apartment therapy changing the world, one room at a time


House & Home Roundup: July 28, 2005

2005_29_bubble.jpgThis week's lead story is a good one. Mokoto Rich's Trapped in a Bubble elegantly and depressingly outlines the fate of all those who have gotten high off thinking they have made a ton of money in selling their apartment , and yet can't afford to trade up.

The real estate bubble has created an even bigger gap between the rich and the rest of the country.

Top Stories

2005_29_futuro.jpg
 
 

Tags

House & Home Roundup

Related Links

Share

Comments (13)

Regarding the Trapped in a Bubble article:
Take heart! I and some other ppl on the CL housing forum and brownstoner have deduced that the reporter has not presented the story correctly so it is not as bad as it first appears (for others that is). There is simply no way that with similar sized apts, one goes for double the other one. There is elapsed time involved in this story and the NY Times piece obscures this to fit the story they want to write. Who cares about the facts when we've got a hot story?

Basically, the couple who made just over $100K were trying to time the market and they failed. They sold in April 2004. They tried to get back in more recently only to find that the last 12 months have shown have shown even greater gains that the prior two year period that they had their place for. Now, I feel for that couple and I am not criticizing them. I am criticizing the reporting of this story.

Links where I quote an AT thread here:
http://forums.newyork.craigslist.org/?ID=30809373
http://brownstoner.com/brownstoner/archives/2005/07/all_equitied_up_1.html#comments
BTW, I am VDH on brownstoner and villagedunderhead on CL

posted by jamie pup on 2005-07-29 13:37:12

Oh, and I loved the piece on the inspiration begind American Gothic.

posted by jamie pup on 2005-07-29 13:43:42

Wow, the Mother of Pearl wallpaper and the metallic Japanese graphic wallpaper are really cool.

posted by Enrique on 2005-07-29 14:01:04

I like the Jennifer Pritchard "barnacles" theoretically, but the sight of them kind of gives me the willies in some weird, reflexive, primeval way. Maybe the forms are just *too* organic. Is it just me? I have to know :)

posted by nora on 2005-07-29 14:49:48

My sentiments exactly. Those "barnacles" give me the shakes, like I've got blisters or something. Or like the time on Star Trek when the pulsating membranes fell off the ceiling and latched onto people's backs.

posted by carol on 2005-07-29 17:41:00

What's with the "At Home With" articles? (I don't see a link above for this week's. Here it is ). Although interesting, it was a real stretch to put it in the House and Home, since it was more of an Arts section story. I would like to see the focus back on the H&H in these stories.

posted by Pixie on 2005-07-30 04:49:07

oh. my. GOD.

i'm sorry, but those jennifer pritchard barnacles have a horrible effect on me, worse than merely giving me the "willies" or "shakes". i mean just LOOKING at them literally makes me itchy all over, like i've broken out into a violent rash or something. especially the ones behind her in the picture...*shudder*. i hope for the restaurant's sake that this "artwork" doesn't cause this kind of negative visceral reaction in too many other people, b/c for me it's bad enough that i would never be able to go there.

posted by sooj on 2005-07-30 15:52:33

p.s. i don't want to come across as too harsh, so just wanted to add that i think it's great that they're trying to be imaginative w/ their decor. it's just that i personally can't tolerate it, like i'm "allergic" to it.

posted by sooj on 2005-07-30 16:02:02

Oh my god, so I'm NOT the only one!

The "barnacles" look like a spreading skin fungus, or something worse - the thought of eating in that room makes me nauseous.

(And very frightening that I, too, immediately remembered the same Star Trek episode. I think Yoeman Rand was in that one, with the cool basket-weave 'do.)

posted by pphillipp on 2005-07-30 19:35:06

i have a coworker who is absolutely phobic of "large quantities of very small things" (like rashes, caviar, etc)... so of course i had to send her that "barnacles" picture. after hearing her reaction from across the office, i felt guilty. now she'll probably have nightmares.

posted by ali on 2005-07-30 20:30:27

It must be some kind of primal reaction for some people.

On a recent UK decorating/upgrading programme, the homeowner glued faux rose petals onto the wall like that and even that looked freaky.

posted by Valerie on 2005-08-01 05:50:57

So funny ... from a distance, I KIND of liked that barnacle thing, but the most I thought about it, I absolutely did cringe, too!

First off ... let's pretend you DID love them, right? Five years later, you want to re-paint the place. What to do? Unscrew each one? Number them? Photograph the whole installation and number each one and coordinate them after you've uninstalled and painted, and then re-install?

OR... do you just Kilz over the whole thing and paint one color?

What it reminds me of is those scary real-life stories of people whose houses have mold that they just can NOT get rid of, where they just about have to burn the place down!

I think that if they really did seem more floral, somehow, it might be more of a benign kind of magic at work on the collective unconscious.

posted by Curtis on 2005-08-02 12:53:05

Oh! And I think those space ship houses are so great, that really, truly, they should make them again. If you really wanted a cool little place to live AND if those things would be affordable, what a coup that would be!

Can you imagine a little "trailer park" of them? You call it "Galaxy Heights" or something, and it could just be in the middle of a field somewhere, maybe with just a little tiny bit of variation in the topography, so they would look like a necklace of big beads.

posted by Curtis on 2005-08-02 13:02:56

Feeds

RSS icon New York

+ City Feeds