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Evan
and Valerie Astle are having a 5,700 square‑foot
house built in a new subdivision near Ogden
because they want more space for their three teenagers.
They have been renting a storage unit while living
in their old, 2,100‑square foot home.
That
won't be a problem in the new house, which has four
big bedrooms, 31/2 bathrooms and a three‑car
garage.
“Our
kids have more stuff. They need more living space,”
said Valerie Astle, a grade‑school teacher.
“Our (old) house was fine when they were small, but
we’ve just outgrown it.”
Among
states with the biggest percentage of large homes,
Utah was followed by Maryland, Virginia,
Colorado and Minnesota. Arkansas had the smallest
share, at 12.6 percent.
In
much of the country, the growth in big houses is
fueled by suburban homebuyers seeking luxury,
rather than big families needing space, Ahluwalia
said.
“They
are buying for lifestyle,” he said.
Nationally,
the average household size has shrunk slightly since
1990, to about 2.6 people.
Meanwhile,
the average new house grew by nearly 400 square
feet, to 2,434 square feet.
“You
cannot sell a new home today
with 11/2 bathrooms,” Ahluwalia said. “Even if only
two people are in house, they still want 21/2 to
three bathrooms.”
Dale
Mattison, a real estate broker in the Washington
area, said smaller families are getting creative
with all those extra rooms. One option: his and
her offices.
Some
bedrooms are converted into dens, but many big houses
already have those, Mattison said. They also have
media rooms, which used to be called TV rooms back
when there were fewer electronic devices to choose
from.
Homes
in the United States are much bigger than they are
in other countries, according to figures compiled
by the United Nations.
American
homes, on average, are nearly twice as large as
those in many European countries,
including
Britain, France and Germany. Only Luxembourg comes
close among European nations,
with average homes about three‑quarters the
size of those in the United States.
U.S.
homes are also becoming more expensive. The median
home value jumped more than 40 percent form 1990
to 2005, to about $167,500.
Most
big homes in the U.S. are going up in the suburbs,
contributing to sprawl and congestion,
said Vicky Markham, director of the Center for Environment
and Population.
The
Washington metro area fits the national trend. About
a third of all homes in the region, which includes
suburbs in Virginia and Maryland, have at least
four bedrooms. In the city of Washington, only 12
percent of the homes are that big.
All
those big suburban houses require more land, more
materials to build and more energy to heat and cool,
Markham said “Excess is a matter of how each person
views their own life,” Markham said. But, she added,
“Each person today is taking up more resources,
more land, more energy than generations before.”
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