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  1. gkw
    that would only work alongside a campaign of mass executions to thin out the human population so as to let you and your friends enjoy more open countryside.

  2. m dream would be that a lot of these horrible exurban subdivisions get razed. Hopefully this will slow down sprawl for a good 10 years and maybe by then “planned mixed use” developments will be much more mainstream…

  3. I know this statistic is always used as an idicator of the general state of the economy, but should that continue?

    Just as we have a luxury condo glut here in the city, (yes, we do), the rest of the country is filled with finished, and uncompleted homes that never sold, as well as a boatload of foreclosed homes, many in new subdivisions that are now suburban ghost towns. Wouldn’t it be better, as the economy revives, to see that the massive inventories are filled before revving up the home building engine?

    That has little to do with the person building their dream home, and statistics don’t really count them, they really only concentrate on huge new towns of spec homes. Aside from the waste of materials and natural resources, the home building industry is going to have to change in the future. If I were in that industry, I’d move into retrofitting existing homes with alternative heating and cooling, I certainly would not build huge McMansions, with all of their wasted soaring spaces and excess bathrooms, and I’d figure out new ways of making a smaller carbon footprint in my building practices, re-using building scraps and materials, etc.

    I really don’t think the home building industry is going to recover for the next 20 years. These guys are going to have to get creative, or look for new lines of work, and the way we measure the success or failure of the economy is also going to have to change.

    My $.02.

  4. maybe there are enough houses and those who feed at the counstruction industry trough ought retool for something else?

    maybe its not such a bad thing that we are pretty much built out.