Anonymous wrote:Pretty sure unless you tear down drywall do real thorough inspection, there is no way to really know how the 'bones' are.
Pretty sure that houses described as having "good bones" have plaster, not drywall.
Pretty sure unless you tear down drywall do real thorough inspection, there is no way to really know how the 'bones' are.
Anonymous wrote:"Good bones" for a house is like "good bone structure" for a person: any improvements would be cosmetic, not structural.
Anonymous wrote:How would a realtor know if the house is built solidly, sounds like typical bullshit when the house sucks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think of it as an older house (think 90-100 year old DC row houses)>>they are solid brick on four sides, I think they could withstand any natural disaster...so very good bones. But don't get started on the plumbing!
Uh, masonry is terrible in an earthquake.
http://www.iitk.ac.in/nicee/EQTips/EQTip12.pdf
Just marketing speak, as if solid timber rather than fire resistant engineer lumber makes up for the lead paint, asbestos, inadequate plumbing, out of code electrical, and draft house. But bones are good: people we are buying a house not a med school skeleton.
This should go in that MRID ridiculousness thread.
It was a good and reaonsalby inforamtive thread until you came along.
But there are idiots everywhere.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think of it as an older house (think 90-100 year old DC row houses)>>they are solid brick on four sides, I think they could withstand any natural disaster...so very good bones. But don't get started on the plumbing!
Uh, masonry is terrible in an earthquake.
http://www.iitk.ac.in/nicee/EQTips/EQTip12.pdf
Just marketing speak, as if solid timber rather than fire resistant engineer lumber makes up for the lead paint, asbestos, inadequate plumbing, out of code electrical, and draft house. But bones are good: people we are buying a house not a med school skeleton.
This should go in that MRID ridiculousness thread.
Anonymous wrote:I think of it as an older house (think 90-100 year old DC row houses)>>they are solid brick on four sides, I think they could withstand any natural disaster...so very good bones. But don't get started on the plumbing!