Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:my ONLY problem with new construction is the design. Why are Craftsman the only style and why no more brick colonials? Even when price is less of an object ($1.5MM and up)?
Brick is still around but commands a premium
http://www.district-properties.com/35250preview_6521+Dryden+Dr_Mclean,_VA_.html
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http://www.kw.com/homes-for-sale/22101/VA/MCLEAN/6713-WEAVER-AVENUE/3yd-MRIS-FX8539556.html
wow those houses are ugly
I love how there's a tiny rambler as the next door neighbor in both pictures.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:my ONLY problem with new construction is the design. Why are Craftsman the only style and why no more brick colonials? Even when price is less of an object ($1.5MM and up)?
Brick is still around but commands a premium
http://www.district-properties.com/35250preview_6521+Dryden+Dr_Mclean,_VA_.html
![]()
http://www.kw.com/homes-for-sale/22101/VA/MCLEAN/6713-WEAVER-AVENUE/3yd-MRIS-FX8539556.html
wow those houses are ugly
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:my ONLY problem with new construction is the design. Why are Craftsman the only style and why no more brick colonials? Even when price is less of an object ($1.5MM and up)?
Brick is still around but commands a premium
http://www.district-properties.com/35250preview_6521+Dryden+Dr_Mclean,_VA_.html
![]()
http://www.kw.com/homes-for-sale/22101/VA/MCLEAN/6713-WEAVER-AVENUE/3yd-MRIS-FX8539556.html
Anonymous wrote:
People are stupid to think that all cinder block buildings are going to be the best needs for residential.
Anonymous wrote:my ONLY problem with new construction is the design. Why are Craftsman the only style and why no more brick colonials? Even when price is less of an object ($1.5MM and up)?
Anonymous wrote:my ONLY problem with new construction is the design. Why are Craftsman the only style and why no more brick colonials? Even when price is less of an object ($1.5MM and up)?

Anonymous wrote:I always love this debate on DCUM, from people in a city with no fashion sense who look like cookie cutter office dwellers in neutral uniforms, bad haircuts, and no makeup. But yet you are all arbiters of architectural "taste" and "aesthetics.". Give me a break.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've never seen one that isn't ugly. That is not to say I don't think there can be nice ones, but I think that requires a special kind of architect and client. They are all cheap looking and give me headaches.
There's this: http://images.bwbx.io/cms/2012-11-16/1116_mcmansion_630x420.jpg
And then there's this: http://www.miamitenniscamps.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/modernist-architecture.jpg
I'd rather live in my 650 sq ft condo forever than the first one.
Anonymous wrote:Some of the posters above state that new construction is cheaply built. I hear this a lot. But on what do they base this?
The new construction I have seen is well-built. Just because it is not brick on the outside does not mean is it cheaply built.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pp- well is sounds to me that you are doing good construction. There is definitely good construction out there. Certainly you could open up an old home and find a shit show of old wiring and turn of the century newspapers as insulation.
My point is that it really does come down to taste.
I could have bought a huge, new house a little further out. Commuting isn't an issue for us. I prefer something that's been around and seen some stuff.
If I had had over a million I would have looked to renovate closer in, not find new construction close in.
It's ok to prefer new things, but many people don't like the soullessness of new homes.
I have even seen the barebone low cost new builds and they are vastly Superior because mandatory modern building codes. I would argue the bones are much better than 90% of the old construction including the cheap new homes. The only thing that really differentiates the cheap vs expensive new homes are the finishing which are interchangeable.
Anonymous wrote:Pp- well is sounds to me that you are doing good construction. There is definitely good construction out there. Certainly you could open up an old home and find a shit show of old wiring and turn of the century newspapers as insulation.
My point is that it really does come down to taste.
I could have bought a huge, new house a little further out. Commuting isn't an issue for us. I prefer something that's been around and seen some stuff.
If I had had over a million I would have looked to renovate closer in, not find new construction close in.
It's ok to prefer new things, but many people don't like the soullessness of new homes.