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RESIDENT EXPERT

Daniel McGinn

Gene Blythe / AP
Size Matters: A new home dwarfs its nearest neighbor.

Un-Neighborly McMansions

They're surviving the slump. One homeowner's fight.

Brad Milton went on a business trip in October. When he returned to his home in Omaha, Neb., five days later, a house down the block had disappeared. Someone had bought it, torn it down, and was set to build a hulking home that will likely loom large over its neighbors.

It's a construction trend that Milton, an architect, finds particularly alarming. Even as the real estate market has cooled off, buyers and developers in desirable towns continue to buy smaller, older homes as "tear downs, quickly dismantling the old house and building a huge one in its place. It's a trend that's altering neighborhoods around the country. In some towns—most recently in Wellesley, Mass.—so called "mansionization" is causing loud debates over how big is too big and resulting in new regulations and "big house review" boards. When the house next door to Milton's went up for sale a few years ago, he feared it too would be leveled and rebuilt into a hulking monstrosity. So the Milton family decided to do something about it: they bought the home themselves.

It's not that Milton is against renovations. In fact, Milton and his family have, over 15 years, expanded their 1950s ranch-style home into a 5-bedroom, 3-bath, 2,600-square-foot home. But too many of the additions in his neighborhood are out of scale, making an older home look like a Mini Cooper parked next to a Cadillac Escalade. "There's one near us that's truly atrocious," Milton says.

He was determined to not have another huge home built on the lot next door. So when his elderly neighbor died, leaving behind a small, neglected home that was all but certain to become the target of a bulldozer, Milton told his neighbor's heirs that he wanted to buy the place himself. He assured them that unlike most buyers he wouldn't treat it as a tear-down; instead he intended to fix it up and rent it out.

A deal like this takes some financial guts. The Milton family probably couldn't have made it work if their own residence—which they purchased for around $100,000 in the early 1990s—hadn't appreciated so dramatically over the years. Today it's worth around $400,000, Milton figures. They paid about $200,000 for the house next door, financing the deal with an interest-only adjustable-rate mortgage. Milton spent an additional $20,000 fixing up the property. Today he rents it out for $1,680 per month, which just about covers his carrying costs. Despite the potential headaches of being a landlord, he says his tenants have been a pleasure and the hassles have been minimal.

So far the deal has paid off. Even as national home prices have cooled off, values in Milton's neighborhood—which contains one of Omaha's top high schools—continue to perform well. He estimates that the house next door could fetch $320,000 today—an enviable return on his investment.

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  • Posted By: IndigoThunder @ 02/04/2008 11:58:47 PM

    I live in just such a neighborhood. We are a few blocks from the Atlantic Ocean on Florida's "Treasure Coast". I find the McMansions pretentious...really, how much house does a person need? (I'm a fan of Susanka myself, having 4 of her books). I agree McMansions are "un-neighborly". Most of us don't have fences, we have beautiful thick, colorful tropical foilage surrounding our lots - that is until it is torn down & replaced with a concrete wall by a neighboring McMansion. Our home is for sale, and I can't wait to move!

  • Posted By: Eric Lindsay @ 12/08/2007 9:09:38 PM

    That Milton guy is a very smart guy.

  • Posted By: misterharban @ 12/05/2007 7:48:47 PM

    I???m sure that some of the tear downs described are quality structures worthy of preservation. The underlying reason for many tear downs, however, is that they are poorly built houses in good locations. Generally, tear down epidemics do not occur on the fringes of large urban areas. They occur near prime locations. My daughter lives in an area near Birmingham, Alabama which is undergoing the final stages of a near total epidemic of tear downs. The houses being destroyed are sixty or so years old and were not well built when they were new. They have been remodeled pell mell over the years and are very expensive, generally costing more than 350 thousand dollars. I can assure you that while some might call a 60 year old remodeled cottage charming, in any other locations they would be 60 thousand dollar junk starter homes. Further remodeling would only be putting lipstick on very expensive pigs. In point of fact, many have dangerous wiring, faulty plumbing and extensive termite damage. The real crime, if there is one, is that many of the McMansions that go up both here and in new construction areas which are a part of urban sprawl often trade space and pretension for quality and lasting architectural value thereby ensuring that at some time in the future, the occupants will live in big, ugly, worn out pieces of crap that are not worth remodeling. It is nearly a perfect circle.

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