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Home builders please take note!

Ronin22

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 2, 2018
Messages
478
Location
BA
Man you guys are harsh regarding your elevations. Sitting here thinking how I would love/hate to hear what you guys would say about some of the houses in my "neighborhood". :lol_hitti

Garages with houses attached to them, he.
 
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American Locomotive

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 8, 2017
Messages
10,928
Location
Rhode Island
The only good things about that house are the inside of the garage and the basement. The rest of that house is absolutely horrible. It was designed by someone with absolutely no taste, and is ridiculously overwrought and gaudy. Everything about it is bad.

- The tacky and out of place sliding barn doors on the office
- The ridiculously oversized master bedroom with absolutely no features at all
- The light fixtures in every single room are an abomination
- Is that a dedicated dog wash down station?...seriously?
- The absolutely awful front view with all the weird random jut-outs (including the two doors on the garage itself...why?)
- That utter travesty of a roof. That roof is practically schizophrenic. It'll be a complete nightmare to re-shingle in 20 years, and you got all kinds of nonsense like this that will be guaranteed to leak in a few years:
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driftpin

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 22, 2016
Messages
11,178
Location
Miami-Dade/Broward Co. Florida
I agree that in many high-population markets, i.e., the PNW, SF Bay area, so. CA, Dallas, New England around Boston, R.I., CN, metro NY/NJ/PA, down to the DELMARVA area, Miami/Ft. Lauderdale/W. Palm Beach, it's 3 to 6X that asking price. Hot markets more to the 6X side.

Not aesthetically-appealing in its design/layout, but the living space has a lot of room, and the roofed lanai in-back is great for 3 season entertaining.

The sliding rustic doors to what's probably called the "den/bonus room" are easily-replaced, so that's a niggling-little correction.

Having the garage in the back would allow a more-traditional look to the front of the home. Any 90 degree perpendicular garage would still require a lot of concrete, but would present a less-dominant street-view.
 
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