I know it’s still cheaper but don’t forget to factor in labor cost to build it. That being said it would be interesting to see what the differential is.
Tell me you’re from the US without telling me you’re from the US. In Europe a 100 year old house isn’t uncommon and isn’t even close to needing to be demolished.
Yeah, 60-80 years is average for the survival of a wooden framed house if it is taken care of. Yes some will last till 200, but for every 1 that does, hundreds have been torn down.
I was looking at a 1920s house 15 years ago. Owner said the wood had become so hard over the years he had to buy special drill bits to work on it and nails were mostly out of the question.
Lived in a 100-yo house in college. It would have been nice if the landlord was dumb to start with then went senile. Looked online last year and it’s still there and all cleaned up!
I think it was around $30K. That hood exploded and now that house is probably north of $400,000.
1921 was $6,488 for a 4 bedroom house, 3,000 square foot. That’s $116,518 today.
At 104 years old one of those houses sell for 4 times that now.
https://www.syracuse.com/news/2011/05/syracuse_house_which_came_from.html
https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/1500-James-St-Syracuse-NY-13203/31660688_zpid/
I know it’s still cheaper but don’t forget to factor in labor cost to build it. That being said it would be interesting to see what the differential is.
Also don’t forget the land itself! That can be a huge cost depending on where the house is.
Figure $250-$350 /sf current building costs, depending on finishes. So better part of a million.
It’s 104 years old. It should be near needing to be demolished.
Tell me you’re from the US without telling me you’re from the US. In Europe a 100 year old house isn’t uncommon and isn’t even close to needing to be demolished.
You’re not wrong, but the houses you’re referencing probably weren’t prefab.
Yeah, 60-80 years is average for the survival of a wooden framed house if it is taken care of. Yes some will last till 200, but for every 1 that does, hundreds have been torn down.
US also has houses that old, mostly on the East Coast.
If it’s poorly made… there are houses in Europe that have been continuously owned longer than the USA has existed.
I live in a 121 year old house. it’s doing ok.
the only problems I have right now is the below sub par contractors that come to work on it.
any work I’ve had done I have had to go back and repair damages because they did it cheaply or incorrectly.
point is, it’s not the house that’s wrong, it’s the talent is lacking.
I was looking at a 1920s house 15 years ago. Owner said the wood had become so hard over the years he had to buy special drill bits to work on it and nails were mostly out of the question.
Lived in a 100-yo house in college. It would have been nice if the landlord was dumb to start with then went senile. Looked online last year and it’s still there and all cleaned up!
I think it was around $30K. That hood exploded and now that house is probably north of $400,000.
Fuck you the home I live in is over 100 years old.