Anonymous wrote:I visit my MIL in Queens NY this long weekend. The stink of vaping and pot in her yard from neighbors. The noise. The tiny tiny plot of a yard with five neighbors on top of you.
The loud screaming of multiple languages and smelly food. Dog crap everywhere.
She is retired and hates it there is literally 12 people on the house next door that is 1,400 sf.
Anonymous wrote:As someone who has lived abroad in several countries (not from here), I always find it difficult to understand the focus of Americans on Suburbs.
You see these massive houses in what I personally would categorize as "middle of nowhere" (especially when we expand to the rest of US, DMV area tbh is very walkable in my view be it DC, N Arlington, or Bethesda, to name a few), where there are no walkable areas (either no sidewalks or nothing to do in a walkable distance), where you have to drive for a while just to get anywhere. Always confused me, why do people here always try to escape to suburbs where you, realistically, don't have much to do and (as I see it) compensate for that by having a large house. Would it not be better to have a smaller property (say instead of 5k Sq ft, 2k Sq ft) but live in an actual city where you can easily get to places and have things to do? Maybe it's my age or my past experience, but just does not add up to me. Having lived in Europe (among other places), it was amazing to be able to exit my place and be close to the action, have restaurants, shopping spots, or nice places to be easily get to.
In an ideal world you would have both a large place and be close to everything, but let's discount this option. Why do so many people here choose to move far to get a massive place rather than staying closer but smaller (assuming that say schools are comparable). Would you not rather live in a modestly size 2k TH rather than super far in a larger place?
Anonymous wrote:For us the #1 reason was money. We could afford to buy a 4 bed home in the burbs. While we could have all crammed into our 2 bed 1 bath in the city, it would have been uncomfortable.
Second reason was proximity to kid friendly stuff and a neighborhood that is safe and walkable for kids. We can’t walk to cool restaurants and bars where we live but our kids can easily and safely walk to school, the pool, and parks.
Anonymous wrote:In my 20’s, I valued living in the city and being in walkable areas near shops, nightlife and entertainment. No need for a car, just metro or Uber everywhere.
Now that I’m in my late 30’s with kids, I couldn’t imagine living where I lived in my 20’s in a city condo where I didn’t have a car. I care about space, safe environments, and walkability is a complete and utter joke when you have kids with groceries every other day to haul. Having a house in the burbs makes sense for me now. 10 years ago, you couldn’t pay me to live in the burbs. Just depends on where you are in life.
Anonymous wrote:That sounds like the article on the Cotswalds I read in the Financial Times. I hope to visit there some day. I have fond memories hiking the famous Lake District back in high school. The English countryside is so beautiful. (What they call third through sixth form back in the UK I think? I always thought that was a strange system.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is so weird. There have always been large English manor houses in the middle of no where. This concept isn’t foreign to Europeans they just couldn’t afford it and don’t have the land to support it.
Many of those estates are too expensive to maintain in this day and age and are now open to the public as hotels or wedding venues to make money.
The descendants of the old European aristocracy by and large no longer live in those estates on hundreds of acres of land.
Lived in Britain for a while. There's no shortage of money in the British countryside. It may not be London oligarchs but there's unquestionably wealth in the countryside. It's more often in the restored farmhouses and smaller manor houses which typically now only have a few acres up to a few dozen acres. Very popular and very much in demand.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As someone who has lived abroad in several countries (not from here), I always find it difficult to understand the focus of Americans on Suburbs.
You see these massive houses in what I personally would categorize as "middle of nowhere" (especially when we expand to the rest of US, DMV area tbh is very walkable in my view be it DC, N Arlington, or Bethesda, to name a few), where there are no walkable areas (either no sidewalks or nothing to do in a walkable distance), where you have to drive for a while just to get anywhere. Always confused me, why do people here always try to escape to suburbs where you, realistically, don't have much to do and (as I see it) compensate for that by having a large house. Would it not be better to have a smaller property (say instead of 5k Sq ft, 2k Sq ft) but live in an actual city where you can easily get to places and have things to do? Maybe it's my age or my past experience, but just does not add up to me. Having lived in Europe (among other places), it was amazing to be able to exit my place and be close to the action, have restaurants, shopping spots, or nice places to be easily get to.
In an ideal world you would have both a large place and be close to everything, but let's discount this option. Why do so many people here choose to move far to get a massive place rather than staying closer but smaller (assuming that say schools are comparable). Would you not rather live in a modestly size 2k TH rather than super far in a larger place?
I can’t speak to the appeal of larger houses—for me, the appeal of the suburbs is actually larger lots.
As a practical matter, I don’t have much interest in “being close to the action”. I want a big yard to play with the kids, a place to garden, mature trees and quiet places to sit and read, a pool to swim in, no neighbors in earshot, etc., etc.
I think there’s also a cultural aspect to this—part of America’s heritage is the relative availability of land for people who couldn’t own in their country of origin (obviously, mostly only available to white people). The suburban lot is an echo of this heritage.
I am a foreigner.
In my view, Americans really value privacy.
Big lots = more privacy.
Anonymous wrote:In DC, there basically aren’t any grocery stores. If you have to drive 20 minutes to get groceries anyway, may as well do it in a burb where you can park without having an aneurysm.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is so weird. There have always been large English manor houses in the middle of no where. This concept isn’t foreign to Europeans they just couldn’t afford it and don’t have the land to support it.
Many of those estates are too expensive to maintain in this day and age and are now open to the public as hotels or wedding venues to make money.
The descendants of the old European aristocracy by and large no longer live in those estates on hundreds of acres of land.