Los Angeles Times

She demolishes McMansions

- By R. Daniel Foster Blogger mocks ‘lawyer foyers,’ ‘overly ornate objects’ and other follies.

Blogger Kate Wagner gleefully chronicles hot-mess mansions, pillorying about 200 homes across 45 states since she launched McMansion Hell two years ago.

Wagner, 24, created her nearinstan­t viral blog to mock ostentatio­us houses and educate house haters. Who doesn’t loathe a McMansion, typically thought of as oversized homes squeezed onto small lots, with inept designs that are shoddily executed.

But few people can as intelligen­tly articulate such architectu­ral folly as Wagner. Her go-to definition: “McMansions are like obscenity: You know it when you see it.”

And when she sees it, she doesn’t hold back.

On the blog, Wagner overlays biting commentary on top of photos of homes she deems as pompous, using arrows to point out the offending features: entry columns “so bad they look upside down,” a display cabinet filled with “overly ornate objects,” an out-of-place porthole window that elicited a derisive “ahoy mateys,” or just “lol” atop a jumbled roofline.

“Ah yes, the esteemed landscapin­g school known as ‘let’s make all the plants into weird balls,’ ” she remarked on an image of a 4,500-square-foot Tennessee mansion.

The snark-filled Tumblr blog has 65,000 followers and offers subscripti­ons with bonus content, enabling Wagner to work on the enterprise full time. It also features Wagner’s essays on urban planning and architectu­ral history; the Baltimore-based blogger holds a master’s in audio science with a specialty in architectu­ral acoustics from Johns Hopkins University.

Last year, real estate website Zillow threatened Wagner with legal action for using its photos but backed down after the Electronic Frontier Foundation cited the fair-use doctrine that allows for parody and commentary.

Wagner’s subjects are usually homes that top 3,500 square feet. Columns and foam-injected crown molding are routinely savaged.

Wagner, who lives in a onebedroom apartment, despises “lawyer foyers,” two-story entries that resemble law firm atria with their grand staircases and mammoth chandelier­s that have “a whole window devoted to them so you can see them from the outside.” And it irks her when a master bedroom’s ceiling starts “to get a little wonky looking,” with illconfigu­red ductwork tucked within irregular ceiling shapes — often caused by what she calls “roofline soup,” a lineup of complicate­d styles.

Among the first homes Wagner skewered was a 4,354-square-foot Encino home listed for about $2 million. The boxy house included exterior columns, a roof balustrade, a lawyer foyer and a beige palette. “It was just mind numbingly dull,” Wagner said.

McMansions were born as home finance became liberalize­d and deregulate­d during the 1970s. Changes in cultural aesthetics and a surge in consumeris­m also contribute­d.

In Los Angeles, McMansions have become prevalent in the Fairfax, Valley Village and Beverlywoo­d neighborho­ods.

McMansions often cram in the greatest number of features for the lowest possible cost. A pastiche of overblown shapes and styles borrowed from different architectu­ral periods are usually at play.

“There are diminishin­g returns” for McMansions, said Paul Habibi, real estate professor at the UCLA Anderson School of Management. Additional size generally decreases the price per square foot a home can command, he said. Another trade-off: sacrificin­g open space that buyers value.

The purpose of such pretension is to “communicat­e the wealth of the owner,” Wagner said.

“It’s such a shameless flaunting of wealth when there’s so much difficulty in finding affordable housing,” she said.

hotpropert­y@latimes.com

 ?? Images courtesy of McMansion Hell ?? IN HER McMANSION Hell blog, Kate Wagner layers comments on real estate website photos.
Images courtesy of McMansion Hell IN HER McMANSION Hell blog, Kate Wagner layers comments on real estate website photos.
 ??  ?? AN ENCINO home, above, is a target of the 2-year-old blog’s take-no-prisoners snark.
AN ENCINO home, above, is a target of the 2-year-old blog’s take-no-prisoners snark.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States