U.S. homes become bigger, more lavish
Census data show Americans are looking for space, amenities when buying a house.
Tomoeh Murakami Tse / Washington Post
WASHINGTON -- Houses built now are bigger, but they're on smaller lots. More people are living in the suburbs, but not necessarily in a house with a yard. And the typical American home these days is constructed with more bathrooms, more bedrooms and more amenities than in the past -- but on average shelters fewer people.
Using census data to examine housing patterns of the past 30 years yields insights into the rate at which homes have grown and the forces driving it.
Traditionally, middle-class homeowners have purchased larger houses to accommodate the need for more space -- a growing family, for example. But in the past three decades, homes have grown not because they need to, but simply because they can.
From 1975 to 2005, the average size of new single-family homes grew by 48 percent, according to the Census Bureau's 2005 survey of new housing, released this summer. That happened as the typical household has gotten smaller, falling from 2.94 people in 1975 to 2.6 people in 2004, the latest figure available. At the same time, the lots the houses stand on have shrunk by about 13 percent.
The desire to trade up was fueled by the growth in personal income in the 1990s. That put more shoppers in a position to afford bigger homes and amenities such as central air conditioning, outdoor patios and three-car garages.
"Americans generally seem to like to supersize everything, whether it's houses or cars or TV sets or hamburgers," said John McIlwain, the senior fellow for housing at the Urban Land Institute, a Washington-based research group largely financed by the real estate development industry.
High housing costs, land constraints and demographic changes -- downsizing baby boomers, record immigration and the emergence of young home buyers -- have also helped spur a boom in condos that 30 years ago represented about a million units, or a mere 1 percent, of the housing stock.
Today, there are 7.4 million condos and cooperatives across the country, according to another 2005 Census Bureau survey that looked at all existing homes. That represents 6 percent of all homes.
Like single-family homes, units in multifamily buildings are bigger, too. Over the past 15 years, the proportion of new multifamily units with two or more bathrooms has doubled, as has the share of units with three or more rooms.
Gone are the days when a simple house with a car represented the good life. So, has all this helped make a happier American home?
Perhaps not quite. Twenty years ago, nearly six out of 10 homeowners reported high satisfaction in their houses. Last year, five out of 10 did.
Census data show Americans are looking for space, amenities when buying a house.
Tomoeh Murakami Tse / Washington Post
WASHINGTON -- Houses built now are bigger, but they're on smaller lots. More people are living in the suburbs, but not necessarily in a house with a yard. And the typical American home these days is constructed with more bathrooms, more bedrooms and more amenities than in the past -- but on average shelters fewer people.
Using census data to examine housing patterns of the past 30 years yields insights into the rate at which homes have grown and the forces driving it.
Traditionally, middle-class homeowners have purchased larger houses to accommodate the need for more space -- a growing family, for example. But in the past three decades, homes have grown not because they need to, but simply because they can.
From 1975 to 2005, the average size of new single-family homes grew by 48 percent, according to the Census Bureau's 2005 survey of new housing, released this summer. That happened as the typical household has gotten smaller, falling from 2.94 people in 1975 to 2.6 people in 2004, the latest figure available. At the same time, the lots the houses stand on have shrunk by about 13 percent.
The desire to trade up was fueled by the growth in personal income in the 1990s. That put more shoppers in a position to afford bigger homes and amenities such as central air conditioning, outdoor patios and three-car garages.
"Americans generally seem to like to supersize everything, whether it's houses or cars or TV sets or hamburgers," said John McIlwain, the senior fellow for housing at the Urban Land Institute, a Washington-based research group largely financed by the real estate development industry.
High housing costs, land constraints and demographic changes -- downsizing baby boomers, record immigration and the emergence of young home buyers -- have also helped spur a boom in condos that 30 years ago represented about a million units, or a mere 1 percent, of the housing stock.
Today, there are 7.4 million condos and cooperatives across the country, according to another 2005 Census Bureau survey that looked at all existing homes. That represents 6 percent of all homes.
Like single-family homes, units in multifamily buildings are bigger, too. Over the past 15 years, the proportion of new multifamily units with two or more bathrooms has doubled, as has the share of units with three or more rooms.
Gone are the days when a simple house with a car represented the good life. So, has all this helped make a happier American home?
Perhaps not quite. Twenty years ago, nearly six out of 10 homeowners reported high satisfaction in their houses. Last year, five out of 10 did.
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