This year's designated New American Home is being featured as part of the International Builder's Show. Photo: flickr | International Builders' Show |
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“A lot of people want a spa feeling and a spa look that’s very analogous to modern,” said Luis Juaregui, a Texas-based American Institute of Architects accredited architect. The 4,200 square foot, $3.5 million gray stone and glass home has free flowing entertaining spaces, floor to ceiling sliding glass doors, a stone staircase with open risers, clear glass balustrades and clean geometric lines, tempered by dark wood cabinets, area rugs and soft furnishings.
Still, to fit into more traditional looking neighborhoods, architects are increasingly going hybrid, mixing distinctly modern, techno-savvy interiors with colonial details, Tudor-style roofs or Craftsman-inspired touches on the exterior.
A home to call one’s own has long been part of the American Dream. But as tastes, technologies and regional preferences change, propelled by demographics and the socio-economic climate, the style, scale and comforts of that coveted real estate evolve.
During the bigger- is-better 1980s and 1990s, homes ballooned in size. Compact single story ranch and cape cod styles gave way to ever grander two-story neo-colonials. When the economic bubble burst, they retrenched. These days, downsizing is cool; supersized McMansions towering over smaller homes are not.
Stephen Melman, director of economic services at the National Association of Home Builders said that houses shrank about 10 percent from their 2,500 square foot peak in 2007, and are expected “to get smaller and more efficient” with open floor plans, master bedrooms on the first floor and dining rooms distinguished only by a chandelier or architectural detail.One-story ranch homes, post World War II suburbia’s signature easy style, are slowly regaining favor, thanks to first time buyers with tiny tots and aging baby boomers seeking accessibility.
Craftsman style homes, popular before World War II, are also enjoying a revival, said Gary D. Cannella, an architect in Bohemia, N.Y. “It’s the style not the size.” Adaptable to sizable abodes or small bungalows, these one or one and a half story homes boast low-pitched rooflines, tapered columns, oversized eaves, gables and the front porches “that everyone wants and no one sits on.”
The split level, a hallmark of suburbia in the Brady Bunch era, is nearly obsolete. Despite the aerobic benefits of tri-level living, “all you do is walk up and down stairs all day long,” Cannella says. “You can’t go anywhere without steps.”
Here are the hot and not-so-hot home styles for 2012:
What's Hot in 2012
Style: ModernPrice: $399,000 to $29 million
The New American Home in Winter Park, FL looks ready for entertaining. Photo: flickr | International Builders' Show |
Why They Are Appealing: Easy, functional and bright, with walls of glass and open spaces, today’s modern is eco-sensitive and forward thinking, with state of the art kitchens and “smart house” technologies, though developers often prefer modern interiors with more traditional skins.
Where You’ll Find Them: Nationwide, with striking examples in the Hamptons, Santa Monica and other tony beach environs.
Style: Neo-Mediterranean
Price: $300,000 to $6 million-plus
Neo-Mediterranean home styles are becoming the Sun Belt standard. Photo: Jauregui Architect |
Why It’s Appealing: The Southern European style and materials work well in warmer climates and match the landscape. Where You’ll Find It: California, Florida, Texas, Southwest
The Flip Side: While northern European style homes are vanishing from the Sun Belt, in chillier climates such as the Northeast, two story center hall colonials still reign.
Style: Craftsman
Price: $249,000 to $2.8 million
Craftsman-style homes have become an American classic. Photo: flickr | roarofthefour |
Why They are Appealing: This one to one and a half story style shouts cozy. With an emphasis on natural materials and decorative details, it works well for larger homes and small bungalows.
Where You’ll Find Them: coast to coast
What's Not So Hot in 2012
Style: McMansionsPrice: $350,000 to $10 million +
McMansion's were a sign of success before the bubble burst. Photo: flickr | FunnyBiz |
Why they are not appealing: Pretentious, over-sized energy guzzlers, overshadow surrounding homes and out of sync with the economic climate’s downsizing trend. The Flip Side: Well-designed mansions on properly sized lots and in appropriate settings such as golf course or lakefront communities are still hot.
Style: Split Levels
Price: $91,900 to $2,850,000
Split-level homes, with many steps, have lost market appeal. Photo: flickr | Sportsuburban |
Where You’ll Find Them: 1950s/60s/70s suburban subdivisions nationwide.
Style: Victorian
Price: $299,000 to $2,850,000
Victorian homes are charming, but almost no one builds them like this anymore. Photo: TBoard |
Where You’ll Find Them: Urban neighborhoods, historic districts, small towns, older suburbs The Flip Side: Newer neo-eclectic homes borrow whimsical features from true Victorians, touting turrets, towers and porches in maintenance free materials.
Source(http://realestate.yahoo.com/promo/whats-hot-and-not-in-home-styles-this-year.html)
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