builders are also trying to be "everything to everyone". If there are three materials trending with buyers, why not just throw them all up on the same house?
Diggity said:
builders are also trying to "everything to everyone". If there are three materials trending with buyers, why not just throw them all up on the same house?
A good catastrophic flood would create tens of thousands of dollars in improvement to that place.Complete Idiot said:
https://www.redfin.com/TX/Liberty-Hill/129-River-Rd-78642/home/32703035
It was a good price for an acre on a river in this area, but the house description and indoor pool cracked me up. Hard to believe that was built in 1994.
combat wombat said:
This house is truly custom. I am sooo confused. It has not just one, but TWO, pools! One indoor and another outdoor.
It's been on the market for over a year. Shocking. It's in the 100-year flood plain, it's got 1980s apartment complex finishes, the schools it is zoned to are garbage (C/F/D grades). But it looks just about the right size a cult.
https://www.har.com/homedetail/1802-castlerock-dr-houston-tx-77090/3349004
Anyone here know anything about it? HCAD shows interesting ownership history... since 2008 it seems to have been titled to different members of the same family with it finally reverting back to the "original" owners.
You know that's just the angle of the ceiling wrapping around before it opens up, right?The Fife said:
House previously owned by M C Escher.
Quote:
A consulting architect on UCSB's Design Review Committee has quit his post in protest over the university's proposed Munger Hall project, calling the massive, mostly-windowless dormitory plan "unsupportable from my perspective as an architect, a parent, and a human being."
Quote:
In his October 25 resignation letter to UCSB Campus Architect Julie Hendricks, Dennis McFadden a well-respected Southern California architect with 15 years on the committee goes scorched earth on the radical new building concept, which calls for an 11-story, 1.68-million-square-foot structure that would house up to 4,500 students, 94 percent of whom would not have windows in their small, single-occupancy bedrooms.
The idea was conceived by 97-year-old billionaire-investor turned amateur-architect Charles Munger, who donated $200 million toward the project with the condition that his blueprints be followed exactly.