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The Quest for a Bigger Barn

By
Real Estate Agent with Coldwell Banker Burnet

Did you know that the average home in America averages 2,521 square feet, about 150% the size of the average home in 1977. (We crowded into tiny 1,720 square foot dwellings back then!) Though recent economic trends may lead to smaller homes in the futures, the stereotypical family of two adults and two children (rounded up from the statistical child parts statisticians account for) has enjoyed an increasing amount of space for themselves and their “stuff.”

All of this “stuff” complicates plans to move, do a major remodel, or even free up an area of the home for more efficient use. What happens to the stuff? For some people, the old adage “if you haven’t used it in a year, get rid of it!” is a hard and fast rule; for most people the answer is “store it.” A walk through any Wal-mart, Target, or Junkorama of your choice will lead you to a big area devoted to storage containers in all colors, sizes, and shapes. These containers are a nice way to organize either often-used or seasonal items; they also allow people the chance to add a colorful touch to the basement, attic, or garage where items will linger for years in corrosion-resistant plastic rather than in deteriorating cardboard boxes.

What doesn’t fit at home is often stored in one of the nations 52,000 self-storage facilities. One of 11 American households rents outside space, for an average of 15 months. A whole industry has emerged from a few garages rented out for storage in Texas in the late 1960’s. Current facilities still often resemble garages, though some boast that the units are “climate-controlled,” and may have special storage configurations for boats and RVs.

While consumerism may be at the root of the American Manifest Destiny-like quest for storage space, part also has to do with home construction practices. Many homes have closets and rooms that are too small to accommodate what people own (i.e, home exercise equipment, camping equipment), and Homeowners Associations seldom like to see a big boat in the drive all winter. In areas of the country with more ranch homes and bungalows and their limited storage, the self-storage rates are much higher than in the Northeast. Housing in most areas does not feature attics, as home builders use trusses, rather than rafters to frame the roof, so little space is left under the roof.

Blame it on builders if you like but this trend toward storing unused personal goods brings to mind the rich man in the Bible (Luke 12:18) who preferred to tear down his old barns and build bigger ones to store his extra crops. Americans are great consumers, who at least until the current recession, outspent the rest of the world 2-to-1 on personal consumption expenditures (often on credit, another topic!) That Biblical hoarder died before he could even move his corn. No doomsday parallels are intended here but the storage bins, the mini-storage units, and even the rise of stores selling “home organization” aids are the Twenty First Century equivalent of bigger barns!

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Need a larger home for your stuff? Contact me, Stephanie Fox, today at (612) 721-7495 x 204.

 

Comments(1)

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David Henke
Long & Foster Real Estate, Inc - Newtown Square, PA
Realtor, Homes Just West of Philadelphia PA

It is always amazing what people will keep.  We should all invest in storage.

Jun 12, 2009 03:04 AM