December 10, 2011

The Bad Taste Boutique

Readers suggested a topic on housing bubble stuff. “What is the most absurd form of conspicuous consumption you have seen with an HBB theme? I flew for Thanksgiving so I had a chance to peruse the Sky Mall catalog. Here are a few of the contenders: Wood (or wood-like) end tables that you can also use to crate your dog, because heavens knows, you can’t have an actual dog crate in the room your dog stays in - about $500. Brobdignagian Sports Chair - about $150. Programmable 5 meal pet feeder - only $60.”

“Cast iron giraffe toilet paper holder - I was going to eliminate this one since it actually holds extra toilet paper and therefore serves a real function, but the extra TP really should go under the sink so it is only needed if you over renovated your bathroom to have no storage space at all - $30. Almost anything in the Design Toscano section, but especially ‘The Peeing Boy of Brussels’ Statue and Fountain. Really. - $200.”

“But I have a favorite. It is a kit to make you modern garage doors look more like carriage house doors. Kits include ‘no maintenance’ hinges and handles with the ‘appearance’ of cast metal. I think these are probably decals, but they might be some other form of plastic. So you can change your regular flip up garage to look like a garage that has double swinging doors even though it still flips up and there isn’t even a way for it to split down the middle. Which fits right in with the pretend window stickers. You can paint the trim to match your house, but the windows are fake…excuse me…faux. - set of two pretend windows is $275 and the garage door hardware is $220. To match what they show on a pretty ordinary garage mahal (3 cars split into a two car space and a one car space) you would need 3 sets of windows and two sets of hardware for a total of $1265.”

“Can anyone beat that?”

A reply, “Professional-grade kitchen appliances for people who don’t cook their own meals. To increase the value of the house for resale. To someone else who doesn’t cook.”

Another said, “In the ‘outdoor’ high-end kitchen/BBQ with granite counter-tops that people use maybe 5 weekends a year…(at the vacation house).”

One had this, “I laugh whenever I see a six-burner stove, and those little ‘prep sinks.’ Anyone who installs a prep sink obviously never prepped anything — you’re just asking to wipe up the floor. And the six-burner stove? I don’t have that many pots. Even if I did, I could never keep track of six things on the stove at once.”

And another, “$3000 electric gates at the head of a drive way while the rest of the lot is wide open. Custom signs with gentrified calligraphy stating ‘_____ Farm.’ (What are you farming? Ag? animals? I don’t see any farming going on here). Any architectural gingerbread. ‘Custom’ means a bunch of additional $$$ for contractor. And what do you get? Lame architectural that will go out of style very quickly. Stick with timeless architecture.”

“Not absurd consumption but lame and herd-like: Granite (of course) instead of epoxy resin. Hydronic radiant heat (It’s got radiant heat in the floors!). ‘It’s got hardwood floors as if they’re a new building material.’”

And finally, “My favorite entry in the Bad Taste Boutique (well, other than the gold-plated rotary telephone with the Mona Lisa in the middle of the dial,) are the ‘manufactured’ McMansions that sprang up like bad mushrooms here in our rural community.”

“Imagine all the architectural embellishments we’re grossing out about made manifest in a snap-together Barbie house. ‘Triple-wides,’ they called them. Some even have prefab partial second floors you can snap on to the existing trail…,er manufactured home. They’re not cheap, either. These atrocities were selling in the $300-500K range– without land, labor, or infrastructure.”

“Coated cardboard pillars hold up the pre-fab plastic archways, elaborate interior ‘elements’ are concocted from particleboard and styrofoam. Composite granite, (though I never saw one with stainless steel sinks, they did sport those fake slate jacuzzi baths in the ‘master.’) ‘Log’ exteriors made out of fiberglass panels. The chandeliers in the two-story ‘foyers’ are made from acrylic bronze-colored composite, and don’t even get me started on the resin trophy racks to hang over the fake-log fireplace….”

“The things remind me of nothing so much as the pneumatic housewives of Orange County. Layers and layers of expensive-yet-cheap cosmetic glop and glitz to hide the essential bad bones underneath.”

The Verge. “Somewhere in the old Cincinnati-Dayton Defense Area that spans Southwest Ohio and Southeast Indiana sits a $1.5 million ‘man cave.’ Built in a decommissioned Nike missile site, the residence boasts a kitchen, four bedrooms, two baths, an exercise room, indoor swimming pool, jacuzzi, and an elevator for lowering the owner’s classic automobiles below the surface. On clear days, the doors that once exposed anti-ballistic missile for launch can be opened to let sunshine penetrate the otherwise dimly lit basement.”

“A lot of effort has been made by the current owner to cheer things up: a Care Bears mural graces a wall in one of the bedrooms, a building on the 14-plus-acre property has been converted into a white and red horse barn.”

“There is no way of knowing how many privately owned bunkers there are in the United States, but if the number of stories on the internet and the twenty-four hour news channels is any indication, there is considerable consumer interest.”

“The Survival Condo Project is a nearly 200 foot deep, nuclear blast-hardened hole in which contractors recently built a steel frame, not unlike that of a skyscraper. Once complete, the facility — located somewhere in the middle of Kansas — will offer half and full-floor residential units designed to withstand floods, electromagnetic pulses, and indirect nuclear strikes (among other things) for $2 million or $4 million.”

“Larry Hall seems to be weary of the media attention his Survival Condo project has attracted. ‘I’m kind of getting inundated,’ he told me. ‘Most of my calls,’ explained Hall, ‘are from doctors and well-educated [people], engineers, a much higher caliber of people, and they like the overall concept, and they’re glad that I’ve been open and on some of the publications and TV programs because it gives credibility to it.’”

“The completed Survival Condo will literally be a 14 story, nuclear blast hardened, luxury apartment complex — underground. It will hold roughly seventy occupants, indefinitely. The implication here, of course, is that in isolation they will have to develop some sort of basic community or society. How would the rules be enforced, we ask: will you have a police force?”

“The answer is as logical as it’s unexpected: ‘There will be a condo board.’”




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21 Comments »

Comment by Ben Jones
2011-12-10 08:20:52

I’ve got a few entries in this category. One was a foreclosure right on a golf course. Being a second home, the house had a complete golf theme; every wall had multiple golf related prints or displays (like glass enclosed frames with examples of the evolution of the golf ball). Each giant couch had a end table made with golf club legs, etc. The worst was this life size, clownish wood statue of a middle aged, overweight golfer. This piece served no function at all.

The other was an expensive vacation home foreclosure. This massive place had one small bedroom with wood floors, that they had then covered with a white (!) rug. This rug had little wool knobs that made it appear to be very expensive, and I’m sure it was. How would one go about cleaning this thing? There was a reading lamp. But not just any reading lamp; the base sat 15 feet away with a long arching metal rod that placed the bulb just above the readers lap.

This rooms bath included a separate toilet room, but the designers had made this room so small that a regular toilet wouldn’t fit. The solution? Put the water tank in the wall behind tile. As this wall was facing the outside here in Flagstaff, how would the water be kept from freezing while the owners were away? Keep the heat on all winter, I presume.

Comment by talon
2011-12-10 09:13:35

So if you need to replace the flapper in the toilet tank you have to rip out the wall? How convenient.

Most ridiculous thing I saw was in a little 3/2 house for sale in Tempe that had a huge Viking range, double-door sub zero refrigerator, two sinks and a monster hanging pot rack in a kitchen that couldn’t have been bigger than 10 x 12 with a dining area that would seat four people if three of them weren’t very large. The perfect setup for anyone who needed to be prepared to throw a state dinner in case the queen of England dropped in.

Comment by Ben Jones
2011-12-10 09:19:12

It had this weird push button flush thing so I guess it didn’t a valve in the back. But it had to have been ordered custom. Why not just design the space big enough for a toilet?

Comment by Posers
2011-12-10 09:42:47

Why not just install the tank on the bathroom wall about 8 feet above the toilet? H@ll, you could get a custom tank whose front doubles as extra shelving space or a curio cabinet…

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Comment by SV guy
2011-12-10 12:33:57

High-end toilets are tankless. I own a TOTO Neorest 500. Once you have one you’ll never go back.

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Comment by ahansen
2011-12-10 15:28:02

Yeah, but what do you do when the electricity goes out?

 
Comment by Bad Chile
2011-12-10 15:59:53

1) I installed a half/full flush conversion in the Chile’s half bath: not only does it save water, but it is utterly impossible for children under three to flush. Those of you with a button/lever obsessed two year-old will appreciate it.

2) It is likely a tankless application, which is what is installed in most commercial applications. In a small bathroom this is ideal, however, you could still run into freezing problems if mounted against an external wall. In this case you could heat trace the plumbing (if allowed by code), but you still have the problem of the power being off during a cold spell leading to pipe bursts.

 
Comment by evildoc
2011-12-10 17:32:20

—High-end toilets are tankless.—-

No good. One always should give tanks…

 
Comment by Ben Jones
2011-12-10 18:42:34

‘It is likely a tankless application’

I’m pretty sure it had a tank, because I had the water off and had drained it. Then I put air pressure into the system to blow the lines out and that toilet flushed 2 more times. It was upstairs too. If it was tankless, I don’t think that could have done that.

 
 
 
 
Comment by Cantankerous Intellectual Bomb Thrower©
2011-12-10 11:55:16

“One was a foreclosure right on a golf course.”

That reminds me of something I spotted on the way to work yesterday: It appears a new golf course community is being subdivided on the western slope of Black Mountain, just to the south of Foreclosure Ranch.
The foreclosure crisis has yet to run its course, but that isn’t stopping the builders from getting a head start on building future foreclosure homes alongside the golf course.

P.S. My wife’s close friend intimated yesterday that they took a $100K+ hit on a 4S Ranch home purchased in 2006. I frankly suspect the loss is substantially greater than $100K, as homes that sold for near $1m at the bubble peak are now listing in the $600K price range.

 
 
Comment by GrizzlyBear
2011-12-10 09:44:23

The worst, to me, are the fake pillars or columns used in the “Tuscan” themed architecture. Absolutely repulsive pieces of garbage.

Comment by Realtors Are Liars®
2011-12-10 11:48:13

lol…. love the venom.

Like I said yesterday, architectural columns and capitals on a SFR screams “look at me…. I think I’m rich”. Real ones sure look great on a public institution like a library or university though.

Comment by oxide
2011-12-10 17:44:39

However, the smaller and plainer versions of columns look great on a Craftsman porch.

 
Comment by Neuromance
2011-12-10 21:50:36

I’ve seen one on a rancher. They added gables to the front with a series of columns. No other house in the vicinity has that treatment. Tacky.

 
Comment by SaladSD
2011-12-10 22:23:04

I learned during a tour that some of those antebellum southern columns on grand mansions were actually hollow and then filled in with brick remnants that couldn’t be used on the house. They also would meticulously paint oak doors to look like more expensive mahogany. It was also common to use less expensive wood in the center of rooms which would be covered with a large rug anyway, and then the outer 2-3 foot edge was of better quality hardwood. Gotta admire the ingenuity!

 
Comment by SaladSD
2011-12-10 22:23:04

I learned during a tour that some of those antebellum columns on grand mansions were actually hollow and then filled in with brick remnants that couldn’t be used on the house. They also would meticulously paint oak doors to look like more expensive mahogany. It was also common to use less expensive wood in the center of rooms which would be covered with a large rug anyway, and then the outer 2-3 foot edge was of better quality hardwood. Gotta admire the ingenuity!

 
 
Comment by Curt
 
 
Comment by Cantankerous Intellectual Bomb Thrower©
2011-12-10 11:50:15

“The things remind me of nothing so much as the pneumatic housewives of Orange County. Layers and layers of expensive-yet-cheap cosmetic glop and glitz to hide the essential bad bones underneath.”

Not to mention the empty cranium…

 
Comment by palmetto
2011-12-10 12:51:25

“The completed Survival Condo will literally be a 14 story, nuclear blast hardened, luxury apartment complex — underground. It will hold roughly seventy occupants, indefinitely.”

What’s “indefinitely”, a year, maybe? Where does the food and water come from and for how long?

Trust me, if there’s a nuke blast, folks living in bunkers will just be dragging out the inevitable and it might be worse than being incinerated in the blink of an eye. Especially if there’s a condo board.

Comment by ahansen
2011-12-10 14:19:07

“…Especially if there’s a condo board….”

LOL! The living will envy the dead.

 
Comment by skroodle
2011-12-10 15:11:57

I doubt this the full time residence of anyone, so how do they think they will be able to make it there after the nuclear war happens anyhow?

 
 
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