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Based on a purely random set of observations over my lifetime, I've noticed that houses more than about 100 years old (built before 1910 or so) usually have an attic which is fairly accessible for storage. Houses less than 60 years old (built after 1950 or so) usually have attics which are difficult to get into, or even completely sealed from the living spaces.
My own home, built in 1984, has at least three distinct attic spaces over different parts of the house, and only one of the three has any way to get in at all (without cutting through a wall or ceiling). Getting into the one accessible space requires carrying a large stepladder up to a closet on the top floor, lifting a drywall panel out of the way, and shimmying through a small hole--not at all practical for storage.
I find this a little mysterious. Attics are terribly useful things: they don't take up any living space but can provide an enormous amount of storage (think of all the billions spent on mini-storage); an accessible attic makes it much easier to inspect the condition of the insulation and look for roof leaks (and every roof, given enough time, will eventually leak); and attics are almost as handy as drop ceilings when trying to pull network cables.
So why doesn't the modern American house make it easy to get into the attic, the way our grandparents' houses did? I have some theories:
My guess is that the answer is a combination of 1 and 2, with maybe a little of 3 and 4 thrown in. I really don't know, though, and my attempts to use Google-fu to find the reason came up blank.
So for now this is just a mystery. But if I ever build my own home, I will insist that it come with a proper staircase to an attic where I can keep all my stuff.
Comments
Why
lol. Don't even know how i ran across this.
When we built our house a few years ago, I asked the question, because I wanted a hole with a ladder like i grew up with. Our builder's answer was simple.
Comes down to cost.
In the old days the walls were way stronger than the are made today and the floors of the attics were basically just normal floor joists. And all of that was what you put the roof on. Now everything is built to be as inexpensive as it can be and all the parts of the house share the work load.
The issue is that newer houses use a truss system for the roof. Trusses are built to hold the roof up, and the walls out; and in-alignment. They aren't built to withstand a lot of weight in the internal (ie flat parts) of the truss. It comes down to a cost thing. To build a truss which would come up to code to allow this would add a ton of money to the cost of the house.
I've been wondering the same thing
Homes are now being built with taller basements if we are lucky, tools have moved to the garage or shed to make room for children's toys and storage. There is no longer much room for a workspace in homes. If we were to have attics still, a basement, well at least half of it would still be a work space. I wish I had an attic like all the homes I grew up in! I could store my our of season clothes up there, the clothes and toys my children are outgrowing and more. All this would free my basement up from all this clutter! America has cheaply made homes now. I have an 80's home. No attic. There is space over the garage- but I'd have to crawl through a hole in my closet!!! CRAZY!!! I plan on laying a floor up there and adding a pull down stairway in the garage to access this. What a waste of perfectly good storage space!!!