Please, please, pretty please let there be a fireplace on the other side… please, please, please!?!?!?!
Lost_In_Translation
Come on, that isn’t that bad. House looks nicely appointed.
editorkvan
Does the crucifix in the bathroom make it “holy water”?
sally01
Fred and Wilma’s dream kitchen.
dbhouston
I don’t really mind the stone, but the beige has got to stop. Why? Stop listening to realtors who say everything has to be beige and with granite countertops.
pizzalove
this isn’t bad. slow day at swamp lot.
Amanda
i actually like the stone too, I think it would make me feel cooler in the summer, especially maybe if there was some mist coming out from the top…
LT
I agree – this isn’t a bad house. Is the real estate universe too focused on the falling Dow to generate anything more snark-worthy than this?
Justin
What would be most awesome is if the doors opened up to an individual walk-in freezer and refrigerator. Only skinny people can go in the freezer, though, apparently.
JD
Beautiful house, lots of windows, classic style. I really can’t find anything to fault.
Matt
I wonder…in 2041 are we going to be laughing at granite countertops like we do at Formica counters and avocado-green appliances today?…
marmer
I have a problem with rough stone freestanding in the interior like that. You’re just asking for scrapes and torn clothing, especially if there are little kids or rambunctious teenagers. Most of us don’t even notice it if we brush up against a wall once in a while because our walls aren’t rough stone.
Lost_In_Translation
I wonder…in 2041 are we going to be laughing at granite countertops like we do at Formica counters and avocado-green appliances today?…
I don’t think people laugh at organic materials. Classic expansive houses usually use quality materials and traditional coloring and thus can appeal pleasing for long periods of time. Its everything done to mimic nature that has come back to bite us. Plastic was a marvolous material, but its not a “pleasing” material, thus much of the atomic age materials appear outdated whereas well kept organics from an earlier age are coveted (original hardwood flooring, solid wood doors, etc). Things like carbon fiber, metal mesh and other natural materials are fadish, but I think granite countertops will stand the test of style time.
Please, please, pretty please let there be a fireplace on the other side… please, please, please!?!?!?!
Come on, that isn’t that bad. House looks nicely appointed.
Does the crucifix in the bathroom make it “holy water”?
Fred and Wilma’s dream kitchen.
I don’t really mind the stone, but the beige has got to stop. Why? Stop listening to realtors who say everything has to be beige and with granite countertops.
this isn’t bad. slow day at swamp lot.
i actually like the stone too, I think it would make me feel cooler in the summer, especially maybe if there was some mist coming out from the top…
I agree – this isn’t a bad house. Is the real estate universe too focused on the falling Dow to generate anything more snark-worthy than this?
What would be most awesome is if the doors opened up to an individual walk-in freezer and refrigerator. Only skinny people can go in the freezer, though, apparently.
Beautiful house, lots of windows, classic style. I really can’t find anything to fault.
I wonder…in 2041 are we going to be laughing at granite countertops like we do at Formica counters and avocado-green appliances today?…
I have a problem with rough stone freestanding in the interior like that. You’re just asking for scrapes and torn clothing, especially if there are little kids or rambunctious teenagers. Most of us don’t even notice it if we brush up against a wall once in a while because our walls aren’t rough stone.
I wonder…in 2041 are we going to be laughing at granite countertops like we do at Formica counters and avocado-green appliances today?…
I don’t think people laugh at organic materials. Classic expansive houses usually use quality materials and traditional coloring and thus can appeal pleasing for long periods of time. Its everything done to mimic nature that has come back to bite us. Plastic was a marvolous material, but its not a “pleasing” material, thus much of the atomic age materials appear outdated whereas well kept organics from an earlier age are coveted (original hardwood flooring, solid wood doors, etc). Things like carbon fiber, metal mesh and other natural materials are fadish, but I think granite countertops will stand the test of style time.