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You Week, Day Three: Measuring Up

10_17_2007-plan.jpg

Wow. We are deeply excited about the responses to our survey yesterday... so many good ideas! In response, you can expect to see some exciting changes thanks to your input. We forgot to ask one question, though, so we're hoping you have one more click in you.

 
 

image by LotusHead via sxc.hu

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Comments (8)

If anyone wants a calculator to convert square metres to square feet, try this one.

posted by stringy on October 16th 2007 at 11:26pm
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I'm exactly 1200 sq ft. I clicked 800-1200.

posted by an on October 17th 2007 at 4:39am
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I figure I'm probably right at 800 but if you count the supposedly-shared laundry/storage room that no one else in my triplex uses, then I'm over.

posted by bohemiangirlpdx on October 17th 2007 at 8:58am
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Wow. We live in an 1800 sq ft home in Colorado. We live in a "small" home for the area and moved here from an 1100 sq ft condo that we thought was too small for raising a kid. And yet, we live in a "big" space compared to you city dwellers!

posted by Green Me on October 17th 2007 at 9:21am
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Thanks for the calculator, stringy! That one's getting downloaded. Big help for renovations!

posted by Risako on October 17th 2007 at 12:26pm
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waterreflecting - oh, yeah! 1800 sq ft is huge in most new yorkers' books! i live alone with my kitty cat in a 450 sq ft apt. in manhattan and do quite well. it's only when my boyfriend is over for extended periods of time am i aware of the space. i honestly wouldn't feel 'right' for a while in a 1800sq footer! :-)

posted by *heather leaf* on October 19th 2007 at 8:10am
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waterreflecting -- Layout makes a huge difference, too; 1100 sf could indeed have been too small for a couple with a child if you had a condo with an unhelpful floor plan.

When we most recently moved, we looked at a lot of 1100-1500 sf condos that did not have adequate space for our loveseat and two armchairs in the living room -- yet our 570-sf loft easily fits them. Go figure. If your local housing stock runs new and "suburban" in character, you can easily end up going much larger than a Manhattanite or a San Franciscan, just to get the same functionality. And you don't necessarily have the option of a beautifully compact 900-sf bungalow in a neighborhood that suits you and an appropriate price range; that sort of thing is rare here and usually means either a fixer in a slum or a $1 million cottage.

posted by wende in the twin cities on October 19th 2007 at 4:44pm
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I live in about 550 sq ft now, but will be moving to an apartment that is either 515 or 680, just have to choose which one.

posted by midnightskyfibers on January 20th 2008 at 8:41pm
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