View Single Post
 
Old 05-30-2024, 10:04 AM
nn0wheremann nn0wheremann is offline
Veteran member
Join Date: Jun 2017
Posts: 858
Thanks: 88
Thanked 333 Times in 238 Posts
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by MplsPete View Post
In another thread (Are you happy you made TV your retirement home?) I saw a couple of comments that disturbed me, and raised an issue only tangentially related to that thread:

OBB wrote
I hate that people think a 20-year-old home is "old." I hate the mentality behind that. Again - where I come from - an "old" home was built prior to 1925, and there are thousands of them in the New England area that function just fine, are well-insulated, have withstood dozens of nor'easters, and are beautiful.

And JLB replied
As far as 20-year-old houses being "old", I hear you. But given that nobody builds great houses like they did 100 years ago (at least, for those that could afford it), even expensive houses of today age far more quickly than they should. We are in a throw-away world, sadly.

So let's talk about this. I live in a home built in 1950. Is construction of the 1990s or 2000s fundamentally inferior? What's this stuff about homes aging far more quickly?
Are preowned homes older than a few years bad? Can someone cite examples?
(Thanks to all who reply.)
Florida building codes were made much stricter in 2002, after Hurricane Andrew wiped out Homestead Florida.If your home was built or permitted before July 2002, you will have difficulty with getting homeowners insurance. Even if it meets Miami-Dade building code standards, you might need an inspection to verify plumbing, electrical, drainage, and wind mitigation. Too much of Florida is overpopulated and under engineered. Fortunately this seems not to be the case in The Villages.