Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would like to see a floor plan of a new build that doesn't have a formal living room. Especially outside the beltway.
Floorplan: http://www.reluxhomes.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/01/Mayflower-Model-Website.pdf
Images:
http://www.thebeltteam.com/property/1202-COTTAGE-ST-SW-VIENNA-Virginia
Here is another one http://www.sekashomes.com/pages/homes/cheshire/default.asp
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hate the giant room with kitchen stuck to one wall look. It's trendy. Will phase out eventually.
i'm under 30 and agreed with you. HATE this 'flow' great room crap.
give me a classic separated style anyday.
Anonymous wrote:I hate the giant room with kitchen stuck to one wall look. It's trendy. Will phase out eventually.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why did you use the word "dc" in your subject line?
The article talks about new construction in oakton, McLean, Rockville, Reston, Howard county, silver spring, and my perennial favorite, LOUDON effing county.
DC is generally understood to be a metropolitan area. Do you not comprehend that?
NP here, no it is not. Have you only recently moved here? DC = District of Columbia.
Whoopee. DC is two letters, "Washington-area" is 14. Get a life.
No, you get a CLUE. DC is the District of Columbia. If you are regularly using it to suggest the greater Washington area you are confusing a lot of people and you are wrong. Those of us who live in DC think it's crazy and ridiculous when people like you suggest that Reston or McLean is "DC". It is blatantly not and you are 100 percent WRONG. It's like living in New Jersey and calling it Manhattan.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why did you use the word "dc" in your subject line?
The article talks about new construction in oakton, McLean, Rockville, Reston, Howard county, silver spring, and my perennial favorite, LOUDON effing county.
DC is generally understood to be a metropolitan area. Do you not comprehend that?
NP here, no it is not. Have you only recently moved here? DC = District of Columbia.
Whoopee. DC is two letters, "Washington-area" is 14. Get a life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why did you use the word "dc" in your subject line?
The article talks about new construction in oakton, McLean, Rockville, Reston, Howard county, silver spring, and my perennial favorite, LOUDON effing county.
DC is generally understood to be a metropolitan area. Do you not comprehend that?
NP here, no it is not. Have you only recently moved here? DC = District of Columbia.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why did you use the word "dc" in your subject line?
The article talks about new construction in oakton, McLean, Rockville, Reston, Howard county, silver spring, and my perennial favorite, LOUDON effing county.
DC is generally understood to be a metropolitan area. Do you not comprehend that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the giant room with an exposed kitchen along a wall is one extreme and having 4+ 9x2 rooms is the other. For me, I'd much rather have something in the middle, like 2-3 rooms that are definable (but flow into each other).
Agree with this. The nicest new houses I've seen have an open kitchen/breakfast room/family room area, but separate living room, dining room and library areas on the ground floor. Lots of defined space, but still feels informal.
That is still open floorplan like the houses above
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:First: the giant room has much more capacity for parties than if the same space were divided into dining, living, recreation rooms and kitchen.
I don't understand that. Either people can hang out in the kitchen or not. Either way the house has about the same capacity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the giant room with an exposed kitchen along a wall is one extreme and having 4+ 9x2 rooms is the other. For me, I'd much rather have something in the middle, like 2-3 rooms that are definable (but flow into each other).
Agree with this. The nicest new houses I've seen have an open kitchen/breakfast room/family room area, but separate living room, dining room and library areas on the ground floor. Lots of defined space, but still feels informal.
Anonymous wrote:I think the giant room with an exposed kitchen along a wall is one extreme and having 4+ 9x2 rooms is the other. For me, I'd much rather have something in the middle, like 2-3 rooms that are definable (but flow into each other).
Anonymous wrote:I hate the giant room with kitchen stuck to one wall look. It's trendy. Will phase out eventually.
Anonymous wrote:I hate the giant room with kitchen stuck to one wall look. It's trendy. Will phase out eventually.