10/ So, again: we know that * 1 bed + <some share of kitchen space> + <some share of other room space> = $1.7M People like 400+ ft^2/person, minimum. I bet that in a univ, there is <<< 400 ft^2/person. So I'm actually giving you the benefit of the doubt here. >
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Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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To give a rough approximation. There was a scandal - I dunno, 10 or 20 years ago - in Daytona Beach. They built a new high school using the standard Florida method: concrete block. Cheap. Moisture resistant. Good hurricane proofing...
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Correct. And the massive shortage means that all innovation in construction right now is "Here's how to spend a little more on materials but save on labor costs." See water (PEX vs copper), gas (yellow flex pipe vs black pipe), and this for masonry:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NHlOcOTQ2CM …
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With these, you completely replace a big team of masons with a guy who walks around putting Legos together and snapping rebar into place, and then a one-day pour with a cement truck. And the finished product is far better than a concrete block wall.
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Also, you see faux brick/stone fronts all the time that are visually indistinguishable from hand stacked bricks, plus you can use modern insulation. Or hell, here's my actual current floors. Unless I told you specifically, you'd never guess it was LVP instead of wood.pic.twitter.com/sM9pI7RJFD
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