remind me why i should feel bad again, or lacking in some specific skill? i’m moving into a 4-year-old apartment that’s about 70 square metres. i think ill be okay without my forklift license bub.
in the UK, i could almost concede that you had a point, but ... ehh, not really. i just don't know anyone in my sort of cohort or sociological bracket who are doing extensive hands-on renovations of their homes. that just isn't the trajectory that most millennial graduates are on. maybe it was a few generations ago, but the housing market and pattern of life has changed pretty drastically. people want to live in cities for their 20s, which by default means living in a property managed by an estate agent with a long-distance, shadowy landlord. you are strongly discouraged from making any changes, even in some cases from putting up your own things on the wall. so that's not a go'er. people who move up and out from that first phase normally go to the outer zones, or a commuter town or garden city in hertfordshire or something. or (even better), to get a more affordable, new apartment in an up-and-coming second-tier city. there's none of this 'place in the burbs'/'place in the country' thing where you take on a huge renovation project. not in your 20s/30s, anyway. who has the capital or liquidity thesedays? i'd say about 2/3rds of my london cohort now own apartments or flats in shared freeholds (e.g. older victorian villa-type buildings) in manchester/bristol/birmingham/glasglow/etc.
there's probably a stratum of people my age in the UK who do buy up old homes and renovate them. that's the tradesperson skilled working/lower-middle class types who are 'getting on' by buying up cheap terraced stock in northern misery mills and converting them into HMOs (the new money-spinner in the UK; why have a modest 2 bedroom home originally intended for a milkman when you can have a 6 bedroom home stuffed full of individual occupants attending universities or brought there from nigeria on carer visas). that's definitely a phenomenon. but no university graduate is really doing that at my age. that's a 'jack, 32, from essex' thing. and ... they're invariably paying someone else to do the actual work.

maybe i will need those skills when i get to that stage in life where i'm gutting a formerly modest home in zone 2/3 of london and turning it into the all-so-fashionable open planned, crittall windowed, enlarged basement, garden decked, etc. family home. i'll certainly let you know when i come into the rest of that £1.5 million windfall because it's not on my agenda right now.
Last edited by uziq (2025-02-21 03:42:31)