[quote author="QH Renter" date=1247706513][quote author="irvine_home_owner" date=1247699576]
In a perfect world, everyone would get the huge lot with the pretty exterior and the best floorplan... in Irvine, you can get that but you have to pay for it (Shady). If you want something that's affordable (well... not right now), you have to make sacrifices, whether it be smaller lot, ugly exterior, no dining room or (gasp!) no 3-car wide garage. In the end, it always boils down to the first 3 rules of real estate, otherwise move to the IE and you can get whatever you want for 1/4 the price.</blockquote>
Not everyone has the same tastes, but there are certain design principles that are true. I agree that compromises must be made, but I think that TIC's designs have robbed too much in aesthetics to create the larger floorplans (and beefy profits). There is no balance and as we've seen these homes do not age gracefully due to their poor design. The current crop of homes are even more out of whack and will be <strong>undesirable in 25 years</strong>. Caveat emptor.</blockquote>
Unless energy cost sky rockets (a distinct probability), I don't think there will ever be a time when the general public would prefer a smaller house to a bigger one, if they could afford it.
In a perfect world, everyone would get the huge lot with the pretty exterior and the best floorplan... in Irvine, you can get that but you have to pay for it (Shady). If you want something that's affordable (well... not right now), you have to make sacrifices, whether it be smaller lot, ugly exterior, no dining room or (gasp!) no 3-car wide garage. In the end, it always boils down to the first 3 rules of real estate, otherwise move to the IE and you can get whatever you want for 1/4 the price.</blockquote>
Not everyone has the same tastes, but there are certain design principles that are true. I agree that compromises must be made, but I think that TIC's designs have robbed too much in aesthetics to create the larger floorplans (and beefy profits). There is no balance and as we've seen these homes do not age gracefully due to their poor design. The current crop of homes are even more out of whack and will be <strong>undesirable in 25 years</strong>. Caveat emptor.</blockquote>
Unless energy cost sky rockets (a distinct probability), I don't think there will ever be a time when the general public would prefer a smaller house to a bigger one, if they could afford it.