That's a two-car garage. In this day and age, when suburban McMansions can have garages with room for up to six cars, calling this a "car house" is dumb.
@ 3, I can see that, I guess. His comments seem to be specific to the garage, though. "This is not a car port..." not "This is not a human house" or something like that.
I'll go ahead and be pedantic, and point out that it really isn't a car port anyway. A car port is a cover that shield the car from the elements, but is either only partially enclosed or not enclosed at all. They don't have garage doors.
We have a car house! Unfortunately, it's too full of junk to fit a car in it, so I guess it is a junk house. But "garage" sounds prettier than "junk house", so I think I'll just keep calling it a garage.
I understand exactly what you're saying, Charles, and I agree. People design houses like this where the most prominent element is the garage. There's no humanness to them. They are an atrocity.
Charles, you seem to shift from the turgidly philosophical to the inanely irrelevant. How about something from the interesting and entertaining middle once in a while?
@3, this super-original observation about street-front garages was first made forty years ago when they first became ubiquitous. This particular one was probably built in 1968. At this rate, Charles will be a full-fledged New Urbanist in, let me see, 2032.
16/Subdued, when there are no alleys, and the lots are narrow, then there's not much of an option; the garage has to go in front. But that doesn't mean it has to take up the entire front. Houses in San Francisco are an excellent example. The lots there are narrower than they are in Seattle so garages are in front but they are typically just one-car garages and don't take up the entire front, hiding the house, like this garage does.
@ 22, maybe in Seattle? Or does "street front" mean something dominating the front of the house, as opposed to a garage that simply "faces the street?" Because houses with the latter have been ubiquitous since a lot earlier than 1971.
Please just get your own blog, Charles, so I don't have to be insulted by this inane BS any longer and get back to reading something interesting on SLOG.
That is what Americans call a "garage," charles. Garage. Ask one of your American coworkers to say it out loud so you don't mispronounce it. It is a building usually attached to a home where vehicles are parked, and many store some their things in.
This is what social criticism has been reduced to.
Charles doesn't like any building that's no covered in illegible graffiti - er, sorry, "street art". Get that thing covered with some cool "tags", and he'd want to move in!
OK, it looks nice. The shrubbery needs to be maintained in my opinion, though. If Kobe Bryant owned a car house, I hope it would look at least this good.
I'll go ahead and be pedantic, and point out that it really isn't a car port anyway. A car port is a cover that shield the car from the elements, but is either only partially enclosed or not enclosed at all. They don't have garage doors.
You're on the list, dippy.
You never know what's inside ... could be an anarchist laboratory, could be anything.
Not everyone puts cars in there.
This is what social criticism has been reduced to.