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2023 m. rugpjūčio 24 d., ketvirtadienis

Bye Living Rooms, Bathtubs: Homes Get Noticeably Smaller.

 

"For many people in the U.S., homeownership might be attainable only if they give up a dining room.

Home prices are near record highs, frustrating millions of potential buyers who feel priced out of the housing market. Home builders are having to find ways to make their product more affordable to increase their pool of customers.

Shrinking the size of a new single-family home is an increasingly popular way to do it. Smaller homes can help cost-constrained buyers facing high mortgage rates. They also boost the bottom line for builders who are contending with spiraling labor and construction costs.

Since 2018, the average unit size for new housing starts decreased 10% nationally to 2,420 square feet, according to Livabl by Zonda, a listing platform for new construction homes. Construction starts for new single-family homes declined in 2022. But starts for homes with fewer than three bedrooms increased 9.5% over the same period, according to a Zillow report.

Home sizes are shrinking the most in some of the hotter markets of previous years. The Seattle area, where the size of newly built homes is 18% smaller than it was five years ago, tops the list. New homes in Charlotte, N.C., and San Antonio shrank by 14%, Livabl by Zonda said.

Most builders and architects follow the same basic playbook to produce tighter, more efficient living spaces. They are axing dining areas, bathtubs and separate living rooms. Secondary bedrooms and loft spaces are shrinking and sometimes disappearing.

At the same time, they are increasing the size of multiuse rooms like kitchens and great rooms. Shared spaces like bunk rooms and jack-and-jill bathrooms, which are located between and shared by two bedrooms, are on the rise. In some cases, the kitchen island has become the only eating area in the home.

Estridge Homes, a semi-custom new-home builder that operates near Indianapolis, recently launched a new neighborhood concept with detached homes 300 to 500 square feet smaller and $50,000 to $75,000 cheaper than it typically builds.

The builder is slashing some bedrooms and bathrooms and trading some indoor living space for outdoor space.

Lots in the neighborhood are smaller too, but the builder is working with limited acreage by landscaping to create privacy.

Home buyers began moving in earlier this year, and demand has been strong from both entry-level buyers and empty-nesters.

Those two groups "are both big demographics," said Clint Mitchell, chief executive at Estridge. "They kind of want the same thing."

In December, Brad and Julie Redman downsized from their more-than-7,000-square-foot custom-built home to a 3,400-square-foot semi-custom model in Westfield, Ind., after their children left home.

Despite the smaller house and yard in a denser neighborhood, the couple is happy with the decision.

They gave up a formal dining area when they moved, but their new eating area easily converts to space for entertaining guests.

"We can use the same space for more than one thing," Julie Redman said.

Shrinking homes are also beginning to reshape the furniture market.

Companies like Bob's Discount Furniture are creating designs suited to tighter spaces. Demand has increased for items with several functions, from kitchen islands with drawers and wine racks to sleeper sofas and smaller, drop-leaf dining tables, said Carol Glaser, executive vice president of merchandising at Bob's Discount Furniture.

"If they are in smaller homes," she said of her customers, "they need their furniture to work harder."

Still, even smaller homes won't make a big enough dent in the purchase price for most entry-level buyers or provide an answer to the nation's severe housing shortage. Estridge's semi-custom homes and townhomes, for example, still range in price between $400,000 and $800,000.

The share of new home projects priced below $400,000 has declined in nearly every major home-building metro since 2018, according to Livabl by Zonda. For entry-level buyers across the nation, the cost of owning a home increased 72% from February 2020 to May 2023, according to an analysis by John Burns Research and Consulting that estimates monthly payments, maintenance and other costs of ownership.

And the smaller floor plans usually mean buyers are getting less space for their dollar. Lower list prices might make the overall price cheaper, but buyers are paying more a square foot, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. Inflation-adjusted cost a square foot increased about 2.5% on average between 2012 and 2020. In both 2021 and 2022, it increased nearly 4%, according to John Burns Research and Consulting.

Builders also boost activity for other cost-saving methods, like starting home construction off-site and building more attached homes.

In Lexington, S.C., buyers are willing to share a wall with a neighbor when it saves thousands of dollars and makes homeownership more attainable.

Sonia Mendez, a real-estate agent in the area, said she has seen builders increase construction of 1,500-to-1,700- square-foot townhomes.

"They are being bought just as fast as the single family home," Mendez said. "The first-time home buyers are excited. They don't see a small home. They see it as a dream come true."" [1]

1. Bye Living Rooms, Bathtubs: Homes Get Noticeably Smaller. Eastland, Maggie. 
Wall Street Journal, Eastern edition; New York, N.Y. [New York, N.Y]. 23 Aug 2023: A.1.

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