Dream Home: What You Need to Know Before You Buy
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About this ebook
Anthony Alofsin
Anthony Alofsin is Martin Kermacy Centennial Professor at the University of Texas at Austin. He has written a new introduction to Frank Lloyd Wright's famous Wasmuth monograph, Ausgeführte Bauten und Entwürfe von Frank Lloyd Wright (Studies and Executed Buildings by Frank Lloyd Wright, 1998) and is the author of Frank Lloyd Wright: The Lost Years, 1910-1922 (1993).
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Dream Home - Anthony Alofsin
CREDITS
A Few Words Before You Buy
You’re considering buying a home. You might begin by looking at the listings in real estate websites and in the Sunday real estate section of your local newspaper (Figs. 1-2). When looking at the homes pictured there, do you wonder where the designs come from, who made them, and who is marketing them? Do you know whether you will be getting value for your money? Do you ask yourself whether these homes really fit your needs and desires? Dream Home explores these questions explicitly for people looking to buy either a newly constructed or a yet-to-be constructed house. It guides you toward getting the home of your dreams. This book gives you the information, knowledge, and tools to be an informed consumer. If you can articulate what you need and want, the building industry will respond positively. As part of its standard practice, the housing industry alters the design of homes in response to buyer demand, and increasingly it relies on marketing surveys and consumer profiles to find what appeals to customers. The industry will listen to you—it wants to give you what you want.
A home, in addition to being a major financial investment, is a primary means of expressing personal identity. A home says something about the people who live in it, and the kind of people who live in their own homes has evolved over the last seventy years. In the mid-1940s, the mass-production housing industry was just getting off the ground, and it built homes primarily for returning World War II veterans who were starting families. Today, it builds homes for the middle class, the upper middle class, and even the very rich. During those same seventy years, the American family has changed dramatically. The traditional family of father, mother, and three children, although still prevalent, is not the only family structure. Besides the traditional family, the housing market today builds homes for singles, couples without children, families with older children living at home, and those needing accommodations for in-laws or aging parents. Demographics show that the United States is becoming ever more diverse, and the housing industry is learning to address the needs of a variety of ethnic and cultural groups. No longer is the industry mostly geared toward preferences of the white middle class.
Despite the lingering effects of the recession that hit in 2008, the housing industry is regaining its role as a major component of U.S. economic strength. If you are interested in buying a home or having one built for you, now is the best time to prepare yourself to make your dreams a reality.
The more you understand about the housing industry and the homes it provides, the better equipped you will be to find the home that’s right for you. Note that Dream Home’s emphasis is on new construction—finding and evaluating previously occupied houses is not its focus. The book has four parts to help you achieve your goals.
Part I introduces you to The Players—real estate agents and home builders. It demystifies the terms and jargon used by the housing industry. It takes you on a visit to a suburban housing development and educates you about the houses you see there. It explains what is involved in choosing and purchasing a home and its finishes. We also look at the important roles of developers and the providers of stock designs in providing the plans used for most projects.
Part II takes you on a Visit to a typical model home. You will experience its neighborhood and its location on the way to the site, then look in detail at a typical model home and the design choices you can expect to be offered. We go on the typical journey any home buyer would experience in preparing to shop for a home, visiting model homes at a builder’s site and then following through to purchase a new residence. It should be noted that model homes come in all styles and are targeted to virtually all income levels, so the questions that buyers face in this situation are similar regardless of the house’s price. The visit then moves to the design center, where you select the finishes for your home; it may be eye-opening to see how these choices will have a huge impact on the final cost of your project.
Part III—A Closer Look—considers the importance of siting, proportions, and orientation, particularly their impact on your utility costs, comfort, and sense of well-being. This discussion takes in the idea of custom design,
a term that is about a carefully controlled range of detail options and finishes, not a unique design. A fundamental practice in the housing industry emerges here: the same designs are circulated throughout the country, but their names are changed, and prices adjusted, depending on location and demand. It may come as surprise to learn that a custom
home is neither unique nor custom. To help you be effective in comparing the custom
options you can expect to be offered, some of the conventions that describe architectural designs—terms such as plan, elevation, and section—are defined. Getting a handle on this terminology will allow you to talk clearly about homes and what you want in one.
Part IV—What’s in a Name?—talks about the styles of houses, what they used to look like and what they look like now. This might seem like school lessons or even technical, but nowhere else can you find these subjects discussed. And a sense of understanding where these styles came from tells you where your own home came from. This section also discusses the concept of style as it applies to fashion and to architecture. In the past, for people who could afford to build, styles had specific associations and clear distinctions that could be grasped and described. Now, the styles’ meanings are no longer obvious and they are unrecognizable. Themes and general categories, like Traditional, European, Mediterranean, and Tuscan, have replaced the old, standard styles and their revivals. These themes do affect, even if subtly, our perception of our homes and neighborhoods. The styles no longer mean what they once did.
The Conclusion looks at the some of the broad and important ways a house represents who you are and how you can be well prepared to express your identity and values in your home. It ends with a summary of the four key points you need to follow in order to be a better-informed consumer. A section on helpful Sources of more information concludes the book.
Most people are unfamiliar with the workings of the building industry, and they have only a general awareness of their buildings as architecture. You might know something about the human body from studying biology in school, but few people ever study architecture. What people do know about architecture comes from the experience of where and how they grew up, anything they may have learned from their families, and from images seen in print magazines, television, photographs, and the Internet. For most people, the subject of architecture is perplexing, and the connection between formal architecture and their homes can seem obscure. Nonetheless, architecture subtly (or not) affects our taste for the kinds of buildings we find appealing (or not). Taste is difficult to define and problematic to judge. But being aware of your own taste can help ensure that the home you buy closely matches your dream home.
Nostalgia, the human tendency to yearn for an imagined time or a past place, is a definite factor in taste. Some people scorn nostalgia, seeing it as a means of avoiding the present and all its complications. But nostalgia can be a way to connect with our roots and traditions and the foundations of who we are. It may help us create a world that comforts and supports our families and ourselves. Unsurprisingly, nostalgia plays a major role in the housing industry. For example, despite some people’s interest in flat-roofed modernist houses with a great deal of glass and a lack of traditional details, the majority of American home buyers still prefer pitched-roofed homes with traditional associations (Fig. 3). Beyond nostalgia, marketing also affects Americans’ preference for a pitched-roof house. It is the style of house most readily available, most reasonably priced, and, we are told, most suitable for our lifestyles.
At the beginning of the twenty-first century, in the most technologically advanced conditions the world has seen, a large percentage of houses are still based on architectural images whose origins go back to traditions hundreds of years old. Some people might argue that old styles have the benefit of a track record. No style is better than another—Tuscan, for example, is not better than modernist, or vice versa—but the clear expression of style is a real factor in the quality of a home. Does the design of a house complement the way you live or how you want to live? A successful home is one that communicates integrity, provides for its owners’ needs, and shows sensitivity to its site, regardless of its style.
A preference for a pitched-roof house over a flat-roof house still dominates, however, in people’s choices. The pitched-roof house communicates home
in clear and familiar ways, and those qualities are comforting and reassuring. This image, which is rooted in the American psyche, began with the first shelters created by the earliest settlers and continues to the present. Sketches by the cartoonist Comfort Thresher show with clarity the basic exterior features of a home (Figs. 4 - 5). His site is in Glendale, California, but it could be almost anywhere. Our eye immediately focuses on three elements: the pitched roof, dormered windows (a protrusion from a sloping roof), and a fanlight (a window located above the front door). These elements from the past are so basic, so pervasive in the present that they have become fundamental in thinking about the American home. People’s memories and associations of childhood identify these fundamental elements with the home. A pitched roof, dormers, and a clearly visible doorway signify home; whereas a flat roof, irregular windows, and an obscured entry mean something else: an office, a factory, or the anti-home.
It is no wonder that purchasing a home is a daunting task, particularly for first-time buyers. In addition to the traditional sources of information—newspapers, magazines, and books—that can help with your preparation, an explosion of digital media now piles on information. Numerous programs on network and cable television expand buyers’ awareness of home styles, interiors, building practices, even