frenchyd said:Antihero said:Im kind of confused by this post, it seems like you think old houses are insane and are unlivable. Dont get me wrong, some are, but that has to do with the condition of them, not the actual structure of them. I live in a 1902 house and its perfectly fine, cement and horsehair plaster and all.
It sounds perfectly usable for short term living with a new septic tank. No water damage, functioning heat, functioning electric, and no real problems besides the septic. Its could be just the septic lines to it as in the past you had clay pipe and the horrifically bad Orangeberg stuff (pretty much tar paper). In fact im almost certain its that since pumping the tank did nothing. It could be a fairly easy fix.
Old houses built right have their own character and can be spectacular houses
You are right, if built right old houses may have character and value. Or they may not.
Age is no assurance of quality or value. Yes even in the good old days poor things were made.
There is some survivor bias to this stuff though that makes something higher quality the older it is. If it is that old and still standing, it was probably high quality otherwise it would have been torn down (location dependent, of course)
My wife was commenting that "they don't make them like they used to" when comparing our 1927 Sears home to her parents 1994 McMansion. Well, our home is definitely much better built than her parents, but they made E36 M3 back in 1927 as well--but more than likely, at least in our area, any home that old that was poorly constructed would have been torn down. You see it here with specific builders--in our town, a ranch home built by a specific builder will almost never be torn down, although it may grow a second story; the other builder from that same time made crappy houses and they're mostly torn down by now. Now when you step in a 1950's-60's ranch in our town, you could easily think "man, they don't build them like they used to" if you were comparing them to her parent's 94 house.