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No swimming pool! Ten hours of maintenance for every hour of use plus high power bills. Never again!
Also big legal liability for swimming pools. If you don't fence it in and some kid drowns, you are screwed.
No basement or crawlspace.
Too many trees. Dealing with that at the GF's house. Constant maintenance item there because of this.
no leaf blowers allowed in neighborhood, or too far to smell and hear them
nowhere near the fire station because i don't want to hear sirens all the time
Also big legal liability for swimming pools. If you don't fence it in and some kid drowns, you are screwed.
zzyzzx saysNo basement or crawlspace.
Where do you find a basement in Florida? That's super rare, and usually because they built up a large berm in their yard. Then they have the basement level half or quarter sunk in the ground. They are half sunken two story houses more than a house with a basement.
The issue I would have with basements, would be flooding. It's not like you can open the door and sweep the water out.
Except for mobile homes, I don't see crawlspaces in Florida much, but there is no real reason not to, except for maybe higher initial cost.
I'll never get all this, but I have had this list for a while:
want to be able to WALK to friends' and relatives' houses
reasonable neighbors
view of ocean
relatively quiet neighborhood; hang out overnight before buying to see
low crime, therefore a probably white or asian area
no leafblowers allowed in neighborhood, or too far to smell and hear them
nowhere near the fire station because i don't want to hear sirens all the time
not too far from a major airport so we can travel
some garden space
wind! clean air in neighborhood, no smoke; check purpleair.com
- Drum/music room (basement)
Also big legal liability for swimming pools. If you don't fence it in and some kid drowns, you are screwed.
Also big legal liability for swimming pools.
My dad would use the pool all by himself, mainly I think to save face to himself.
One neighbor only put in a "doughboy". I remember my mom and her gossipy friends talking of it with a bit of derision. But they were the smart ones; that doughboy was easy and cheap to undo.
B.A.C.A.H. saysOne neighbor only put in a "doughboy". I remember my mom and her gossipy friends talking of it with a bit of derision. But they were the smart ones; that doughboy was easy and cheap to undo.
What is that?
I would say, most of the neighbor kids and my siblings and me were ambivalent about the freaking pool
What is that?
My kids are pretty ambivalent about it in general (they are competitive swimmers, so they are in an olympic-sized pool every day twice a day)
view of ocean
view of ocean
Patrick saysview of ocean
Whish you will enjoy for the first month then after that, you might notice the view 2 or 3 times a year.
view of ocean
Lakes are only available in the north, or you'll be next to an artificial one in the south. Artificial lakes suck, they are just mud pits.
Booger, thank you for pointing out my use of a local catchword-buzzword from the 1960's-70's.
What nobody wants secret bunker? Lol
Also big legal liability for swimming pools. If you don't fence it in and some kid drowns, you are screwed.
the Land lady's boyfriend, knocked out all of the internal walls and ceiling,
although the view, breezes and ambiance were excellent, the saltwater air corroded practically anything metal.
Community pools (and sports/tennis courts) are great, but they come with HOA fees. Totally worth it in our case,
Patrick saysAlso big legal liability for swimming pools. If you don't fence it in and some kid drowns, you are screwed.
Normal even in northern Florida:
the saltwater air corroded practically anything metal. Bicycles, cars, tools, and even metal poles or other parts of the house seriously rusted.
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Inspired by this thread:
https://patrick.net/post/1325185/2019-06-18-the-illinois-california-exodus
Where I mentioned low inventory and not liking most existing houses. Since we all have our preferences and pet peeves, and presumably a number of us are thinking about having something built.
So I'll start.
Deal breakers:
Not enough off street parking.
Lot too small.
House has had additions (IMO, that's never done right. I'm not talking about separate structures like a standalone garage / shed / pool etc. Those can be done right.)
OSB
No basement or crawlspace.
Things that I really hate, but can be rectified:
Vaulted ceilings. I want an attic.
Skylights (because they always leak).
Too many trees. Dealing with that at the GF's house. Constant maintenance item there because of this.
Flex ducting for HVAC.
Wants:
Walk in closet
Walk in pantry
Ideal house is on a 1/2 acre, has a basement (if in someplace like Florida, put in a crawlspace or just make the whole lower floor unfinished (and probably unconditioned) and make that a substitute for your garage / workshop / shed and run all the wiring and plumbing in the ceiling for easy maintenance, and put the water heater / HVAC / electrical panel, stuff there (normal basement stuff). Super insulated with a nice sized attic and a roof that slopes towards the sun to facilitate the installation of solar panels. I would also want some sort of roof access (I have that now and it's nice to be able to easily do all my rooftop maintenance). Probably 2000 sq ft minimum, but with the largish garage underneath it might not need to be that big.