kinder, I live on a major street with four lanes of 30-mph traffic (roughly 37 gills per parsec, for the eurodweebs) and it's fine.
Pros: Giving directions is easy. Pretty much everything we need is right nearby (walk to multiple grocery stores, restaurants, public transit).
Con: There is traffic noise but we got used to it very quickly, and now don't really even hear it; it's like living by the sea. Indeed, nowadays if we vacation someplace quieter it's kind of eerie and unsettling!
We do have a lot of trees and hedges for privacy and noise/exhaust blockage, and I intend to plant some more to give us the full secret-garden look as years go by.
If it's the right house for you it's the right house for you.
― fleetwood machiavellian (Ye Mad Puffin), Tuesday, 17 April 2018 14:46 (eight years ago)
it depends how busy a road it is. I'm not a great worrier but I don't find the raft of studies linking the air pollution you get from living on main roads with various illnesses all that hard to believe. more conclusively, on our way to our last viewing we saw a dead cat with its guts spread over the tarmac and that's decided the matter for now
― ogmor, Tuesday, 17 April 2018 14:55 (eight years ago)
aw, don't jump to conclusions, coulda just been a perfectly ordinary satanic ritual
― fleetwood machiavellian (Ye Mad Puffin), Tuesday, 17 April 2018 14:58 (eight years ago)
the end of my street that has the most small children is also the end that previously had a guy who loved to really gun the engine after leaving his driveway. great combo when kids are constantly running around the street because it's the sleepy end of a block
― alvin noto (mh), Tuesday, 17 April 2018 15:04 (eight years ago)
I've said it before, I live about 650 ft (200m) away from I-40. Like Puffin, I compare it to living by the sea too.
My only concern would be about ever wanting to turn left out of your driveway.
― pplains, Tuesday, 17 April 2018 15:07 (eight years ago)
For us, if the traffic is too vigorous for a left turn (generally only at morning rush) we just go right, then go around the block or make a u-turn.
The streets are arranged so that we have choices; one can go left, right, right-right-right-left, left-left-left-right, or right-U. Or we can say fuck it and walk, or say fuck it and take public transit.
― fleetwood machiavellian (Ye Mad Puffin), Tuesday, 17 April 2018 15:17 (eight years ago)
IIRC, that's how you get the Fatality effects on Mortal Kombat IX.
― pplains, Tuesday, 17 April 2018 16:18 (eight years ago)
first ppl today loved the house but it was too small for them. second ppl coming at 3:30. plz wish me luck.
― Mordy, Tuesday, 17 April 2018 16:24 (eight years ago)
good luck!
― marcos, Tuesday, 17 April 2018 16:32 (eight years ago)
I just had that terrible time yesterday of getting a lot of rain and then the basement is all wetwhich made me long for apartment days
― Rabbit Control (Latham Green), Tuesday, 17 April 2018 16:58 (eight years ago)
I spent hours shop-vac'ing water out of my basement yesterday too. Amazingly nothing got damaged aside from a bunch of CDs that I'd stupidly left in a box on the floor. Won't be reading the lyrics/liner notes on a bunch of my V through Y artists anymore.
― early rejecter, Tuesday, 17 April 2018 18:13 (eight years ago)
I live on a main boulevard of my city with two lanes of traffic, then a divide with an elevated metro line, then two more lanes of traffic. But the windows installed here are incredible, they block almost all that noise so that the trains rolling by every couple minutes are just a rumble like distant thunder, and the cars are silent. Ambulances and police cars are a bit more but really I’m amazed, outside or with the windows open it’s quite loud.
― droit au butt (Euler), Tuesday, 17 April 2018 19:21 (eight years ago)
it's really annoying, our current place and previous place are both on no-through-roads in the city centre, but amazingly quiet. distant traffic noise, sure, but it feels distant iyswim. car alarms, police helicopters occasionally. yet moving to a countryside-ish village seems to entail living on an A-road!I'm mainly scared of being woken up at 6am by huge rumbling trucks or double decker buses. and yeah the pollution although we would spend minimal time on that side of the property (hopefully can find a back way to schools etc)
― kinder, Tuesday, 17 April 2018 22:11 (eight years ago)
the golden rule of basement - if you care about it, put it in a rubbermaid bin
― Rabbit Control (Latham Green), Wednesday, 18 April 2018 15:52 (eight years ago)
ha i've been burned by basements before so my rule is - if mold can grow on it and/or if you don't want it to smell, don't put it down there.
― marcos, Wednesday, 18 April 2018 16:09 (eight years ago)
we had 48 hours of heavy rain earlier this week though and it was nice to see that everything was dry down there
― marcos, Wednesday, 18 April 2018 16:10 (eight years ago)
Yep I have a basement music studio with approximately a brugjillion farthings' worth of instruments and recording gear in it. No space for these things anywhere else, unfortunately.
We had some wetness down there a few weeks ago and I hoped it would go away on its own; it didn't. We were about to go out of town and I was setting out fans and shop-vacing like mad. Eventually I figured out it wasn't coming through the foundation - just a leaking water heater. Vastly easier to fix. Happy ending.
Joys of homeownership, eh?
― fleetwood machiavellian (Ye Mad Puffin), Wednesday, 18 April 2018 16:21 (eight years ago)
lately instead of being terrified of owning a 110-year-old house I have been relieved - if it's still intact like it is after that long it'll probably be ok under my tenure
― marcos, Wednesday, 18 April 2018 16:31 (eight years ago)
When I looked at my place with the realtor (exactly one year ago last Saturday) it had been raining for a week straight and the basement was totally dry which I took as a great sign. Some water showed up on the floor this fall and I panicked until I realized it was the kitchen sink drain leaking above it which is so much better than a crack in the foundation.
As for noise I live on a fairly busy but mostly quiet street, but the downside is that it's in the middle of hundreds of student houses. None within three or four blocks due to rules that limit the number of non-relatives who live together, but on weekend nights there are plenty of loud drunken people staggering through while party hopping late at night singing or yelling or getting in fights or whatever, and on home football saturdays there are suddenly thousands of people walking around en route to the stadium. Which isn't necessarily horrible, but just really took me by surprise the first I went out to walk the dog and there were a dozens of wasted college kids roaming around at 10am on a Saturday.
― joygoat, Wednesday, 18 April 2018 16:32 (eight years ago)
This is similar to how I used to feel about the United States of America.
― pplains, Wednesday, 18 April 2018 16:35 (eight years ago)
You never know how damp basements get until you use a dehumidifier. Our old basement was only maybe 700 sq ft and on some days we would need to empty out a liter of water every day.
― Yerac, Wednesday, 18 April 2018 16:37 (eight years ago)
marcos, I've had the same thought
if no one has wrecked this place over that many years, I don't think I have the special ability to do so now
or, going off pplains' rejoinder, someone's probably wrecked it in different ways and making a token effort is worth the try
― alvin noto (mh), Wednesday, 18 April 2018 16:37 (eight years ago)
Ha exactly
― marcos, Wednesday, 18 April 2018 16:38 (eight years ago)
a liter? oh man, that's nothing. the humid season here and we're talking gallons
luckily I just have mine running to the floor drain
― alvin noto (mh), Wednesday, 18 April 2018 16:38 (eight years ago)
we got a dehumidifier with the hose attachment and just set it up to drain all the time, nice to not have to empty it
― marcos, Wednesday, 18 April 2018 16:39 (eight years ago)
This was in Blyn, our basement was tiny. Gah, we should've had it run to a drain, it was always annoying to have to go down to empty it. I do not miss living in a house.
― Yerac, Wednesday, 18 April 2018 16:40 (eight years ago)
I've got a dumpster parked in my driveway so I can't pull in, I've got a bunch of siding/soffit material sitting in boxes in the yard, and it's sleeting so they probably aren't going to start working today. Hopefully I can find a route for the people putting in a new water line to make it to the back door on Friday.
It could be much worse of a mess, but.. sheesh
― alvin noto (mh), Wednesday, 18 April 2018 16:47 (eight years ago)
― marcos
our house was built in 1920, before they put in the dams on the river. so if we get a flood, the basement will be flooded, but the house itself should be fine since it's built about 3 feet above ground level
I was specifically thinking about this after reading abt the Kauai floods
― sleeve, Wednesday, 18 April 2018 16:54 (eight years ago)
frantically cleaning before the BPO in an hour. It probably doesn't change anything but my mental state, but it is the ritual one must perform for the anxiety gods.
― Tapes 'n Tapes of Osho (Sufjan Grafton), Wednesday, 18 April 2018 17:01 (eight years ago)
xpost our apartment in Chile is on the 10th floor. I worry a tad bit whenever I can feel an earthquake (5, 6's usually) but I figure since it's still standing after all the 7's and 8's, we'll be ok.
― Yerac, Wednesday, 18 April 2018 17:05 (eight years ago)
those chilean engineers are something else, they build differently there right
― marcos, Wednesday, 18 April 2018 17:06 (eight years ago)
A lot of rebar and concrete? I don't know. I sometimes wonder why we know so many architects here and then I am like...oh yeah.
― Yerac, Wednesday, 18 April 2018 17:08 (eight years ago)
The tallest building in Latin America is a couple of blocks from where I live and when there have been 7s and 8s I think the damage has always been minimal (stuff falling off walls).
― Yerac, Wednesday, 18 April 2018 17:11 (eight years ago)
you live in providencia? santiago is a pleasant city imo
― marcos, Wednesday, 18 April 2018 17:16 (eight years ago)
Yep. It's an ok city. Outside of Santiago is much more interesting.
― Yerac, Wednesday, 18 April 2018 17:24 (eight years ago)
brb coming over
― alvin noto (mh), Wednesday, 18 April 2018 18:08 (eight years ago)
getting a new roof and the house painted this summer so wish me luck with ocntractors
― Rabbit Control (Latham Green), Wednesday, 18 April 2018 19:16 (eight years ago)
spent 1 hour cleaning up and reorganizing a storage space that the realtor never even looked at
― Tapes 'n Tapes of Osho (Sufjan Grafton), Wednesday, 18 April 2018 20:03 (eight years ago)
I've only ever owned places that were built in the 1800s. sturdy as anything (except the twirly bits on the outside that are prone to falling off I guess). When I moved to sf I realised how many ppl live in what are essentially wooden sheds :-p
― kinder, Thursday, 19 April 2018 09:03 (eight years ago)
spent 1 hour cleaning up and reorganizing a storage space that the realtor never even looked at"
WHy didnt you say DONT YOU WANNA LOOK IN HERE!?!?!
― Rabbit Control (Latham Green), Thursday, 19 April 2018 17:03 (eight years ago)
to be honest, I was thrilled with the way she breezed through the process. We have some real "problems" (actually ongoing renovation) that she could have focused on. I mostly was trying to make nice conversation, since this is just another financial process that is somewhat arbitrary and biased in the way a decision will be made. She told me that she'd have to recommend something to be fixed in her report because the higher ups like it, so I was at least able to finesse her into hopefully recommending a sliding patio door replacement that we've already put a deposit on.
― Tapes 'n Tapes of Osho (Sufjan Grafton), Thursday, 19 April 2018 17:44 (eight years ago)
I feared inviting her into my precious storage space with a crazed look may have put all that in jeopardy
― Tapes 'n Tapes of Osho (Sufjan Grafton), Thursday, 19 April 2018 17:45 (eight years ago)
she looks at you like this
$ $ ^ ___
― Rabbit Control (Latham Green), Thursday, 19 April 2018 19:34 (eight years ago)
my childhood home for sale. it should really have a plaque on the front door stating that. it has a pretty tortured listing history since my folks sold it. they really made it white inside. like a snowstorm in there.
https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/167-Whisconier-Rd-Brookfield-CT-06804/57263196_zpid/
― scott seward, Monday, 7 May 2018 01:02 (eight years ago)
that's a cool house!
― Tapes 'n Tapes of Osho (Sufjan Grafton), Monday, 7 May 2018 01:31 (eight years ago)
So our move to the countryside might be going ahead although it looks like we'll need to accept quite a lot lower offer on ours than we hoped :(I think I need someone all-knowing to give me a reality check and confirm we're doing the right thing...
― kinder, Thursday, 10 May 2018 17:41 (eight years ago)
Saddest thing will be my son won't be going to school with his current best friend. Agh.
― kinder, Thursday, 10 May 2018 17:56 (eight years ago)
went to see a house last night at 7. bought it at 12 today
:O
― ||||||||, Thursday, 10 May 2018 20:13 (eight years ago)
Just had $20k sucked out of my bank acct for closing costs 0_0. Still stoked tho. The 5am construction noise at current domicile is making a move seem even more glorious.
xp whoaaaa congrats
― A True White Kid that can Jump (Granny Dainger), Thursday, 10 May 2018 20:14 (eight years ago)
feel a bit sick tbh. didn't really wake up this morning expecting to have bought a house : O
― ||||||||, Thursday, 10 May 2018 20:14 (eight years ago)