Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The best is when gorgeous old architecture is tastefully updated
+1 I grew up in a neighborhood established in the early 1900s. Everybody tastefully updated their home, and it’s lovely. Huge homes; huge bedrooms; lots of character.
Which neighborhood??
Oklahoma City
Here is a house for sale in my old neighborhood: https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/1715-N-Hudson-Ave-Oklahoma-City-OK-73103/21846242_zpid/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The best is when gorgeous old architecture is tastefully updated
+1 I grew up in a neighborhood established in the early 1900s. Everybody tastefully updated their home, and it’s lovely. Huge homes; huge bedrooms; lots of character.
Which neighborhood??
Anonymous wrote:I love old houses, and the term "updated" makes me wince, because it means you've stuck some current trends on your old house. I warn you now, that's not going to age well.
What really makes me nuts, though, is people announcing that they fell in love with the charm of our neighborhood, and that's why they wanted to tear down one of the original houses to put up their new one.
Where do they think the charm is coming from, exactly?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Improvements in construction materials and methods can be a good reason for a teardown, but windows are a terrible example of this. Windows are designed to be replaced, and are a small fraction of the cost of most houses.
Insulation and modern heating and cooling technologies are better examples. Its much easier to be energy efficient with new construction, and retrofitting new tech onto old houses can present real problems.
Architecture is subjective, but the bigger issue is that we should really aim to build buildings to last, and we don't always do it. Our architecture choices, construction methods, and urban planning should be done with the goal that most things will still be in use in a couple hundred years.
Do you really want to live or work in a building that is 200 years old? I doubt most people would like that.
Anonymous wrote:I love old houses, and the term "updated" makes me wince, because it means you've stuck some current trends on your old house. I warn you now, that's not going to age well.
What really makes me nuts, though, is people announcing that they fell in love with the charm of our neighborhood, and that's why they wanted to tear down one of the original houses to put up their new one.
Where do they think the charm is coming from, exactly?