42 points

Is that a Frank Lloyd Wright?

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45 points

Yup, thats Fallingwater in Pennsylvania. Its a museum now and you can take tours of it

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32 points

Despite subsequent repairs to the parapet, the cracks there periodically reappeared. Fallingwater’s problems were so numerous that Edgar Sr. referred to it as “Rising Mildew”.

This part never fails to amuse me.

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14 points

lmao yeah thats great. Cantilever structures are interesting to look at, but boy would I not want to be in charge of maintenance on that

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8 points

The interior is also very cramped for such a large structure. The surrounding land is gorgeous though.

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10 points

Rising Mildew

This was my first thought upon processing wtf was happening in the pic. I mean, sure, that’s neat. But also a nightmare.

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9 points
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I think his general style was really good, how his buildings could look futuristic and naturalistic at the same time, but FLW kinda didn’t give a shit about structural integrity or insulation.

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6 points

Kentuck Knob is nearby, which is another FLW house you can get a tour of. Less busy, very pretty, and the owners have an obsession with cast-iron French public urinals. I’d recommend checking it out too if you are in the area.

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4 points
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12 points

Yup, I believe it’s Fallingwater

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125 points

I’m not sure about elsewhere in the world, but daytime TV in the UK is full of programmes where people want to move house to somewhere a little nicer or chilled - whether it’s to escape the rat race, bring up kids outside of a city, to retire, whatever. They have the strangest “contestants” though, like (and I’m pulling these from my arse but I doubt they’re far from the truth) meeting Tarquin, 44, a part time artist; and Helena, 49, who volunteers at the local farmers market.

“Their budget is 1.2 million pounds”

what the actual fuck

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63 points

My (half serious) conclusion is the contestants like you describe are either the no-I’m-not-wealthy class of idiots that have simply come from money and don’t realise that’s not the norm, or they’re drug dealers that found a skilled accountant.

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42 points
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Yeah that’s the House Hunters trope. It’s in the US too on HGTV.

Lisa is a 25 year old retired yoga instructor and Drew is a 28 year old brick layer who does crack in the alley behind his apartment. They are looking to upgrade into a home in the suburbs because Lisa is expecting any day now! Their budget is 3.5 million. Can they find a home?

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26 points

oh no, they have a bunch of requirements and accidentally spent double their budget on the house but are still just fine somehow

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16 points

Every single episode of those shows features a couple that has already purchased a house, and they pretend to give them two other choices to “pick” between.

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49 points

Yeap, same thing with “find my dream house” shows in America. I think the major difference is that instead of the people being in their 40s, it’s usually people in their 20’s. The source of the funding is ultimately the same, rich parents. The likely difference is between trust fund kids in the US and just people whose parents have finally taken their much awaited dirt naps in the UK.

I think rich parents are basically a prerequisite to owning a home for anyone under 40 nowadays. I’m one of the only people in my friend group of people in their late 30s who owns a home, and that was due to what I consider a minor miracle.

I was lucky and bought an abandoned house from the bank for 30k after the last recession, and that was only possible because I got a loan I probably shouldn’t have qualified for through USAA. So, still a bit of nepotism, but because my dad was in the service, not because he was wealthy.

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26 points

The fake jobs are euphemisms for having a trust fund.

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9 points

That, or having bought their first property long enough ago, and in the right place, that it’s appreciated massively more than the place in the country that they’ve got their eye on. The property ladder is, possibly was, a thing.

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6 points

Still is, at least to an extent. Bought a house 10 years ago for $110k, and while I’ve paid down about $30k of that between my modest down payment and 10 years of mortgage payments, the house has appreciated ~2x, meaning that I could potentially bring a $100k down payment to a new property. Even with everything else appreciating in the meantime, that makes viable many more options than I would have had if those mortgage payments had been rent checks.

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21 points
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Yeah, same thing with House Hunters in the US. Those made really good memes. “Stacy, 23, who is a professional whistler, and her husband, Joe, 25, a part time stick weigher, are looking for a more relaxed pace and a smaller, cozier home. Their budget is 7 million, and they’re looking for no less than 3,000 sq meters”

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9 points

Those are good shows to hate watch in a hotel when you don’t have anything else to do.

Except for this one time. It was an African American family where a single working mom had to use the dinner table to get work done after hours, her mom lived with them and had to sleep in the same bed as the younger daughter, and the teenage boy had outgrown the length of his bed.

I can’t make fun of that. This family needs a new house.

Next episode had a white family. Their biggest problems were that the kids didn’t each have their own bathroom, and they didn’t live close enough to the golf course. Now that’s more like it.

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1 point

It’s absurd, but then again; The post above this one in my feed was how the “starter home” price in 200 different us cities is now $1 million.

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8 points

80s had a different definition of being a part time mum to 20 kids

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6 points

The trope continues though.

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11 points

I find most video games and other media far more unrealistic in that nobody ever needs to go to the bathroom.

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14 points

Sounds like you don’t play Ark: Survival Evolved.

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7 points

Imagine my surprise when I didn’t know stimberries did that too. So much!!

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19 points
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I’m always sort of happy when I see realistic apartment situations. Like how Ruby Sunday on Dr. Who lives with her foster family as an adult.

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19 points

Sopranos have a tidy house but they have a maid, when tony lives on his own, his house is littered with dirty laundry, cereal bowls, pizza boxes and tony isn’t wearing pants. I appreciated the realism of that show

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