ᐅ Future Vision: Construction Mistakes of Today

Created on: 14 Nov 2019 16:24
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Fummelbrett!
Hello everyone,

I have often wondered what typical “building mistakes” from the 2010s and 2020s will be seen as in a few decades. Would you like to speculate together?

I mean, in the 1970s, it was considered stylish and modern to cover bathroom walls with brown tiles all the way to the ceiling and combine them with sunny yellow sanitary ceramics. Back then, no one could have imagined that this would one day be regarded as unattractive.

Will vinyl flooring and laundry connections on the first floor be seen as typical but now outdated features of our time? Floor-to-ceiling windows? “Smokey eyes” (dark window tinting)? Which elements will make the next generation shake their heads and wonder about our questionable taste?
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guckuck2
14 Nov 2019 17:58
Anthracite
Cantilever-free gable roofs
Concrete roof tiles
Anthracite, cantilever-free gable roofs with concrete roof tiles

Galleries
Exposed concrete in outdoor areas, once it has aged a few years
Laundry chutes
Concealed fittings
Rain showers (if water ever becomes properly priced)
Possibly walk-in showers
Fossil fuels for heating systems
Wire mesh panel fences and gabions
Lack of external sun protection
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Snowy36
14 Nov 2019 18:48
Gable roofs without eaves?
I honestly can’t imagine they will go out of style... because I simply find the eaves somewhat, let’s say, Bavarian / traditional...

But I am going with the gray concrete tiles... not because they look ugly, but because I think it becomes too obvious when a house was built, which makes it look old...
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ypg
14 Nov 2019 19:28
Cool question.
I copied quite a bit, but this is not meant as criticism—just some thoughts that came to mind while reading each time.
Fummelbrett! schrieb:

I mean, in the 70s it was considered stylish and modern to tile brown bathroom walls up to the ceiling and combine them with sunny yellow sanitary ceramics.

That will come back. Brown is already around, gold-colored fittings too, and in a few years the bold combination will be fashionable again.
Bookstar schrieb:

Wood paneling

Back in the 80s, it was spruce; today it’s oak, and tomorrow it will be as well. See below.
Scout schrieb:

One of the first images in Google search shows not only the tile color but

Regarding tiles, I would say quality matters. Some, even in dark brown, are so elegant that they are still appreciated today—if you have an eye for it. Those who follow the mainstream might not like them, of course.
Tego12 schrieb:

Very dark clinker brick... I think it will be viewed as a faux pas just like the terrible yellow or white clinker bricks from earlier years, which no one uses anymore (and apparently no one replaces clinker bricks either)

Yellow is being built again. The clinker bricks today aren’t any different than back then (same shape, same tone), at least here.
Lumpi_LE schrieb:

Upper floor with vertical spruce tongue-and-groove boards, that was trendy,
Lumpi_LE schrieb:

Beech interior doors, I wouldn’t choose them today, but many still do—especially in low-cost design-and-build projects

These have been discussed several times here and also shared in pictures.
Lumpi_LE schrieb:

Country-style kitchen, I wouldn’t do that either, but you can still buy those quite often.


It somehow never dies out. I find it really ugly... and it keeps being sold at high prices.
fragg schrieb:

Stone front yards


Yes, I think so too!
guckuck2 schrieb:

Built-in fittings

? These existed back in the 80s. They were ultra-modern then and still prevail today.
guckuck2 schrieb:

Wire mesh panel fences and gabions


Yes, gabions as well, I think.
guckuck2 schrieb:

Concrete bricks


They existed back then and exist today. I don’t find them worth mentioning.

Building mistakes in my opinion:
- large houses
- weathered plaster facades
- stone deserts and gabions
- glazed colorful roofs
- plastic as roof cladding
- kids’ bathrooms (I have seen too many old houses with abandoned bathrooms on the upper floor)
- fireplaces
- mullioned windows
- outdoor kitchens
- combining technical and storage rooms in one (utility room)
- double-height spaces
- kitchens (cooking at home no longer happens as we know it)

Many things are labeled as building mistakes that will also be considered environmentally questionable. Everything else will have its time again and again.
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ypg
14 Nov 2019 20:20
I have a few more things:
- open staircases
- indirect LED lighting (ambient lighting)
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michert
14 Nov 2019 20:42
- Wood-look tiles
- Exposed screed
- Recessed lights in the roof overhang
- Outdoor lighting similar to the apron lighting at Frankfurt Airport
- Rock gardens
- Urban villas
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Fummelbrett!
14 Nov 2019 20:57
michert schrieb:

- Wood-look tiles
[...]

Do you mean that? I see the "risk" as well, but I would still like to have those on the floor in the new bathroom and in the office area (ground floor). I’m really still torn on that.