pull down to refresh

FIAT buildings
I think about this quite often. Look around town....the old bank in center of town....the old church....most of the really good, very solid buildings were all built with commodity money.
All new construction, when seen in the early phase, its impossible to tell if its going to be: a KFC, a Bank, a Dr's office, etc. They all use the same shitty particle board construction.
Makes sense as its impossible to do long-term projects with fiat....In the old days if you saved up enough money to start a big project, that saved money would carry you all the way thru to completion (due to the natural deflationary aspects).
Now days, you need to rush thru the project as fast as possible before lumber shoots up another 20% unexpectedly.
As an estimator I would get plans that has no structural drawings for concrete and this would be a 3 or 4 story a apartment building. I was supposed to give a price for the concrete! Total joke as it was called "design build".
reply
most of the really good, very solid buildings were all built with commodity money.
I think you can find examples of good and bad buildings through history with little correlation to fiat. False front architecture has been around for a couple hundred years (at least)
reply
It's shit. No excuses.
reply
Not an excuse. I'm just not convinced on the lazy "the world is on fiat therefore all buildings are shit" logic.
reply
OK. I understand. But it is fiat and it is lazy. Here is why. The actual work is done to front run the devaluing of the dollar and it is not done to make good quality products and services. Construction crews are pushed to work long hours and assemble garbage, interpret garbage and make garbage work. Then there are those who in the office are bullshitting on their phones, setting up appointments for everything in the world except the actual job. It's an insane amount of non-work going on.
reply