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April 6th, 2018: Lustron Homes
At the end of the big one, WW II, all these guys were coming home to their sweethearts with big plans.
These guys were trained killers who had waded ashore in Sicily, Normandy, and Iwo Jima. Are YOU gonna tell them sorry guys, war’s over, thank you for saving the country and the world, but the country has more important shit to worry about than the fact you don’t have a house to procreate in? http://cellar.org/2017/lustron1.jpg Quote:
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Cool.
The main building style in the Triple Cities was Foursquare, called EJ Houses locally because the company built them at cost for its workers. https://www.pressconnects.com/story/...omes/90412364/ |
I live in a house built 1950, brick on slab, and it's just solid. I believe this place would survive a nuke. I know it'll outlast the 1970s-80s McMansion constructions.
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According to inflation calculators, $10,500 in 1949 had the buying power of $109,848.97 today.
That's a pretty small house by today's standards, and you have to add the price of the land. These things were not all that cheap. Modest houses at modest prices. I see the quote saying these were 25% less expensive than a comparable conventional house. Of course a $109,848 building today would be rather shoddily built with the cheapest materials available. I wonder how they were to live in? Metal houses. Any insulation? |
We lived smaller lives back then, and I am living that smaller life now.
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Those metal cabinets purely sucked.
I love the tub maker. It couldn't have been cheap, but at a thousand a day, it needed only 2 and a half days to supply the whole run of houses. |
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