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For Slow Transformationists - How Will the Suburbs Adjust?

General discussions of the systemic, societal and civilisational effects of depletion.

Re: For Slow Transformationists - How Will the Suburbs Adjus

Unread postby jmacdaddio » Mon 17 Oct 2005, 23:06:24

The reason why brownstones have lasted to this day is because they were built to last. McMansions will be crumbling into dust by the time things get bad. The materials in use today are shoddy and the workmanship is terrible. Developers plan for a new house to last no more than 30 years while in the past structures were built to last a century or more. Sure, squatters might get shelter for a few years while the former luxury homes they occupy still stand, but when the McMansions are crumbling, they're SOL.

And no, reverse white flight won't happen in an instant. It's happening now, slowly, as people with the means and inclination choose to buy houses or apartments in cities.

And if the exurbs are destined to be the slums of the future, how will the future poor be able to exist in exurban sprawl with gas at $8 a gallon if you can even get it? Where will they work? Where will they get food? We're not going to see a role reversal where Hickory Hills and the South Bronx trade places. Most likely the exurban areas will become wastelands, perhaps monuments to our own greed and excess. I don't see how anyone other than drifters and hippie-like communes could exist under such circumstances. As for the future poor, I hear FEMA has unbeatable rates on cots, safely behind barbed wire for their own protection of course.
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Re: For Slow Transformationists - How Will the Suburbs Adjus

Unread postby emersonbiggins » Tue 18 Oct 2005, 01:20:04

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jmacdaddio', 'T')he reason why brownstones have lasted to this day is because they were built to last. McMansions will be crumbling into dust by the time things get bad. The materials in use today are shoddy and the workmanship is terrible. Developers plan for a new house to last no more than 30 years while in the past structures were built to last a century or more. Sure, squatters might get shelter for a few years while the former luxury homes they occupy still stand, but when the McMansions are crumbling, they're SOL.

And no, reverse white flight won't happen in an instant. It's happening now, slowly, as people with the means and inclination choose to buy houses or apartments in cities.

And if the exurbs are destined to be the slums of the future, how will the future poor be able to exist in exurban sprawl with gas at $8 a gallon if you can even get it? Where will they work? Where will they get food? We're not going to see a role reversal where Hickory Hills and the South Bronx trade places. Most likely the exurban areas will become wastelands, perhaps monuments to our own greed and excess. I don't see how anyone other than drifters and hippie-like communes could exist under such circumstances. As for the future poor, I hear FEMA has unbeatable rates on cots, safely behind barbed wire for their own protection of course.


I agree completely. The future poor won't be able to exist at those rates. In fact, it will be cheaper to squat in McMansions and attempt gardening for subsistence rather than drive to a McJob that won't even pay the commute costs. This is what I think will happen. McMansions will be inhabited by squatters and the current homeless. Cities and small towns will be burgeoning with the responsibility of taking on the rest of us - no small task, to be sure.

Your FEMA line: priceless... :-D
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Re: For Slow Transformationists - How Will the Suburbs Adjus

Unread postby Macsporan » Tue 18 Oct 2005, 04:10:26

There is much merit here in the idea of rigging up MacMansions for medium density accomodation.

Not all of them need be preserved, the others can be cannibalised for materials and dug up for gardens , public buildings and spaces; workshops and shops.

Gradually the great city and its suburbs will become a small city surrounded by satellite towns joined by electric railway lines complemented by light-rail feeders, devoted increasingly to localised agriculture. People will spread out further afield and the cities will empty.

Where once SUV rumbled and supermarket trolleys clashed, the plough shall turn the earth and the birds sing amongst the flower-gardens. :)
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Re: For Slow Transformationists - How Will the Suburbs Adjus

Unread postby Liamj » Tue 18 Oct 2005, 05:27:44

I'm interested in how propertyless people might be integrated into communities via idle or abandoned property in the 'burbs in the years to come.

Not by negotiating with distant banks or corporations (who i hope will gradually come a cropper cos so over-centralised their power, presuming ubiquitous transport), but with remaining residents, local government & law enforcement. My compulsory optimist says there must be some path balancing local soveriegnty (community self determination via direct democracy), the best use of land, capital and resources, and hopefully humane 'making room' for the dispossessed.

If communities had knowledge of where their idle land/property was, say thru a locally compiled geographic info database, and what the possible & popular land uses and local resources were, informed by as many perspectives as possible (open/indy media) and determined by said direct democracy, why shouldn't they take the reins from the fools on the hill?
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Re: For Slow Transformationists - How Will the Suburbs Adjus

Unread postby Daryl » Tue 18 Oct 2005, 07:41:12

"The reason why brownstones have lasted to this day is because they were built to last."


I doubt you have seen a period brownstone in NYC that has not undergone massive renovations several times over the course of the 20th century. If you saw one, you wouldn't think it was built to last. Great place for rats to live, though.
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Re: For Slow Transformationists - How Will the Suburbs Adjus

Unread postby Ludi » Tue 18 Oct 2005, 09:02:43

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Liamj', ' ')My compulsory optimist says there must be some path balancing local soveriegnty (community self determination via direct democracy), the best use of land, capital and resources, and hopefully humane 'making room' for the dispossessed.



Can you explain how you see this "humanity" developing in the future, when we do not see it now? The dispossessed are outlawed nearly whenever they appear, by vagrancy laws. Why will they be embraced in a more difficult future?

(My compulsory pessimist keeps asking these kinds of questions)
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Re: For Slow Transformationists - How Will the Suburbs Adjus

Unread postby Daryl » Tue 18 Oct 2005, 09:12:52

I'd like to thank all of the posters to this discussion thread for their contributions. This has been very interesting. I'd like to especially thank Macsporan, DigitalCubano, mommy22, Ibon, jtmorgan61, dbarberic, EnergySpin and jmacdaddio for making on-topic remarks.

My feeling is that if you believe the suburbs are going to be abandoned, then you are a Mad Max doomer. The cities and small towns cannot absorb these huge populations, therefore you are forecasting massive chaos and die-offs. I don't know the future, you may be right. However, the topic of this discussion is how the suburbs will adapt in case you are wrong and we see a slow transformation, cornucopian environment where a mix of efficient motorized personal/public transportation still exist. This is also an environment where a stable, but challenged economic infrastructure survives. If you want to discuss alternative scenarios, I'm sure there are many other places on these boards to post.
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Re: For Slow Transformationists - How Will the Suburbs Adjus

Unread postby emersonbiggins » Tue 18 Oct 2005, 09:59:04

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Daryl', 'M')y feeling is that if you believe the suburbs are going to be abandoned, then you are a Mad Max doomer. The cities and small towns cannot absorb these huge populations, therefore you are forecasting massive chaos and die-offs. I don't know the future, you may be right. However, the topic of this discussion is how the suburbs will adapt in case you are wrong and we see a slow transformation, cornucopian environment where a mix of efficient motorized personal/public transportation still exist. This is also an environment where a stable, but challenged economic infrastructure survives. If you want to discuss alternative scenarios, I'm sure there are many other places on these boards to post.


My point is that suburbs and exurbs built today will not continue to house the socioeconomic classes that they were 'designed' for. Even you seem to agree with that when you speak of partitioning McMansions into multifamily dwellings. And if those dwellings are hemorrhaging people that can financially handle their upkeep, service and maintenance (the automobile lifestyle), then their transition into neglect and blight is inevitable. It's not mad max, but it won't be green lawns and new cars, either.
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Re: For Slow Transformationists - How Will the Suburbs Adjus

Unread postby Daryl » Tue 18 Oct 2005, 11:45:40

Fair enough. But the average suburban house is not a McMansion. On average they tend to be small 2-4 bedroom homes. I don't think the heating and cooling expenses for most of these homes will be prohibitive in the future we are describing. The key issues are transportation and jobs. Can the layout of these communities adjust to a limited/modified motorist environment that is supplemented by an extensive bus oriented public transportation. Can enough jobs be close enough? I think the answer is yes for many communities.

Others will no doubt become untenable. We will need new small town environments. Key suburbs will become the basis of the new towns. Unusable strip malls and parking lots will be used for new condiminiums that will increase the population density and make transportation more efficient. The populations from the untenable suburbs will migrate to the tenable ones. All the old style developers will be gone. Development will be run by the state in consultation with the employment sector, as it should have been all along. In that context, the McMansion neighborhoods that are located near areas that lend themselves to this transformation might be partitioned if no wealthier class remains that can afford to heat, cool and light the whole place.

Not sure if anyone continue to live in an untenable suburb though. If they go offgrid, only animals will occupy them. Non-grid human communities have to be near alot of fresh water, don't they? They might be demolished for scrap in that case, or turned into farmland.
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Re: For Slow Transformationists - How Will the Suburbs Adjus

Unread postby emersonbiggins » Tue 18 Oct 2005, 11:59:40

When I think of the term 'McMansion', I'm usually thinking in terms of a 3,000+ SF house on 1/4-1/2 acre lots. The cost of extending services to such a neighborhood is prohibitive (even today), and is largely augmented by the introduction of big-box retail, which creates a tax surplus that augments the shortfalls that accompany McMansion development. The hundreds of miles of roads and streets (and utilities, emergency services, schools, etc.) that are laid to serve population densities of less than 250-500 sq mi (exurban) will be ill-funded by current property and fuel tax structures, assuming that a transition to hybrids/diesels/buses takes place. No funding mechanism in place = erratic degradation/elimination of services.

Older suburbs nearer the cities (1850s-1940/50s) will fare nicely though, and probably will continue to appreciate in value. I'm not as sure about modest newer suburbs, because most of those are built in exurban locales with horrible commutes as it is. If PO hits anybody hard, it will hit those with 1-2 hour daily commutes. A resurgence of streetcars, light rail and commuter rail will make some of the locales viable once again, at least once those communities embrace the aggregate development that will be inevitably built around transit stops.

On a tangent: we need to burn segregated zoning ordinances, and fast!
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Re: For Slow Transformationists - How Will the Suburbs Adjus

Unread postby holmes » Tue 18 Oct 2005, 12:12:42

These optimists see it all yet they do not even take into consideration the reduction in quality of the ecosystems that our sprawl is built on. First we built our cities on the most ecologically prime land(the most productive fertility known in the last continent). There are documents of the natives laughing at this and wondering WHY!
Then our sprawl out has built upon the next highest productive land. we dug and grinded and filled in with unproductive infertile CONSTRUCTION FILL. The only buildings with "original" soil are the first built and ones build prior to the fill/construction craze. So These utopian suburbs better start composting en mass and piling up fertilizers now asap. Thats the only way to get high yeild crops out of your predominatley infertile fills/soils. So ya need to start bulldozing now and rehabbing the soils now if u want any chance at this green utopia.
and for the cities forget it. The soils are laced with lead, cadmium, mercury, etc...
But hey these things dont matter just meet supply and demand of the huddling masses. I am sure u can make profits off some more poor slobs. ge them in debt.
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Re: For Slow Transformationists - How Will the Suburbs Adjus

Unread postby jmacdaddio » Tue 18 Oct 2005, 17:24:42

I'm glad I can make some people here laugh.

What's clear is that US suburbia will need a massive investment in public transport that works for suburb-to-suburb commuting and errand running. Most suburbanites I've talked to say they would take public transit to their jobs if it were a viable option. Europe has non-metro areas with decent access to transport so there's no reason why we couldn't do it here.

Light rail could be built quickly. 4 lane main roads in suburbia could easily sacrifice their middle lanes for rails, especially if vehicular traffic is reduced by fuel price realities. NJ has completed a couple of light rail projects with good speed. I'm not sure how well they're used, but it takes time for people to adapt.

The larger issue of what to do with our highways remains. Unlike other nations, Americans in suburbs use our highways for just about everything, whether to go to another city or go get a quart of milk. In Germany you might bicycle to the town center for milk, take a tram to go to work, and use the Autobahn to go visit cousin Guenther in Mannheim if you didn't feel like using the trains. In the US you're on the highway for everything in a large number of areas. Ideally the market will force businesses off the major highways but it's hard to undo 50+ years of development in a short time.

If the P.O. crisis plays out as a gradual decline rather than a sudden collapse, we can do it. If it's a sudden collapse, hello Mad Max scenario.
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Re: For Slow Transformationists - How Will the Suburbs Adjus

Unread postby GoIllini » Tue 18 Oct 2005, 20:01:23

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jmacdaddio', 'T')he reason why brownstones have lasted to this day is because they were built to last. McMansions will be crumbling into dust by the time things get bad. The materials in use today are shoddy and the workmanship is terrible. Developers plan for a new house to last no more than 30 years while in the past structures were built to last a century or more. Sure, squatters might get shelter for a few years while the former luxury homes they occupy still stand, but when the McMansions are crumbling, they're SOL.

Really. I think that most of the buildings built 100 years ago that are still standing today weren't built to last. A lot of these McMansions are built outta brick, and the roofs often come with 50 year warranties.

Sure, they're cookie cutter homes, and put together very efficiently- one might argue they're mass produced. However, I'd argue that they're built decently. At least, they're designed to last a lot longer than a lot of the 100 year old wood Victorians you guys seem to respect were.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')nd no, reverse white flight won't happen in an instant. It's happening now, slowly, as people with the means and inclination choose to buy houses or apartments in cities.

I see public transportation coming into vogue. These days, the commuter trains in Chicago are packed, and they're adding to the schedule like nobody's business. I think Houston just built a commuter rail line, and other cities might be following.

70% of the Chicago suburbs are within 5-10 miles of a commuter rail line. If everyone spends an hour biking to and from work, people will either be able to solve their obesity problems or cut out a lot of time spent at the gym.

Admittedly, it'll be tough for us the four months from around mid-November to mid-March. We'll figure something out, though. Teachers only work nine months of the year...

There will be more help and solutions for everyone than I think some of the more pessimistic folks are willing to admit.
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Re: For Slow Transformationists - How Will the Suburbs Adjus

Unread postby jmacdaddio » Tue 18 Oct 2005, 20:26:16

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'S')ure, they're cookie cutter homes, and put together very efficiently- one might argue they're mass produced. However, I'd argue that they're built decently. At least, they're designed to last a lot longer than a lot of the 100 year old wood Victorians you guys seem to respect were.


Where on earth did you get this idea from? Newer homes look nice but it doesn't take a civil engineer to realize that the build quality is terrible. Builders make money on economies of scale, and believe me, when they source doorknobs, they get the cheapest ones money can buy -- using $2 doorknobs that will last 2 years instead of $10 ones that will last forever saves tons of money when you consider how many thousands of doorknobs go into a 600 unit condo complex. Time is money for builders so they have every incentive to finish the job and get the mortgage signed. Horror stories of families finding their new homes falling apart around them are abundant on the internet -- look up Hovnanian and you'll see. I'd rather clean up a neglected brownstone from 1905 than live in any of the Potemkin Village homes that are going up in new subdivisions.
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Re: For Slow Transformationists - How Will the Suburbs Adjus

Unread postby Seadragon » Tue 18 Oct 2005, 21:54:50

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Macsporan', 'T')here is much merit here in the idea of rigging up MacMansions for medium density accomodation.

Not all of them need be preserved, the others can be cannibalised for materials and dug up for gardens , public buildings and spaces; workshops and shops.

Gradually the great city and its suburbs will become a small city surrounded by satellite towns joined by electric railway lines complemented by light-rail feeders, devoted increasingly to localised agriculture. People will spread out further afield and the cities will empty.

Where once SUV rumbled and supermarket trolleys clashed, the plough shall turn the earth and the birds sing amongst the flower-gardens. :)


I really like this vision; I see in it a hopefulness I don't find in Kunstler, and I'm not an optimist, but it's simply impossible to predict the future with the precision that some assert, and my reasonable side believes that a combination good/bad scenario is most likely. To address some other posts, yes, the build quality in a lot of the cheaper suburban tract housing is poor, but much more energy efficient than in years past. Also, average house size in the US has increased over the years (to 2265 sq ft as of 2002), so there are a lot of relatively large houses. In typical American thinking, bigger is better.
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Re: For Slow Transformationists - How Will the Suburbs Adjus

Unread postby Liamj » Tue 18 Oct 2005, 22:04:14

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ludi', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Liamj', ' ')My compulsory optimist says there must be some path balancing local soveriegnty (community self determination via direct democracy), the best use of land, capital and resources, and hopefully humane 'making room' for the dispossessed.



Can you explain how you see this "humanity" developing in the future, when we do not see it now? The dispossessed are outlawed nearly whenever they appear, by vagrancy laws. Why will they be embraced in a more difficult future?

(My compulsory pessimist keeps asking these kinds of questions)


Damn Ludi, i only installed Compulsory Optimist (beta test version) so i could sit at table with you nice folks! It crashes most times i run it alongside Historical Precedents 8.1 or my Growthist Mindset 12.1 (cracked), but here goes anyway..
(apologies daryl if this offtopic)

I'm assuming some semblance of order and rule of law, some form of local government keeping some lights on or at least enabling dialogue. I see this some years in the future, after 10?50?80% of ppl have exited the burbs either closer into cities, or off to rural towns or hamlets, and without/before any apocalyptic dieoff.
In that context, why would established and persisting suburbanites make any room for or allow emigration of newbies with little 'legitimate' claim on unused housing/capital stock?

1. Charity (nostalgia for?) - we all like to think we are humane and charitable folk, and so long as situation not dire at the time in given 'burb, softer hearts may melt and allow emigration on spiritual or religeous motivations

2. Pragmatism - if you think as i do that relocalisation is inevitable with a decline in our prime transport fuel, then the problem becomes one of assembling sustainable local economy - sufficient skills and resources in your locale to cover the essentials. What if your burb doesn't have a doctor? Need a dentist too? What about a refrigeration mechanic? What about a dozen strong-as-bulls to load/unload exports to city? A horticulturalist to select and breed up approp local tree varities? Obviously which skills will be most valuable will depend on place, but i'll be stunned if where i end up already has all the reqd skills and labour. Hence some emigrants will be required, and advantageous.

There are other pragmatic priorities (defence, outbreeding, resilience to disease/disaster) that could support newcomers too, i wont bore y'all with as may not apply, but hopefully see my point about potential benefits of emigration.

Too true that vagrancy in increasingly criminalised, but i don't think thats hardwired into the majority of people. After some years of blunt adjustment to assumptions and the failure of a slew of institutions i think ppl will be keen on what works more than on checking ppls property titles and creditworthiness. A community that couldn't decide to allocate an empty house to say a desperately needed vege.oil alchemist or a midwife would be completely doomed, imho.
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Re: For Slow Transformationists - How Will the Suburbs Adjus

Unread postby GoIllini » Tue 18 Oct 2005, 22:15:46

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jmacdaddio', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'S')ure, they're cookie cutter homes, and put together very efficiently- one might argue they're mass produced. However, I'd argue that they're built decently. At least, they're designed to last a lot longer than a lot of the 100 year old wood Victorians you guys seem to respect were.


Where on earth did you get this idea from? Newer homes look nice but it doesn't take a civil engineer to realize that the build quality is terrible. Builders make money on economies of scale, and believe me, when they source doorknobs, they get the cheapest ones money can buy -- using $2 doorknobs that will last 2 years instead of $10 ones that will last forever saves tons of money when you consider how many thousands of doorknobs go into a 600 unit condo complex. Time is money for builders so they have every incentive to finish the job and get the mortgage signed. Horror stories of families finding their new homes falling apart around them are abundant on the internet -- look up Hovnanian and you'll see. I'd rather clean up a neglected brownstone from 1905 than live in any of the Potemkin Village homes that are going up in new subdivisions.


I will say that 100 years ago, most homes weren't getting built out of brick. Increasing incomes and standardization is allowing us to build our houses better than we were building them back in 1900.

Luddites have complained that mass-production was turning out horribly inferior products, but after a while, they turned out better than almost anyone without a factory could have made them. I don't see how this is a much different situation- the only difference is that housing prices haven't come down, whereas a lot of other things have.

That points to one thing: we're putting the higher-quality houses into mass-production. KB Home's (NYSE: KBH) and D.R. Horton's (NYSE: DRH) margins on a house are about 25%. That is to say, if you give them $500K to build a home, they're spending $375K on materials and labor; the value of the land is not included in the margin. Sure; there are some exceptions- just as I'm sure there were exceptions back before 1900, and I'm sure that one can take extreme examples of builders gone bad. (The shoddily constructed wood houses that started the Chicago Fire come to mind) But overall, we're spending more on homes, and the big homebuilders are putting most of the money buyers pay them into the homes.

Go ahead and buy a brownstone; you'll get a higher quality house and a better deal than buying new. I buy my cars used and get great deals, and I think that buying an older house that probably isn't going to see its overhead increase anymore, but the owners is still worth having is a good move.

But don't complain that standards for building these homes are going down. The big homebuilders, at least, aren't building shoddy homes. And while it might be tempting for a homebuilder to be cheap on materials, it would be a horrible move. The homebuilding business requires a lot of trust, and shoddily built homes get in the way of that.

Even the mass-produced houses of the postwar boom are still in good shape today- after 40-50 years. Those cheap Lustron factory-built homes are still getting showcased on the History Channel. Something tells me that these more expensive houses aren't going anywhere anytime soon.
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Re: For Slow Transformationists - How Will the Suburbs Adjus

Unread postby mommy22 » Wed 19 Oct 2005, 09:07:14

There is actually a cute article on MSN Money about "How to take the bus" or something close to that. Yes, I think that if it's available to people and they learn how to use what's available, more people will ride.
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Re: For Slow Transformationists - How Will the Suburbs Adjus

Unread postby Daryl » Wed 19 Oct 2005, 10:39:28

I have some experience owning both types of houses, older and newer. I renovated and maintained a 1905 Tudor for 5 years. Plusses were: fantastic doorknobs, glass handles with solid brass plates (black with tarnish - was a major project to remove them all and polish), solid wood doors, thick plaster walls. That's about it. Negatives are too many to mention, but the biggest was poor exterior wall insulation. Poor window insulation could be fixed easily with new windows, but to fix the walls, you would have to strip off all the original stucco and reinsulate. Prohibitively expensive. One shower that was up against an exterior wall used to freeze up every winter. I punched holes in the plaster between the joists and poured a ton of foam insulation behind the wall. Didn't help. Other major negatives - no copper plumbing - has to be installed bit by bit as the old stuff corrodes. Electrical wiring is a joke. General lack of closet space and electrical outlets is very annoying. Bad floor plan throughout.

Now I live in a house built in 1996. Plusses: Insulation is fantastic. 4 side brick exterior is great. Nice floorplan. Negatives - cheap doorknobs, hollow interior doors, sheetrock walls not as solid (I like them better though because it is easier to hang curtains and pictures). Consider the house very well built. Don't have to worry about the infrastructure. Over the long haul I think much of the infrastructure will survive much better than the homes from 1905. Copper pipes will last much longer, doubt if the electrical system will go of date. All houses will need to be renovated over time, and in some respects the older homes might be more durable but I would have to say that overall the edge goes clearly to the newer homes.

Of course, many new constructions are shoddy, but that mostly depends on the builder. The same was true in 1905 also.
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Re: For Slow Transformationists - How Will the Suburbs Adjus

Unread postby dbarberic » Wed 19 Oct 2005, 11:35:38

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Daryl', 'I') have some experience owning both types of houses, older and newer. I renovated and maintained a 1905 Tudor for 5 years. Plusses were: fantastic doorknobs, glass handles with solid brass plates (black with tarnish - was a major project to remove them all and polish), solid wood doors, thick plaster walls. That's about it. Negatives are too many to mention, but the biggest was poor exterior wall insulation. Poor window insulation could be fixed easily with new windows, but to fix the walls, you would have to strip off all the original stucco and reinsulate. Prohibitively expensive. One shower that was up against an exterior wall used to freeze up every winter. I punched holes in the plaster between the joists and poured a ton of foam insulation behind the wall. Didn't help. Other major negatives - no copper plumbing - has to be installed bit by bit as the old stuff corrodes. Electrical wiring is a joke. General lack of closet space and electrical outlets is very annoying. Bad floor plan throughout.

Now I live in a house built in 1996. Plusses: Insulation is fantastic. 4 side brick exterior is great. Nice floorplan. Negatives - cheap doorknobs, hollow interior doors, sheetrock walls not as solid (I like them better though because it is easier to hang curtains and pictures). Consider the house very well built. Don't have to worry about the infrastructure. Over the long haul I think much of the infrastructure will survive much better than the homes from 1905. Copper pipes will last much longer, doubt if the electrical system will go of date. All houses will need to be renovated over time, and in some respects the older homes might be more durable but I would have to say that overall the edge goes clearly to the newer homes.

Of course, many new constructions are shoddy, but that mostly depends on the builder. The same was true in 1905 also.


This goes along with the notion that I had, which is that an enterprising individual could for less money modify a suburban McMansion for multi-family than attempt to upgrade early 1900 intercity housing to modern energy efficiency standards. In the future world of high energy costs, well insulated walls and windows are of critical importance. In addition, fresh building materials will be very expensive as production and shipping costs will be outrageous due to high energy costs. Consequently, full renovations of century homes to modern energy efficiency standards will be extremely cost prohibitive. So why not modify what already exists at the lowest cost possible.

There is also no reason to assume that common areas of the kitchen family room could not be maintained as common, but personal living areas could be partitioned off. In my 2,300 sq ft home I was thinking that I could take in another couple who are currently friends, or family members. If I take in people I know, then we could share a kitchen and family room making the transformation even easier and cheaper. Not to sound sexist, but the women could do perform household functions while the men pursue businesses/trade/or work to generate income/supplies to live.

Some of you may consider my house a McMansion, it was built in 1997 and is 2,300 sq ft. It energy efficient with good insulation and sealed modern double pane windows, has a wood burning fireplace insert, has sidewalks that in under 5 minute walk gets you to a town square that was founded in 1802. The town square still has functioning independent small town retail and restaurants, and is surrounded by a mix of century homes, modern suburbs/McMansions, and small farms in the community. Within 5-15 miles of my house are even more small farms in the next community over. The community is extremely close and well knit. We have tough zoning laws that have prevented all big boxes from even entering the community and have allowed small business to thrive. I do not see any reason why the “McMansions” in this area could not survive in a post peak world and if necessary be split up into multi family units. The way I see it, my community existed before there was oil and coal, and it will exist after there is no longer oil or coal.

Some modern McMansion suburbs, provided they are in the right setting/environment, may actually continue to exist. Some, however, are built in such poor locations with poor layout, that they will indeed turn to slums.
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