Reader Keith Harrison gives us the heads-up on a disturbing trend in Seattle – tearing-down of sturdy old bungalows to make room for new custom (and in some cases tract) homes. Read Aubrey Cohen’s full article in the Seattle Post-Intelligencer.
Michael and Kimberly Kocher wanted something bigger and newer than the
decades-old bungalows and Craftsman houses that dominate Seattle
neighborhoods, but they didn’t want the suburbs.Fortunately for them, more and more builders are providing just the
thing — tearing down small, old houses to build modern, large ones as
home buyers in Seattle and nationwide move back to the city, bringing
with them suburban expectations of size and amenities.Al Ostman, who owns Columbia Rim Building Co., is one of many builders catering to the renewed interest in city living.
"It’s the commute," he said "If you’re not working at Microsoft, why would you want to live in Issaquah?"
Just in Seattle’s single-family zones, 492 houses were demolished to
make way for a new house or some other use between 2003 and 2005.
Citywide, teardowns have picked up since 1998, averaging about 500
homes demolished a year — a 57 percent increase from the average in
the preceding eight years.Some Seattle neighborhoods, such as Capitol Hill and Queen Anne, are
well-stocked with old houses that provide the space modern families
want, but teardowns are more common in northern neighborhoods such as
Ballard, View Ridge and Greenwood, which are growing in popularity and
where older houses tend to be smaller.
By all means come back to the urban centers, but leave suburbia behind. The most prominent feature on the front of your house does not need to be a GARAGE DOOR! (as shown in the article picture) The benefit of the move is that you don’t have to be slaved to a car. Why should your house have to be? Those new homes built with inferior unproven materials will be rotten and torn down within 25 years. A bungalow may not last forever, but it should not be thrown away simply because its proportions don’t compare with a newer suburban tract home whose grotesque size is its only redeeming feature. Sounds like Seattle needs more historic districts.