1 year ago6 points(+0/-0/+6Score on mirror)1 child
And this was before drywall and other jewish fuckery. The exterior material would be whatever is available locally, could be stone, could be logs or maybe bricks. The roof would be stone or clay tiles instead of paper. Redoing the roof 10 years after purchase would be unheard of, that roof could last at least 100 years.
The overhang protects the facade, which means if it's a painted wood house you won't have to repaint it as often. Last but not least, notice the awnings and the chimney, in this house you burn logs in the fireplace to warm it up, and to cool it down you cover the windows with awnings. No need for an expensive to run AC unit which requires electricity from the (((power grid))).
Also no garage, that would be a separate building, detached from the house which is great in case of a fire, as you won't lose everything. Only thing missing is a basement bigger than the house itself for storage of my antisemitic meme collection.
This house also came with a boiler and steam heating system which I actually like and will be doing in our next house (wood boiler) but yes, there are ways to build homes where you don’t need A/C and then heat constantly running. Everyone around here goes crazy for “character” homes, so I’m going to try building one of two old fashioned homes using these plans and see how they sell.
1 year ago5 points(+0/-0/+5Score on mirror)1 child
I know this is somewhat sensationalized, but some items for context:
* The dollar, when compared to gold (which it was originally tied to) has lost 97% of it's value since 1920, rather than the 88% that jews admit to. **This means that this house package is valued at roughly 145,500,** not 77k.
* It was a very common drive amongst men to build your own house. Once this was done, you would find a wife. This changed largely with WWII.
* **This house was a kit - it didn't come fully finished.** You built it yourself. Homes in the 1920s didn't have standardized plumbing or electrical, and HVAC wasn't invented, so the kit didn't include these either.
These are remnants of a manlier era, where men literally built their homesteads. If your business idea is modern home kits, I think you could absolutely be onto something, as the tinyhouse builders are starting to completely lose the plot with 'luxury' tinyhouses at prices that remove them from 'starter house' territory. If you can put together a real home kit with modern amenities (e.g. HVAC, plumbing) and come anywhere near to the tinyhome prices, you will have a real winner.
1 year ago3 points(+0/-0/+3Score on mirror)1 child
That house does come with a heating system (boiler, pluming, radiators) full plumping, toilets, sinks, etc. and full wiring. The only thing it didn’t include is masonry stone, hammer, and nails. It also can will full moulding, trim, casing, beautiful stairs, banisters etc. all made of real beautiful hardwoods. Even at $145,000 (their nicest house) it’s an incredible deal if you factor in that almost no taxes existed. Most two story homes though in that book are around $1,500-$2,000 which is even better. The cheapest home is $650 still comes with two bedrooms, a bathroom, separate kitchen, dining, and living room area. With beautiful finishes. A Ford model T at the time, one considered “the people’s car” because of its affordability, cost $290 for comparison.
> That house does come with a heating system (boiler, pluming, radiators)
Everything you mentioned is an optional extra, not included. In your book, the pricing sheet for these extras is on page 131. In my book, it is on page 138.
I agree with the rest, and pardon me if I am being pedantic.
This was a kit. The BUILDING MATERIALS could be bought for the equivalent of $77,500. Land, permits, site prep, foundation, and construction were separate.
This would be about a $12,000 house in 1925. Inflation adjusted, that would be about $214,000.
If you were building this today in Portland, OR, it would cost you about $800,000 (land + permits/development fees + construction and materials).