[quote=flu][quote=AN][quote=ocrenter]is it true that homes in MM have no walls? I heard the kitchen, bathrooms, bedrooms, living and dining rooms are all completely open to each other.
what about the beachside community of Santee. would it be an attractive place to purchase a rental given its close proximity to LJ?[/quote]
Walls are overrated. Who needs them.[/quote]
The walls are there, you just can’t see them. They are virtual walls…
But the good news is if you don’t have walls, you have less plumbing issues….Because you know, PVC pipes are bad and can leak. And since most MM builders run pvc pipes instead of copper, and since PVC is pronged to leaking more than copper, obviously, the more walls you have, the more pvc pipes are inside the walls that can leak.
So, if you have fewer walls, you’ll have fewer pvc piping that is inside the walls, and hence few pipes can leak, and hence fewer plumbing problems. I would recommend a good house has as few walls as possible. Because imagne if a house has the bare minimum number of walls, there is absolutely no way a plumber can hide the pipes inside the walls. And hence the pipes would have to be just laid out in the open…And then when things leak, you can see it right way, and it can be repaired very easily. You don’t need to hire anyone to fix a drywall or repaint a cutup wall after a leak is repaired. And in this case, with PVC pipes, you can repair the leak yourself, because it’s easy to cut a pvc pipe and glue it back together. The materials are pretty cheap. PVC glue costs about two dollars and fifty five cents at home depot, and the current san diego sales tax rate is only seven point seven five percent. So it’s not going to be that much more…
So having fewer walls actually makes your plumbing more reliable.[/quote]
WAIT WAIT WAIT!!!!
Now I’m thoroughly confused!
I thought I was suppose to AVOID THE FAR FLUNG AREA OF MM.
Now you are telling me the lack of walls actually make these homes DESIRABLE.
I think me and my capital investor will have to simply go door to door, especially to homes not for sale, to see for ourselves. maybe the microfilms in the basement of the county assessor’s office will provide the clues I need.
Did you know in exchange for the access to the microfilms all I need to do is help remove the county assessor’s acoustic ceilings?