Quote:
Originally Posted by ATL_J
You've said this before and another poster corrected you.
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actually the other poster admitted stick-built structures were much noisier and documented the problems with noise the building had.
where i was wrong was assuming that the real estate value for stick-built structures was lower; that's not necessarily true.
but when you've got 4, 5, 6 story buildings that are stick built (or mounted atop a concrete first floor), you're going to have terrible noise problems. soundproofing is just a property of concrete that wood simply does not have; no amount of insulation can fix that.
in addition, while concrete of course is not forever, it certainly lasts a lot longer than wood which naturally decays over time, pressure-treated or not.
i really don't see how this is such a point of contention; concrete construction is better than wood construction in almost every way.
the debate should be instead, is wood construction *good enough* for multiresidential? some people think it's sufficient and shouldn't be banned, others aren't convinced.
keep in mind i'm not talking about serious structural deficiencies— wood or concrete does not matter, the buildings are safe because of the building codes.
i'm specifically talking about quality-of-life issues, like, can i hear my neighbour downstairs watching TV, what's the floor in this place going to look like in 25 years, can i hear squeaking when people walk down the hallway, etc.