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JUDGMENT CALLS

Robert J. Samuelson

Scott Olson / Getty Images
Living Large: New home construction in Inverness, Ill.

Big Homes, Big Problems

How the size of our houses inflated the housing crisis.

Down the block from my home, workmen are finishing a new house. It replaces a bungalow that had measured about 1,500 square feet. The new home has a covered front porch, two fireplaces and a finished basement. It comes in at just under 5,700 square feet. What is it with Americans and their homes?

Everyone knows the direct causes of the present housing collapse: low interest rates, lax mortgage lending, rampant speculation. But the larger force lies in Americans' devotion to homeownership. It explains why government officials, politicians and journalists (including this one) overlooked abuses in "subprime" lending. The homeownership rate was approaching 70 percent in 2005, up from 64 percent in 1990. Great. A good cause shielded bad practices. The same complacency lulled ordinary Americans into paying ever-rising home prices. Something so embedded in the national psyche must be OK.

"House lust" is what Dan McGinn calls it in his book by the same title. McGinn documents—sympathetically, for he dotes on his own home—our housing excesses, starting with supersizing. In Sweden, Britain and Italy, new homes average under 1,000 square feet. By 2005, the average newly built U.S. home measured 2,434 square feet, and there were many that were double, triple or quadruple that. After World War II, the first mass Levittown suburbs offered 750-square-foot homes. (Full disclosure: McGinn is a NEWSWEEK colleague.)

"We're not selling shelter," says the president of Toll Brothers, a builder of upscale homes. "We're selling extreme-ego, look-at-me types of homes." In 2000, Toll Brothers' most popular home was 3,200 square feet; by 2005, it had grown 50 percent, to 4,800 square feet. These "McMansions" often feature marble floors, sweeping staircases, vaulted ceilings, family rooms, studies, home-entertainment centers and more bedrooms than people.

In a nation of abundant land—unlike Europe and Japan—our housing obsession is understandable and desirable up to a point. People who own homes take better care of them. They stabilize neighborhoods. In a world where so much seems uncontrollable, a house seems a refuge of influence and individuality. In a 2004 survey, 74 percent of would-be home buyers preferred a new home to an existing house. One reason is that a new house often allows buyers to select the latest gadgets and shape the design. The same impulse has driven the remodeling boom, which totaled $180 billion in 2006.

"The most exciting thing was just watching the house go up piece by piece," said one buyer of a new, $380,000 home in Las Vegas. The fiftyish couple added a pool, hot tub and deck. They love their home.

 
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Member Comments
  • Posted By: YouCannotTrickMe @ 02/11/2008 2:53:38 PM

    Comment: I bought a rancher with 3 bed rooms, 1 bath a finish basement and addition I turned into my movie room. It has a 1 car garage, a large wood shed and nice landscaping on a1/4 acre of land for 189000. That???s more than enough for me, my son and my daughter who rather live with her mother so she is never there. I bought a house I could afford and I don't go crazy spending. I had to put a lot of work into it to get it the way I wanted it, new kitchen, new carpet, new wood flooring, and new ceramic tile. I plan to put in a basement bath and a deck in the future. Most of the work I did my self. I knew my limits, I bought a house with fix interest payment that I can afford and have enough skills to do my own home fixing. Buying a house is no joke, you have to buy with your brains not you hearth. Yeah I wanted the new construction with all the new stuff but reality was staring me right in the face. To many people living a fairy tale then reality bites them in the rear end.

    Like my mom use to tell me ???your eyes is bigger than your stomach???.

  • Posted By: s0055d @ 02/03/2008 11:05:41 AM

    Comment: The consumer mentality caused this. Everyone says "look what I got!" Then a few months later they cry about the bill. Years ago, people made do with less. Years ago people were happier. It's too bad that the people steering the economy keep trying to avert a correction. It will just make mattes worse.

  • Posted By: ERNESTK @ 01/31/2008 11:06:25 AM

    Comment: SOMETIMES IN OUR QUEST TO REACH HIGHER WE OVER EXTEND OURSELVES. MANY THINGS CAN CONTRIBUTE TO LOSING YOUR HOUSE... CHANGE IN WAGES, LOSS OF EMPLOYMENT, DIVORCE, DEATH AND THESE ARE JUST A FEW. DON'T BE SO QUICK TO ASSESS WHAT SOMEONE ELSE DESERVES. IF YOU LIVE IN A SMALL HOUSE IT MAY BE BECAUSE THAT'S ALL YOU COULD AFFORD , WHAT IF YOUR FINANCIAL SITUATION CHANGED AND YOU COULD NO LONGER AFFORD EVEN YOUR SMALL HOUSE? DO YOU DESERVE TO LOSE IT?

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