Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Same here. I loved my charming older home, until we had kids.
We are relocating to a less expensive city, and I want a new home. I want double sinks, walk in closets, laundry located off the master, open concept family/kitchen, a mudroom off an attached garage...
Sign me up.
Yup. Not huge, but not small, I love my 5BR 3.5BA home with a closet the size of a small bedroom with floor to cieling built ins.i too had a small shit shack and almost suffocated with baby #2 came along and couldn't move fast enough.
Just set up the deck and patio today and will enjoy my additional 1,000 sq feet of deck and patio.
I'm thinking of something like this.
Anyone care to guess what it's gonna cost to build? I'm wondering if I can do it under 400k....
https://www.architecturaldesigns.com/house-plans/4-bed-craftsman-beauty-with-exterior-options-500002vv
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Same here. I loved my charming older home, until we had kids.
We are relocating to a less expensive city, and I want a new home. I want double sinks, walk in closets, laundry located off the master, open concept family/kitchen, a mudroom off an attached garage...
Sign me up.
Yup. Not huge, but not small, I love my 5BR 3.5BA home with a closet the size of a small bedroom with floor to cieling built ins.i too had a small shit shack and almost suffocated with baby #2 came along and couldn't move fast enough.
Just set up the deck and patio today and will enjoy my additional 1,000 sq feet of deck and patio.
Anonymous wrote:Same here. I loved my charming older home, until we had kids.
We are relocating to a less expensive city, and I want a new home. I want double sinks, walk in closets, laundry located off the master, open concept family/kitchen, a mudroom off an attached garage...
Sign me up.
Anonymous wrote:Same here. I loved my charming older home, until we had kids.
We are relocating to a less expensive city, and I want a new home. I want double sinks, walk in closets, laundry located off the master, open concept family/kitchen, a mudroom off an attached garage...
Sign me up.
singledadmclean wrote:One reason developers build six bedroom houses is that the marginal cost of a 6 bedroom house, as opposed to 4 bedroom house, is small. There isn't much to those huge houses--just wood and re-manufactured wood. The real cost of the tear-down and McMansion buildup is the land, followed by the permits. Given the scarcity of land, and the big fixed cost of permits, you might as well build as big as possible.
Many of those large houses have apartments in the basement, or in-laws living in the house so there are more than 2 adults in the average McMansion.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We need to expand affordable housing, increase density by changing zoning laws, in places that increase accessibility to transit. And yet instead, all the new developments seem to be either giant mcmansions way far out there, or giant new 1-bedroom apartment buildings in urban neighborhoods.
The giant fat McMansions are also replacing old housing stock close-in. There is going to be a glut of 6+bedroom Craftsman houses all over the area with a 'dated' look in 7-10 years. These are going for $1.6-$2.5 million around us--but they are all very similar. I just don't see a market for all of these very gigantic houses down the road.
I'd rather have nice houses for which the price has to come down than the continuation of the crappy old housing stock that still litters many close-in areas. Those old houses may have been well-built (in some instances) but they're just not suitable for modern living -- and having to pay $900k or more for them, and still have to fix them up, is maddening.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We need to expand affordable housing, increase density by changing zoning laws, in places that increase accessibility to transit. And yet instead, all the new developments seem to be either giant mcmansions way far out there, or giant new 1-bedroom apartment buildings in urban neighborhoods.
The giant fat McMansions are also replacing old housing stock close-in. There is going to be a glut of 6+bedroom Craftsman houses all over the area with a 'dated' look in 7-10 years. These are going for $1.6-$2.5 million around us--but they are all very similar. I just don't see a market for all of these very gigantic houses down the road.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When a double income household with each partner making in the low to mid $100ks (3 x the national median income and more than 2x the DC median) are locked out of most desirable areas- you have a market that's not sustainable.
But while that income is high for the reat of the country, it is not high here. You are competing against the lawyers, lobbyists, tech guys, defense firm owners...whether you like it or not. Good luck.
LOL there are not enough "defense firm owners" to buy your overpriced shitbox in East Falls Church. Something will give.
Well, there are more than enough lawyers and lobbysists to make up the difference!
You sure do sound jealous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When a double income household with each partner making in the low to mid $100ks (3 x the national median income and more than 2x the DC median) are locked out of most desirable areas- you have a market that's not sustainable.
But while that income is high for the reat of the country, it is not high here. You are competing against the lawyers, lobbyists, tech guys, defense firm owners...whether you like it or not. Good luck.
LOL there are not enough "defense firm owners" to buy your overpriced shitbox in East Falls Church. Something will give.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When a double income household with each partner making in the low to mid $100ks (3 x the national median income and more than 2x the DC median) are locked out of most desirable areas- you have a market that's not sustainable.
But while that income is high for the reat of the country, it is not high here. You are competing against the lawyers, lobbyists, tech guys, defense firm owners...whether you like it or not. Good luck.
LOL there are not enough "defense firm owners" to buy your overpriced shitbox in East Falls Church. Something will give.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When a double income household with each partner making in the low to mid $100ks (3 x the national median income and more than 2x the DC median) are locked out of most desirable areas- you have a market that's not sustainable.
But while that income is high for the reat of the country, it is not high here. You are competing against the lawyers, lobbyists, tech guys, defense firm owners...whether you like it or not. Good luck.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When a double income household with each partner making in the low to mid $100ks (3 x the national median income and more than 2x the DC median) are locked out of most desirable areas- you have a market that's not sustainable.
National stats aren't relevant to the DC area, are you still waiting for NYC to fall
Anonymous wrote:When a double income household with each partner making in the low to mid $100ks (3 x the national median income and more than 2x the DC median) are locked out of most desirable areas- you have a market that's not sustainable.