Talk of The Villages Florida - View Single Post - Longevity of modern construction?
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Old 05-29-2024, 07:14 AM
MandoMan MandoMan is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Toymeister View Post
There were updates to the Florida building code in the mid nineties as a reaction to hurricane damage. This includedstronger garage door reinforcements. HVAC efficiency standards as well as water heater standards have changed as well.
True. And all of the homes in The Villages apart from the Historical District are under that code. I’m not a builder, but I read Fine Homebuilding and The Journal of Light Construction cover to cover for a quarter century and designed and built my own home and restored a couple others (one a two hundred year old log cabin). Every home requires upkeep, including roofing, paint, HVAC, etc. My sense, based on seeing construction methods here and seeing a lot of homes, is that homes in The Villages are very well built, and if maintained, they should last a century. Perhaps “they don’t build them like they used to,” but building methods have changed. Steel studs, roof trusses, much better windows than were used in the sixties in Florida, more insulation, safer. You don’t need to worry about the quality of construction here, and don’t listen to the people on here who don’t really know much about building methods. Yes, the fixtures are contractor grade, which isn’t the best, but they work. Yes, I wish there were even more insulation, but I’ve seen worse. The Villages looks beautiful, and under that beauty is good bones.