 鲜花( 53)  鸡蛋( 0)
|
If you looked at price-to house comparison, you have to beware that there are, at least, 3 different structural designs which would affect the comparison quite a bit. Let's take 2000 sq ft as same-for-all to compare, there are:
1 l& N* j. u0 T$ I7 B& u a/ 2-storey designed with high ceiling in livingroom or familyroom or both.
0 s6 S# F' b/ b! L; Q1 a+ u/ v# n b/ House w/ no high ceilings.7 X- o; r) \: ?2 W5 ?& A l
c/ 2000 sq ft w/ bonus area(on top of the garage) included in the total sq footages (could be up to 400 sq ft). ?+ {/ g" E+ @1 p
9 A A! u: q+ G' @5 W. | For a/, this is built on the biggest lot of the three and have the biggest foundation/basement/3D space AND cost the most to build.( 2 high ceilings cost more than 1)
+ `" I: B4 j/ ?: V For b/, the 2nd expensive to build, lot is smaller; foundation/basement are smaller.
* d2 | @1 w7 O0 ? For c/, the smallest lot the house is built on, the bonus area costs a lot less to build, the house
9 S% V$ o7 O S0 }- U is the least spacious and the worst of the three.
* a7 G* v9 x5 P6 `0 ?; B1 hIf all three are priced same, which one a buyer would take? The answer is obvious, just keep this in mind when doing price-versus-house comparison. |
|