Anonymous wrote:I think people in DC tend to be better educated and more worldly, and thus are able to either "make do" with 2,000 SF (or less sometimes) to be in a good, urban, walkable environment, or see their dream home as something large but not strangling. Like 4,000 SF, not 10,000. And being better educated, they value design and aesthetic over opulence.
Of course, there are the outliers who are very wealthy and want the 10,000 SF frontgate design home. Different strokes for difft folks.
Anonymous wrote:Old home lover here. I do think construction has improved, and one could in principle build a better built home now than in the past. The problem is that a great number of builders now don't use the available technology but instead rely on the cheapest possible way to mass produce homes of inferior craftsmanship than yesteryear.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't get why people hate them so much to the point it becomes some religious or political movement.
I wonder if housing was cheaper around here that there would be less complaining and hate for them.
mostly because your giant, garage front POS is way too big for the neighborhood and makes my 90 year old center hall colonial look like a tool shed. Thanks so much for turning Chevy Chase into New Jersey.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I do not like old houses nor do I like small houses. But I'm from the south, where living in a old or small house usually means you are probably broke.
It's the opposite in this area!!! Go 45 miles outside the city and you'll have a Mansion for what you'd pay for 1,500 square feet close-in.
I love when a Southern inlaw was going in about how her friend just bought a million dollar home while she was standing in the kitchen of my $1.5 million home. I just demurely smiled in the Southern way. Bless her heart for being so ignorant
Sad your home doesn't look like a million dollar home. Maybe your in laws friends home would be 5 million in dc.
Hey Retard, the point is they wouldn't be able to afford a 1/4 of that square footage anywhere remotely close to DC.
At least my friends in their $250k Mansion in the Midwest are smart enough to realize that and joke about it. The Southerner isn't so bright.
Anonymous wrote:I don't get why people hate them so much to the point it becomes some religious or political movement.
I wonder if housing was cheaper around here that there would be less complaining and hate for them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I do not like old houses nor do I like small houses. But I'm from the south, where living in a old or small house usually means you are probably broke.
It's the opposite in this area!!! Go 45 miles outside the city and you'll have a Mansion for what you'd pay for 1,500 square feet close-in.
I love when a Southern inlaw was going in about how her friend just bought a million dollar home while she was standing in the kitchen of my $1.5 million home. I just demurely smiled in the Southern way. Bless her heart for being so ignorant
Sad your home doesn't look like a million dollar home. Maybe your in laws friends home would be 5 million in dc.
Hey Retard, the point is they wouldn't be able to afford a 1/4 of that square footage anywhere remotely close to DC.
At least my friends in their $250k Mansion in the Midwest are smart enough to realize that and joke about it. The Southerner isn't so bright.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I do not like old houses nor do I like small houses. But I'm from the south, where living in a old or small house usually means you are probably broke.
It's the opposite in this area!!! Go 45 miles outside the city and you'll have a Mansion for what you'd pay for 1,500 square feet close-in.
I love when a Southern inlaw was going in about how her friend just bought a million dollar home while she was standing in the kitchen of my $1.5 million home. I just demurely smiled in the Southern way. Bless her heart for being so ignorant
Sad your home doesn't look like a million dollar home. Maybe your in laws friends home would be 5 million in dc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I do not like old houses nor do I like small houses. But I'm from the south, where living in a old or small house usually means you are probably broke.
It's the opposite in this area!!! Go 45 miles outside the city and you'll have a Mansion for what you'd pay for 1,500 square feet close-in.
I love when a Southern inlaw was going in about how her friend just bought a million dollar home while she was standing in the kitchen of my $1.5 million home. I just demurely smiled in the Southern way. Bless her heart for being so ignorant
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People in DC complain about large homes for one or more of the following reasons:
1) They fancy themselves trendy hipsters who think of large homes as resignation towards a life of McMansion suburbia. They feel bad that they don't live someplace truly hip and urban like Brooklyn, so they have to pretend.
2) They are from places other than the United States and thus are unaccustomed to the large homes that are typical in many if not most of this country, so liking large homes is "vulgar" or just unfathomable.
3) With the prices in DMV, they simply cannot afford large homes. They secretly envy their friends and relatives living in 4000 sq. ft. homes in Indiana or Ohio, but what can you do? They are here in DC and must pretend they prefer a smaller home.
Or
4) They are not from Indiana or Ohio at all but from the Northeast where small and old are actually positive attributes. They grew up with craftsmanship and detailing, brick and plaster and walls that were not made of particle board, solid wood doors, not hollow ones, slate roofs and copper pipes etc. so when they see these huge particle board houses going up -- the kind a limp-wristed middle schooler could punch a hole in -- they are reminded of plywood dollhouse kits.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I do not like old houses nor do I like small houses. But I'm from the south, where living in a old or small house usually means you are probably broke.
It's the opposite in this area!!! Go 45 miles outside the city and you'll have a Mansion for what you'd pay for 1,500 square feet close-in.
I love when a Southern inlaw was going in about how her friend just bought a million dollar home while she was standing in the kitchen of my $1.5 million home. I just demurely smiled in the Southern way. Bless her heart for being so ignorant
I don't think they are the "ignorant" ones. After all, you are the one paying 1.5 million dollars for a house that you could get for $200,000 in many other places. When we were in D.C., I felt like the ignorant one for spending almost $800,000 on a just-o.k. house. We moved and paid $250,000 for a five bedroom, all stucco house in a golf, tennis, swim community. Our home backs up to the water and I can be on the beach in ten minutes.
Your inlaws have presumably been around longer than you have. They are probably smarter than you give them credit for.