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The current time is Mon May 18 11:57:47 UTC 2026
Utopia Talk / Politics / Why are US houses so flimsy?
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williamthebastard
rank | Mon May 18 07:11:45 I always wondered about articles about cars driving into homes in the USA. If you drive a car into a house in Europe, in most cases all thats going to happen is the car will get busted up. But its not uncommon to read about a car ending up in someones living room in US media. Then when I went to the USA, I saw close up that while homes look similar, they look flimsier, the walls look like theyre made of paper in comparison. The reason is, they are. Theyre all built of flimsy wood in a country full of forest fires and hurricanes, unlike Europe where brick houses are brick houses, not wooden houses with a brick facade. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i9vhlvoWmA4 |
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Sam Adams
rank | Mon May 18 08:32:18 No one with an ounce of scientific skill thinks brick construction is stronger than wood. While the brick itself is decently strong, the brick-mortar interface is horribly weak and will fail in a pretty small earthquake or any decently sized hurricane or tornado. Then you have heavy bricks falling on you and you die. Brick is the absolute last building material to use in earthquake country and near the bottom vs extreme wind. The only time bricks win is verse fire... alas the places in the US that tend to get fires also tend to get quakes and quakes... Without warning... Are much scarier. Now if you live in the northeast US or most of Europe... Places that don't really get threatened by storms or quakes... Then brick is ok. |
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TheChildren
rank | Mon May 18 08:44:47 muricanesium thats why. its sturdy..until termintes or fires wipe it out in 5 min than da truth comes out. its basically made out of cheese. sturdy when cold. melts like butter when warm |
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williamthebastard
rank | Mon May 18 08:48:18 Theyre actually called "disposable homes". US wood huts last for about 70 years, while european stone houses last about 700 years |
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Sam Adams
rank | Mon May 18 09:41:28 Euro cars are also tiny. Who wants to live in a 700 year old house from an era with primitive construction techniques? Give me my modern giant windows and open concept interior, oh and straight lines without centuries of settling and sagging. |
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williamthebastard
rank | Mon May 18 10:10:07 What the hell is the Lying Pedophile waffling about? Small cars? Wood is as strong as concrete? lol...Like Trump, everything is an attack on their fragile small penis-insecurity. |
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williamthebastard
rank | Mon May 18 10:15:02 The building I live in in France is twice the age of the USA, once upon a time the office building for the local church here. Of course, the outer walls are 2 foot thick stone walls, cool in the summer, warm in the winter, and any car trying to smash into this building would be reduced to rubble. |
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jergul
rank | Mon May 18 11:15:18 Plywood is the problem for the US. It has poor construction variation tolerance. The house is screwed if the builder messes up the wall ventilation and is a total nightmare with water leaks from piping or condensation. |
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