, flooring, crown mould) that buyers can readily see. Many cut corners on the structure and on other things hidden behind drywall. It is important to remember building code is the minimum quality needed for safety. A really good quality house will be built better than the building code requires.
If possible, look closely at the insides of a house by the same builder that is not yet finished and does not yet have dry wall in place. That isn't ideal, but it is better than not looking at such an under construction house.
Arthitect here. Home inspectors (AsHi cert means squat) are incompetent and miss so much. A joke. Good laughs for the builders. I recommend getting specialists to inspect the most critical items. Specifically, hire PE engineers to inspect your foundation, framing, grading - these are some the most critical components and inspectors can’t discern between a benign vs ominous crack in your foundation - a structural PE will know and will stamp their seal - this means something. The builder will respect that and it holds up in court. The home inspector, not. Read your home inspector report- the “inspector” absolve themselves of ALL liability. WTF? The PE hold a state license plus years of formal education, training. It will cost a bit more but well worth it imo
We're past the point where an inspector could see framing or insulation, etc. It's all closed up. The foundation doesn't have cracks, at least anywhere visible and the rest is behind drywall or buried underground. I'm not sure what I'd be hiring them to even look at. If there was a crack, I'd have them take a look.