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Making McMansion Owners Pay (TIME.com)

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eppur_se_muova Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jul-17-07 02:02 PM
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Making McMansion Owners Pay (TIME.com)
By BY RITA HEALY/DENVER AND P.G. SITTENFELD/NEW YORK

As bloated homes and McMansions continue to sprout up across the country, Boulder, Colorado, may have come up with a lucrative approach to contain what detractors call the plague of Garage Mahals and Big-Hair Houses. At a July 10 meeting, where more than 70 citizens spoke, Boulder county commissioners preliminarily approved a system of development rights transfers that would extract mega-bucks from builders of mega-homes.

It is a process that has been used for historic, agricultural and natural resource preservation in other parts of the country. Michelle Krezek, Boulder County land use manager, said the commissioners "want to allow property owners who either have or want smaller-scale homes to be able to sell a portion of their 'unused' square footage." Homeowners willing to sign away their option to someday add additions to their houses would receive a one-time payment as well as lower yearly tax assessments on their homes. The forfeited enlargement rights would then be available for purchase through a specially established market. Residents planning to build or expand homes larger than the recommended thresholds — 7,000 square feet on the plains, 5,000 square feet in the mountains — would be required to purchase additional development rights at prices determined by the market, which might be in the hundreds of thousands of dollars per property. Krezek adds: "This will allow for an ongoing diversity of housing stock and allow for people of varied means to own homes in Boulder County."

The average U.S. home size was 2,434 square feet in 2005, up from 983 square feet in 1950, according to the National Association of Home Builders. But new houses in Boulder County are now averaging 6,500 sq. ft. (one 5,000-sq. ft. residence on a Niwot hillside, with four bedrooms, four baths and views of snow-capped peaks, goes for $875,000). And there is no shortage of people wanting more and more living space. At the Boulder meeting, mega-mansion aspirant Harry Ross said he'd spent all his savings on 70 acres and wants a 6,000-square-foot home secluded in the middle of his property, invisible to neighbors. Fran August says she grew up in a three-room house and had to sleep in the living room. Now that she can afford it, she says, "I want a bigger home! I am so sick and tired of being cramped." Local real estate broker Rick Corbin says the Boulder County Commissioners have gotten "way too carried away" in infringing upon the ability of property owners to build homes of varying sizes. He says he "adamantly opposes" the county's regulatory efforts.

But critical, aesthetic and media sentiment around the country has been against the giant homes. Last month, Minneapolis approved caps on home sizes (limiting them to 50% of the lot), while in Austin, a local paper offers an "Is My House Too Fat?" feature where online voters jeer at architectural monstrosities. Lane Kendig, who writes about the McMansion phenomenon for the American Planning Association, says that an underlying motive for building big houses can be a mentality that says "I've got lots of money and I want to show it off," leading to "Chateaus du Screw You," as the Austin Chronicle has dubbed these properties with paved parking lots and Versailles-like ornamentation.
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more: http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,1643151,00.html?cnn=yes
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TlalocW Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jul-17-07 02:10 PM
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1. I've mixed feelings about this
As I hate going back to my hometown (small farming community in Kansas) and seeing these ugly things where there used to be wheat fields, but I also would like to buy a large piece of land in the country - say four acres and build a house right in the middle of it so I could keep all my neighbors at a perfect distance - not close enough to hear them but within shotgun-range. :)

TlalocW
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bunkerbuster1 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jul-17-07 02:29 PM
Response to Original message
2. Limiting to 50% of the lot is pretty short sighted
I loathe the trend toward 5000-7000 square foot homes as well--but there's nothing wrong with high-density housing, i.e., homes on very small lots.
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TygrBright Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jul-17-07 02:47 PM
Response to Original message
3. I just can't figure this out... what do people DO with all that space? And...
...howthehell do they keep it healthy, as in, dusted and cleaned and lacking hazards like slick flooring, sharp edges, etc?

I mean, you need... what? A bedroom for everyone? Okay, cool. Big closets? Well... HOW big, sheeeesh, how many clothes can you wear? Big enough to walk in and turn around and see everything still shouldn't take more than 30-35 square feet, right? A bathroom for every bedroom and a powder room on every floor? Sure, consume conspicuously. A rumpus room where the kids can make noise without giving the adults headaches? I can dig it. A home office? Kewl. Dining room AND breakfast nook? If you must. Sunroom for dark winter days? An understandable luxury...

But even with ALL of that, we're up to, what... 3000, maybe 4000 square feet? Max?

What's the rest? A frickin' bowling alley? Basketball court?

Come ON, people... even if you've got the money to exploit a coupla illegal brown people full time, how are you gonna actually USE that much space and maintain it in clean and safe condition?

And whothehell are you gonna sell it to, someday? You're not gonna need it all when you retire, and the kids will have ideas of their own. Where you gonna find anotha sucka willing to put so much money and effort into living space?

bewilderedly,
Bright
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kestrel91316 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jul-17-07 02:57 PM
Response to Original message
4. Here in LA we call them Persian palaces when they are found in
Edited on Tue Jul-17-07 02:57 PM by kestrel91316
neighborhoods of humble little post-war 3-br ranch homes. The folks with $$ like to tear down, then build a home that can look down upon all the neighboring serfs.
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