by Twilight » Mon 25 Jun 2007, 16:54:45
In the UK most homes are brick. Thick, solid brick, 2-3 layers thick. A lot of 3-4 floor late Victorian stuff is still standing because it's thick as hell with massive load-bearing columns and beams which make interior decorating a nightmare. You can't change layout, you're stuck with what you've got. There was a big building boom 1920-1940s, that stock is awesome too, built to a fairly standard layout and averaging a quarter million these days. There was more housing built in the 1980s to replace the post-war crap that got put up in a hurry; where it copied early 20th century methods, it was built well, where an architect flew off on an experimental whim, you have problems.
What really sucks though, are the apartment buildings and massive suburban developments of the 1990s onwards. They're cheap, they're thrown up in months, they're built up like a kit.
If you're lucky, it's one layer of breeze block, 1-2 layer brick exterior, cavity wall insulation and pre-fabricated roof members thrown on top. Interior walls are basically a non-load-bearing honeycomb plasterboard sandwich. Maybe the attraction is you can redesign room layout however you like, but you can also punch a hole in those walls just by toppling over a tall piece of furniture.
If you're unlucky, instead of a brick exterior you get some sort of insulated aluminium panels which are bolted onto the breeze block, sandwiching a plastic-sheeted insulating layer. Or worse, wooden panels which are supposed to look charming, but in the British climate, last even less time. I started noticing that sort of thing in the late 1990s, some of it is showing signs of age, peeling and erosion, after only 5 years. The irony is, because it's brand new, it was bought during the bubble. No-one bought it for a fair price over the decades and got use out of it, it's basically bubble-housing from inception. That sucks. Everyone living in those places is being ripped off. Millions of people by now.