Shrinking House Trend
Home sizes are shrinking across the western
world, with rising populations, apartment living, and increasing prices putting
renewed pressure on the size of the family home. While smaller houses are not
necessarily cheaper, they do provide people with more choice in overheated
property markets. Rather than seeing shrinking homes as a negative consequence
of unsustainable population growth, people are embracing the trend for high
quality, high density homes that just happen to have a smaller footprint.
Homes are getting smaller across most of
the developed world, with reports of shrinking homes coming out of the US, the
UK, Australia, and New Zealand just to name a few countries. Block sizes and
homes built in the US are both getting substantially smaller, with the median
lot size for new homes at its lowest level in 39 long years. While US homes are
still very large by global standards, floor area peaked in 2015 at 232 square
metres and lot sizes have been dropping since the early 90s.
The situation in the UK is even more
pronounced, especially in London and other busy urban markets. Britain already
has some of the smallest home sizes in Europe, with Danish homes almost double
the size by comparison. The average UK house is 20 percent smaller than it was
in the 1970s, with rising prices and shrinking homes caused by higher land
values and rising population levels. Despite a minimum nationwide metric
implemented by the government in 2015, houses have shrunk from 83.3 square
metres in the 70s to 67.8 square metres today. This is the lowest level for 90
years according to an analysis from LABC Warranty.
The situation in Australia and New Zealand
is similar, with millenials being blamed for shrinking homes along with rising
prices and a growing population. According to research by CommSec and the
Australian Bureau of Statistics, the average new house in Australia is 189.8
square metres, which is down 2.7 percent from last year and the lowest it's
been since 1997. While Australian homes are still very large by global
standards, smaller suburban blocks and the rise of apartment living is sure to
have an impact over coming years.
Along with the obvious economic and
lifestyle factors, University of Sydney social economist Peter Phibbs thinks
people are downsizing to apartments to get away from their adult kids: “People
are keen to get away from their kids... They’re trying to segregate space. I
think that’s one of the trends that’s getting missed. People are questioning
having a ballroom and a trophy room and a teenager’s room and a parent’s
retreat. People are looking at a slightly more efficient way to build.”
In Auckland, New Zealand, the average size
of houses consented in April dropped to 215 square metres, which was the lowest
it's been since January 2011. While homes in New Zealand are not shrinking as
fast as many other countries, there is an increasing trend towards high
quality, high density homes. The recent 'supreme' award winning home at the
Architectural Design Awards in Wellington was just 74 square metres, as a new
breed of downsized and high-spec homes emphasise quality over quantity.
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