Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To me, the layout is more important than all the square feet.
I think many of the new houses have too many living areas.
We went from 2400 sq. ft to 5600 sq. but our layout is terrible and although it is nice to have all the storage space, we would have been fine with a 3,000 sq. foot house with a better layout.
Agree that too many bathrooms to clean is a PITA plus all the time it takes to change out towels and refill soap and TP etc.
It is nice when you have company.
Ideally, I would like an average sized home with great layout and a lot of land.
I don't understand the people who love to live in crowded subdivisions. Give me open space and acres any day! It is so peaceful to be outside and enjoy nature and quiet.
In this area, to have such a large house, chances are you have cleaners to do this.
Anonymous wrote:To me, the layout is more important than all the square feet.
I think many of the new houses have too many living areas.
We went from 2400 sq. ft to 5600 sq. but our layout is terrible and although it is nice to have all the storage space, we would have been fine with a 3,000 sq. foot house with a better layout.
Agree that too many bathrooms to clean is a PITA plus all the time it takes to change out towels and refill soap and TP etc.
It is nice when you have company.
Ideally, I would like an average sized home with great layout and a lot of land.
I don't understand the people who love to live in crowded subdivisions. Give me open space and acres any day! It is so peaceful to be outside and enjoy nature and quiet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel like many of these posts are not from ppl who live in the DMV
Clearly not. 7200 sq feet? That's in Nebraska for sure.
No. Close maybe? Moved to Denver. Housing prices aren't like inside the beltway, but the house we own and rent out in ashburn is the same size (willowsford). Housing prices here are very similar to suburb prices there as we are in a boom.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel like many of these posts are not from ppl who live in the DMV
Clearly not. 7200 sq feet? That's in Nebraska for sure.
No. Close maybe? Moved to Denver. Housing prices aren't like inside the beltway, but the house we own and rent out in ashburn is the same size (willowsford). Housing prices here are very similar to suburb prices there as we are in a boom.
Anonymous wrote:My parents have one that I have used since they host a lot of family events and we try to help out. I would never bother with one and they aren't huge fans of it either. Lugging around the hose/ and or accessories you need to do a good job isn't much less of a hassle than just carrying a good vacuum, and the performance of the central vacuum system just isn't the same as a regular vacuum. Also, the central vacuum system technology is much harder to update since its part of your home, whereas vacuum technology is changing. My parents don't use theirs anymore. They keep a Meile on one floor and a Shark on the other.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel like many of these posts are not from ppl who live in the DMV
Clearly not. 7200 sq feet? That's in Nebraska for sure.
Anonymous wrote:I feel like many of these posts are not from ppl who live in the DMV
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let's see. What do I regret about having a house with a study, a living room, a dining room, a kitchen/family room, five bedrooms (one used as a workout room), five full bathrooms, a powder room, a media room, a finished basement, and a mud room? Nothing, really. It's a great house and is zoned for top schools, too.
Were you looking for a different answer?
Not the OP, but did you just look at the subject and post without reading the thread? Plenty of people have pointed out the cons of living in a larger home.
Glad your house is working for you, but we have no use for five full bathrooms, five bedrooms, and a media room. So your house would not fit our needs, and that is fine.
The question was whether those of us living in larger houses have regrets. The answer was not at all.
Perhaps you could work on those reading comprehension skills.
My comprehension skills are fine. You responded to the OP with a nasty post - implying of course everyone loves their big houses, and I was pointing out that several people have chimed in that there it's more complicated and there are downsides.
Take the stick out of your ass, you have contributed nothing but nastiness to this thread.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let's see. What do I regret about having a house with a study, a living room, a dining room, a kitchen/family room, five bedrooms (one used as a workout room), five full bathrooms, a powder room, a media room, a finished basement, and a mud room? Nothing, really. It's a great house and is zoned for top schools, too.
Were you looking for a different answer?
Not the OP, but did you just look at the subject and post without reading the thread? Plenty of people have pointed out the cons of living in a larger home.
Glad your house is working for you, but we have no use for five full bathrooms, five bedrooms, and a media room. So your house would not fit our needs, and that is fine.
The question was whether those of us living in larger houses have regrets. The answer was not at all.
Perhaps you could work on those reading comprehension skills.
Anonymous wrote:My parents have one that I have used since they host a lot of family events and we try to help out. I would never bother with one and they aren't huge fans of it either. Lugging around the hose/ and or accessories you need to do a good job isn't much less of a hassle than just carrying a good vacuum, and the performance of the central vacuum system just isn't the same as a regular vacuum. Also, the central vacuum system technology is much harder to update since its part of your home, whereas vacuum technology is changing. My parents don't use theirs anymore. They keep a Meile on one floor and a Shark on the other.
Anonymous wrote:We are in 4300 square feet, so not huge compared to some PPs here, but definitely more than we needed for 2 parents and 2 young children. The nice thing is that we have tons of living space with 4 living/family room type spaces. The con is that we have big bedrooms that no one really uses except for sleeping. The kids used to play in their bedrooms when we were in a small TH, but now we're all just in the various living spaces downstairs, and the bedrooms just gather dust.
It is nice for when we have guests though. And because we have the space, we entertain and have overnight guests frequently.