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mistersmiley318 t1_j5lj58b wrote

Rowhomes/rowhouses/terraced homes. They don't get built because in 95% of America it's literally illegal to build homes like this due to all sorts of zoning regulations, (minimum lot size, setback requirements, etc) that came into existence after WWII. More locally, DC doesn't have that much non-developed land, so developers want to max out returns on their investment with big apartments instead of more modest rowhouses. Newbuilt rowhomes do still happen (see Navy Yard and NE) but they're very rare in DC itself.

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GingerMan027 t1_j5ljcul wrote

Old style DC row houses. These specific materials are outdated or too expensive now.

Now we get "Towne Houses."

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keyjan t1_j5lkd17 wrote

Rowhouses. Built all over the place in the suburbs, not really in D.C. so much anymore.

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not_a_gumby t1_j5logq0 wrote

they don't get built much anymore because of zoning requirements that revolve around parking for cars.

One of the many ways cars ruin cities.

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Joelpat t1_j5lsa64 wrote

As all the religious orders in Brookland run out of baby boomers to fund them, they are selling their land off to developers to build as many units as possible.

Also, Dakota Crossing down by Costco.

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BrightThru2014 t1_j5lzggj wrote

Modern developers/architects are opposed to building in classical styles, in part due to their bias, in part because it’s likely to get rejected by the DC planning boards for “giving a false sense of history.” Bizarre because rowhouses are almost universally celebrated by the public for their beauty and character.

https://planning.dc.gov/sites/default/files/dc/sites/op/publication/attachments/DC%20New%20Construction%20Reformatted.pdf

PS anyone saying that it’s prohibitively expensive to build in that style doesn’t realize that: 1) the vast majority of the expense of building consists of the land and internal constructions; 2) a number of new rowhouses have been built in the last few decades (see Capital Quarter in Navy Yard, Harrison Square in Shaw, etc.).

It’s weird, almost like a deliberate decision to make DC more ugly…

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GingerMan027 t1_j5m0rwy wrote

When I worked a L'Enfant Plaza, years ago, I saw new nice townhouses built around um, 7th Street SW? Showed them to my wife one time, we dreamed what must it be like to have that much money.

Then again, our first house, a 50's era rowhouse just north of Baltimore, cost us $67,500. Loved that house, brick and block, slate roof. You could walk standing up in the attic.

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spectredirector t1_j5m7nb8 wrote

Row houses. Some of the ones in Georgetown are crazy narrow.

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super544 t1_j5mbmv4 wrote

These homes are all stairs.

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LilInterweb t1_j5mdfuu wrote

The value of row houses is to be near a vibrant walkable area. The townhomes that get built these days are islands in a sea of suburban sprawl and so you don’t get the walkable density these buildings are designs to promote.

We may be able to build more if we promoted more transit oriented development and stop spending so much on freeway expansions and small amounts on public transit.

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GingerMan027 t1_j5mdwd6 wrote

You got to know where you are in Baltimore. Many variables. If you work remotely, I can tell you places that are great, prices, neighborhood, and safety.

If you have to go to work there, it gets complicated. I have spent a life between the two cities. I love them both.

You want advice, looking for a house, PM maybe I can give you a lead.

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vermillionmango t1_j5mg5b8 wrote

It's illegal in most of DC. They are grandfathered in but new ones can't be built in most residential zones.

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thefakebecky t1_j5mgxkx wrote

We’ll, your first link is of rowhouses in SE, north of and predating the Yards development. Not part of the Wharf. Your second link is indeed in SW, but not part of the Wharf but rather of the townhouses bound by 7th, G, and 9th St SW. They also predate the Wharf by almost 20 years. No rowhouses and/or townhouses were built as part of the Wharf development. There are a number of townhouses in SW near the Wharf, but the vast majority of them were built in the 1960’s as part of one of the country’s first urban renewal projects.

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Malnurtured_Snay t1_j5mhdw7 wrote

Well, it'll be a few years until I'm in a position to move. I went to Towson U., and lived in the northern suburbs for a bit. Between 2004 - 2008 (when I moved back to DC) I spent a lot of time in Baltimore -- a friend owned a little bar in Remington, and I'm overly fond of that neighborhood and will miss Dizzy Issie's until the end of my days (I forget if that was considered Remington or Hampden) -- but I don't consider myself familiar with the city anymore. Most of the people I knew there have moved away (even if just to the suburbs). But I'd still love the recs because then I can be semi-realistic when browsing Redfin :)

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Malnurtured_Snay t1_j5mkmss wrote

Now I'm thinking of my buddy who owned a giant ass house on Reservoir Hill. It's certainly the type that you might describe as a "brownstone" -- full basement, main living floor, and two floors of bedrooms above it. He was renovating it one room at a time.

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Altruistic_Loss6834 t1_j5mkt5y wrote

Lol just like in DC (where I lived on and off between 2005 and last year) there are plenty of great neighborhoods in Bmore where the crime you are most likely to encounter is package theft. I bought a nice rowhouse in Butcher’s Hill last year for under $400k and the neighborhood feels safer than my last DC residence near 14th and U (and omg my local grocery/target situation is sooo much better, actually a lot of food is better). What I have learned since moving here is that 95% of the people who talk shit about Bmore know more about it from The Wire than actually visiting.

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TheWolf_ofOptions t1_j5mna2z wrote

These are called Victorian row houses. You will find this type of architecture all over DC as well as Federal, especially in Georgetown. This property in particular is 1438 Corcoran St NW. Which is currently being sold for $2.5M and has been on the MLS for 78 days and if anyone were looking to buy this property, I would suggest leveraging the days on market and the fact they haven’t gotten a single offer to come down in price. It’s a great property in the heart of Logan circle, which surprisingly is experiencing low demand per the MLS.

I’m personally saddened by the idea that these home styles will not be built anymore but it does however, give that much more value to such a historic home IF it still has its original charm.

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Free_Dog_6837 t1_j5moh99 wrote

that is called a row house and they are still building them. go anywhere in NE

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SportIndependent7846 t1_j5mr4pr wrote

There’s already enough of them, they just renovate all of em whenever there somewhere that gets gentrified.

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giscard78 t1_j5mu4ob wrote

So here’s the thing, SE or EOTR gets a bad rap, some of it is warranted, but some of it is not. I have no idea for this particular block, maybe someone else can chime in. The thing about EOTR, though, is it lacks a lot of amenities. People are willing to put up with more violent neighborhoods in NW or NE but they have access to [whatever]. It’s not the same in that part of SE.

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thepenguinknows t1_j5my3w1 wrote

Thank you. I lived in a city with a major university before moving up here. Gun shots weren’t daily but they were pretty frequent so I understand putting up with it in order to be close to something.

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Bigtsez t1_j5n0jcd wrote

They're nice in their own way, but they definitely don't have the same feel. I describe them as, "If Disney added a Washington, DC section to Epcot Center's World Showcase, it would look like this."

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BrightThru2014 t1_j5n128r wrote

So you prefer we built what instead? The weird cheap blocky modernist condos which are identical in every city in the US? Give it 20 years of wear and tear and it’ll have the same “feel” as the older rowhouses.

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firewarner t1_j5n25gk wrote

It's a short walk to the Wharf but certainly not part of the Wharf redevelopment lol. They're expensive because they're gorgeous and huge by DC standards and in between the Mall and the Wharf

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Bigtsez t1_j5n38ne wrote

There are better examples recently built elsewhere (for example, here, built in 2018) that I think better reflect the old style in modernized form. I just don't like the specific look of Capitol Quarters. To each their own, of course.

Also, I didn't see the link to the Harrison Square ones, which I do like better.

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Arctic_Dreams t1_j5n7ede wrote

The walkable part is probably pretty important. Housing like these aren't usually known for their ample driveways or garages.. and if it's not walking distance to transit and points of interest, everyone moving there is going to want a spot for their car.

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isaghoul t1_j5nfrq4 wrote

There's a serious lack of adequate grocery stores (there are only 4 and one doesn't even sell produce) and medical care available in ward 7 and 8. Things are changing as gentrification moves EOTR though.

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Successful-Return186 t1_j5nid4s wrote

Only thing is that the houses are very cheaply made. I live not too far from them & saw how they took 4 years & cut corners to build some crappy buildings that are mostly just Air B&B's. No one wants to buy a property that looks at the backs of surrounding homes.

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Gooner695 t1_j5nnryb wrote

A great, real life example of this happened in Alexandria, VA either last year or 2021. There was an empty lot in a row of a rowhomes where another home used to be. The lot owners had to file with the city for a zoning adjustment (and have public hearings about it and everything) just to be able to rebuild the townhome that was once there.

Parking requirements, setback requirements, minimum lot sizes, and other dumb regulations make many old buildings illegal today. Have you ever wondered why modern apartment buildings all have hallways to the doors but in old ones they were closer to the staircase? That’s because modern building codes require access to multiple stairwells (but that requirement does not improve fire safety in reality).

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MarkinDC24 t1_j5nu8z9 wrote

I am guessing you hangs not heard of “age in place?”. Stairs are cute until you start getting older. My dad swears the number one killer for old people is a slip downstairs. The impact might not kill them but eventually the broken hip, complications from an acute concussion, etc. will slowly take their life.

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jundog18 t1_j5o2480 wrote

Kind of disagree. A lot of housing in DC isn’t that walkable (like it takes 15 minutes or more to walk somewhere worthwhile) so people hop in their car or an Uber anyways. EOTR is less than 10 minute drive from the yards, barracks row, a handful if restaurants in historic anacostia, and two grocery stores in skyland.

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NOOBEv14 t1_j5o4gpf wrote

Most of the cost to build is in land, development, and structure, but as always, the money is in the margins.

Homebuilding is very competitive these days, especially in areas where land supply is as limited as DC.

The extra $15k you’re dropping on relatively useless space and a “traditional aesthetic” is just wasted money. You’re not seeing the $20k increase in price that needs to offset it.

And for all that residents seem to prefer the classical look, someone dropping a million bucks on a new townhouse wants the thing to look modern. Builders are always looking to appeal to the meat of the market.

Regardless, anyone with beef about home aesthetic in their jurisdiction should, as you say, always look to the local planning department. These guys have absolute power with regard to architectural approval. They can request whatever they want, take as long to make their decisions as they want, and can’t really be held accountable in any way. New homes will look the way they want them to look.

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DarknessOverLight12 t1_j5o4upv wrote

I swear u the first person on here to not call SE a hellhole of some kind and u even gave a reason why people still prefer NE and NW. As a SE native, for the longest time I never understood why transplants prefer NW neighborhoods like Columbia heights, seat pleasant, ivy City and more when there is just as much shootings there as SE. My best friend lives near Columbia heights and he has seen drive-bys and a dead body from his window.

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vermillionmango t1_j5o6rlx wrote

In most R zones rowhouse setback (space from sidewalk to front door) is too small, floor area ratio (ratio of built house:property size) is too high, don't have the required offstreet parking space, minimum lot size is too small (single rowhouse lots are under the required property lot sizes in many cases), or just you can't built undetatched housing that shares an outside wall because the only allowed building is a detatched single family home.

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dc_dobbz t1_j5ocws8 wrote

DC zoning allows new row houses in most districts by-right, but you are correct that the lack of open land is a problem. The other issue is that huge swaths of our existing row house stock is under historic district restrictions, which makes demo and rebuild prohibitively expensive if not impossible.

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limerickdeath t1_j5ogymh wrote

Because it’s easier to build prefab boxes than beautiful things these days

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smacks23 t1_j5okg7g wrote

I feel like every dc resident has done this exact exercise and every time I’m like wait what am I doing it’s Baltimore. And then I go to r/Baltimore to see if I’m making the right decision and the whole front page is crime and businesses closing. We have that in dc for sure but no where near the level. And the path for Baltimore to revitalize is so much harder to happen than dc

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9throwaway2 t1_j5okp09 wrote

It isn't a hellhole, far from it; some of the prettiest neighborhoods in DC are in SE, like Hillcrest. The issues are more to do with historic redlining and racism combined with a lack of amenities that are walkable. Keep in mind there are barely any highways in NW DC. Highways were only built in poorer neighborhoods.

Hopefully we can fix these problems.

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BrightThru2014 t1_j5onayw wrote

Lol modern/contemporary homes are more expensive to build not less: https://nehomemag.com/the-cost-to-build-a-contemporary-home-why-its-higher-than-a-traditional-one/

And if it’s “just the market,” why are developments like this built at all: https://www.chevychaselake.com?

The reality is that a lot of it has to do with the imposition of top-down elitist architectural tastes which abhors all traditional design out of some egotistical pretentiousness.

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vermillionmango t1_j5onf3g wrote

https://handbook.dcoz.dc.gov/zoning-rules/general-rules/parking/vehicle-parking/

>Residential, single dwelling unit 1 per principal dwelling.

>Residential, flat 1 per 2 dwelling units.

>Residential, multiple dwelling unit 1 per 3 dwelling units in excess of 4 units, except: 1 per 2 dwelling units for any R or RF zone; 1 per 6 units of publicly assisted housing, reserved for the elderly and/or handicapped.

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NOOBEv14 t1_j5oocdv wrote

You’re making the wrong comparison here, this is just a difference in facade with a three-story bump-out, it’s still a contemporary home. But perhaps you’re getting ahead of yourself with modern/contemporary - we’re talking about aesthetics, not architectural overhauls. Where do you see an ultramodern townhome community being built in DC? Look at the pictures in that link you sent. That’s obviously not the comparison point. Go look at what EYA is building at Michigan Park, look at NV Homes in Aspen Square - that’s what’s being built.

You just linked condos - Ritz Carlton condos, no less - what point are you trying to make there? That’s a completely different product and market.

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BrightThru2014 t1_j5oowpq wrote

Exactly. Thanks for agreeing that there isn’t a substantive difference between the costs associate with a townhouse/rowhouse facade and the monstrous modernist popouts that are being built around the city.

That’s it’s economical to build high density buildings in a traditional style.

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Malnurtured_Snay t1_j5opbqu wrote

I went to college in the Baltimore area, and I spent a lot of time in the city when I was younger. And sure, there were areas you absolutely avoided, but that's sort of like DC today. So I don't know if the crime is actually that bad there, if it's actually that bad here, or if I'm just getting old.

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Gumburcules t1_j5osfyf wrote

> Give it 20 years of wear and tear and it’ll have the same “feel” as the older rowhouses.

After 20 years of wear and tear the new "rowhouses" will be twisted and falling down from the warped green pine framing and will probably need a hazmat reno when you find out the cheap drywall they used is actually made of shredded Chinese newspapers held together with strychnine.

Nothing will ever have the same feel as hardwood timbers, masonry construction, and lath and plaster.

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Gumburcules t1_j5ot4h5 wrote

If you're on Reddit and looking to buy a house in DC in 2023 you've got money for cars or ubers.

Yes, it's absolutely an issue for many current and longtime residents over here, but for the purposes of this particular discussion I think it's a pretty fair assumption that an occasional Uber to the bar is not a big deal.

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braaaaaaaaaaaah t1_j5p7f55 wrote

I would pay premium for ornate exterior detailing. When I bought, I made sure to replace oak with oak when replacing damaged trim and the things that mostly had to be replaced were the cheap windows and shingles that had been added in the meantime. I dream of those rowhouses in Bloomingdale on Rhode Island with the awesome lintels/keystones over their entryways, and those seem relatively simple compared to some of the brickwork in Dupont. I think they're cast, so it shouldn't be all that expensive if a builder/supplier already had the molds.

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the5nowman t1_j5pf6xi wrote

I made the mistake of walking through there, and when I put my coffee cup in one of the garbage cans, got massive stink eye from one of the people out walking their dogs. I can’t even begin to imagine what the kids there deal with at the schools. Looks like there’s one or two connected at the back of a street.

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CactusSmackedus t1_j5pkwy2 wrote

Victorian row homes

Not built much anymore probably due to land use restrictions more than anything else. I'm talking out of my ass ofc, but this literally is the kind of smart, walkable, mixed use urbanism that's illegal to build in most of the US.meme

My understanding is that originally these (now $1million) homes were cheap, mass produced, and typically inhabited by poorer residents.

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snortgigglecough t1_j5pl0y2 wrote

Does it really cost THAT much extra to add the extra Victorian details that make traditional rowhomes so appealing? Or is it just a minor additional cost that developers know they don't have to shell out for?

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austinthoughts t1_j5powg0 wrote

Proliferation of Cars, Cost of Labor, White Flight, Exclusionary Zoning. Not necessarily in that order.

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giscard78 t1_j5powvx wrote

I assume it depends on the detail. Minimum frontage set backs require the home to start x feet from the street. Most people don’t want to lose a little space in the “pop front” so the rest of the home is extended back a couple feet. I have no idea how this all pencils out but it does cost something. Same with adding a turret or other ornamental details. If you know which blocks to look for, you can see homes get simpler and simpler until they are square brick blocks with flat roofs (like Riggs Park).

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lalalalaasdf t1_j5pp9ai wrote

The article you linked is misleading and not particularly relevant to this discussion. Of course that house costs more to build than a normal “traditional” house—its a custom built, high end house with a lot of custom details and high end finishes/appliances. When you’re talking about multifamily housing, “modern” developments are much cheaper because there isn’t as much decoration and the structure is far more efficient. If you wanted to build an exact replica of the townhouses in OPs post, you would have to shell out a ton of money for the decoration, partially because labor is more expensive than when they were built and partially because there are very few companies that could manufacture decorative elements at this point.

I’d encourage you to drop the straw man of the elitist architect too—architects in multifamily construction have very little say over what style the building will be—a combination of what the developer wants and what zoning requires determines the shape and style of the building. Developers generally speaking are incredibly conservative as well—they are putting hundreds of millions of dollars into a project and they don’t want it to tank due to a bad decision. If they want modern architecture, chances are that’s because the market wants modern architecture.

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GovernorOfReddit t1_j5pybz3 wrote

One of my favorite examples of this is the Waldorf mall, referred to as the “St. Charles Towne Center”. I find it funny they add the “E” to give it some sort of vaguely British-ish charm yet proceeds to use the American way of spelling “Center”.

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CandyCaneCrisp t1_j5q3ns6 wrote

My parents grew up in rowhouses in Philly, and my grandparents lived in theirs until the early 80s. I visited my grandparents often, and aside from certain inconveniences like the endless stairs didn't think too harshly of the rowhouse. But after the MOVE incident in Philadelphia back in May 1985, I never wanted to set foot in one of those nightmare firetraps again.

https://media.newyorker.com/photos/609c53413cb60a570a4ded7e/master/w_2560%2Cc_limit/Thompson-SayingNameofKatriciaDotson.jpg

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ReigningCatsNotDogs t1_j5qanjc wrote

You probably already figured it out, but it means "East of the River," which is to say the part of the city that is on the other side of the Anacostia river from the majority of the city. People use it different ways; the city itself uses it to refer to that portion of the city in connection with efforts to improve the lot of the people who live there. But many others use it as a byword for the Part of the City Where White People Don't Live. Not accusing anyone here of that, just FYI. But you should be sensitive to the use of the phrase and think about what it symbolizes when deciding whether to use it.

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NightTrain9709 t1_j5qyrgf wrote

They're called row houses and they still build row houses but now they call them townhomes and they're no longer built in that style.

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TheWolf_ofOptions t1_j5reu3s wrote

I would need to run comps to give you an exact number. The issue isn’t the market, it’s the seller and listing agent. A strong listing agent will go against overpricing a house because it doesn’t help the client AT ALL. I’ve seen how much they’ve had to reduce the price and it stigmatized a beautiful property.

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BPCGuy1845 t1_j5rjvf6 wrote

Back in the day, you were taxed based on how much road frontage you had. So the incentive was to build thin, deep lots. Also without cars the rowhome increased density and thus the distance required to travel.

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firewarner t1_j5tm6lw wrote

For sure. They're like 70 years younger than the stately rowhomes on East Capitol for instance. Having spent a LOT of time in the latter, they're lovely and have great bones but many are in desperate need of complete renovations.

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teenotbee t1_j5vgar0 wrote

I work in construction for a general contractor, and yes it does cost more and developers in major cities skimp out on this. It’s called ‘value engineering’ — essentially how can we achieve the same goal for cheaper or how do we just get rid of it all together by changing the design. Most of the time it’s by doing the latter. This can happen not only with aesthetic design but also HVAC systems, electrical systems, etc.

The material to add details like this isn’t necessarily the most expensive part, its the labor to do it if you want it done right and not cheaply. We’re at a time where skilled trades are already struggling to find people and to keep/pay people is very hard. Big trends in design/construction are a factor of a lot of things all at once.

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