Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I am the 7:45 pp. I agree. There are things I would want to do inside, too (like I don't like the master bathroom sinks or the paint colors through the house). And I am not wild about the prominence of the garage. But overall, this is a nice house and would be a good place to raise a family. I am not from around here, and this is the first place I have ever lived that new builds get so much hate and crappy little capes and bungalows are prized.
This is DCUM, which is the province of a few dozen insecure DC and inner suburb residents who want to feel better about their crappy little capes, bungalows and ramblers, so they tout the location of their homes and crap on new houses as a matter of principle.
+1
But ... but ... but I have such a SHORT COMMUTE!
Never mind I live in a complete shithole of a neighborhood where you barely know your neighbors and everyone flees when the kids hit school age ... never mind I pay $900k for a place that's barely been touched since the Nixon administration.
The romanticizing of ultra-short commutes is a DCUM only thing, it seems.
Anonymous wrote:OK, I'll take the troll bait...
I live in a tiny old condo "close-in" and would I take this house if someone handed it over to me? Obviously. Would I buy it even if I could? No. I do love the inside space, but I do prefer older brick or stone homes and older neighborhoods. It's how I was raised and what I prefer. I just find these neighborhoods lacking character.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I am the 7:45 pp. I agree. There are things I would want to do inside, too (like I don't like the master bathroom sinks or the paint colors through the house). And I am not wild about the prominence of the garage. But overall, this is a nice house and would be a good place to raise a family. I am not from around here, and this is the first place I have ever lived that new builds get so much hate and crappy little capes and bungalows are prized.
This is DCUM, which is the province of a few dozen insecure DC and inner suburb residents who want to feel better about their crappy little capes, bungalows and ramblers, so they tout the location of their homes and crap on new houses as a matter of principle.
Anonymous wrote:
I am the 7:45 pp. I agree. There are things I would want to do inside, too (like I don't like the master bathroom sinks or the paint colors through the house). And I am not wild about the prominence of the garage. But overall, this is a nice house and would be a good place to raise a family. I am not from around here, and this is the first place I have ever lived that new builds get so much hate and crappy little capes and bungalows are prized.
Anonymous wrote:Everything in this area is overpriced. Except that people are paying it, so that means it's priced right.
Anyhow, the type of houses that have been around 1.1M were listed around 1.4 in 2008, so if you're seeing price increases (which I haven't yet noticed), I would chalk it up to market rebound.
Anonymous wrote:I agree, too. This house is really nice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Classic crapmansion.... The back of the house says it all...
Do people really hate this house? I live in an older house and would love something like this. I do not understand all the hate for a newly but house like this. Lots of room, aesthetically pleasing (mayb3 not original, but neither are many of the house built after the war), good floor plan, etc.
I am with you. It does need a deck, landscaping, better use of the backyard space.