Why people thought steel houses were a good idea

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  • čas přidán 28. 03. 2022
  • It was supposed to be the future of housing. What went wrong?
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    Why aren’t homes made of steel? In the late 1940s, one company posed that question. Lustron was a prefabricated home that was supposed to be the future of housing. So why did it fail?
    For just a few years - 1947 to 1950 - the Columbus, Ohio-based Lustron represented the future of housing. Using a steel frame and porcelain enamel-covered steel panels, Lustron made homes in a factory and shipped them around the country.
    Vox’s Phil Edwards visited a Lustron home just outside Dayton, Ohio, to experience the unusual features, like magnetic walls, for himself. This home’s quirks weren’t relegated to the materials. Through a combination of government funding sources, an attempt to reinvent the production cycle for home, and a unique distribution plan, the Lustron home helps explain how housing does - and doesn’t - work in America.
    Further reading:
    www.amazon.com/Lustron-Home-H...
    Tom Fetters’s book, The Lustron Home, is packed full of charts, graphs, original letters, and a clear and concise history of the company’s successes and failures.
    www.amazon.com/SUBURBAN-STEEL...
    Suburban Steel, Douglas Knerr’s look at Lustron, covers similar ground, but with more of an eye toward government drama and the complexities of public funding for a private business.
    www.ohiohistory.org/visit/exh...
    Located in Columbus, the Ohio History Connection has a reconstructed Lustron as an exhibit. They also have online resources including the linked instruction manual.
    whitehallhistoricalsociety.we...
    The Whitehall Historical society writes here about their reconstruction of a Lustron home.
    If you want to stay in a Lustron, you can. These are just a few of the Lustrons available on vacation sites like Airbnb and VRBO (including Barbara Rose’s home in West Alexandria).
    www.airbnb.com/rooms/4832937
    www.airbnb.com/rooms/21647262
    www.airbnb.com/rooms/41822136
    www.vrbo.com/1375987
    www.vrbo.com/432058
    www.airbnb.com/rooms/44593287
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Komentáře • 3,2K

  • @Vox
    @Vox  Před 2 lety +676

    Lustron fan sites abound, including the Lustron Locator, which lets you find the possible location of Lustron homes near you: www.lustronlocator.com/
    Thanks for watching!

    • @justrandomthings709
      @justrandomthings709 Před 2 lety +3

      First 🥇 lol

    • @oreochild5652
      @oreochild5652 Před 2 lety

      3RD

    • @gregthorne4292
      @gregthorne4292 Před 2 lety +6

      Ok, about to geek out here. A couple more ideas if you're interested:
      - Donald Wexler made steel homes in Palm Springs
      - Alcoa "Care Free" homes by Alcoa Aluminum -- mostly a building partnership showing other uses for aluminum in homebuilding

    • @thesilentone4024
      @thesilentone4024 Před 2 lety +3

      Can we go to Hawaii and start casting the Lava into Lava blocks that cool then we can use to build homes.

    • @aaronstanley6914
      @aaronstanley6914 Před 2 lety +5

      aha so that's where the starter houses of fallout4 came from

  • @alexsmith-rs6zq
    @alexsmith-rs6zq Před 2 lety +5998

    You can clearly see the influence these houses had on the homes featured in the fallout game series. Particularly Fallout 4.

    • @kayburcky7146
      @kayburcky7146 Před 2 lety +413

      It's like the exact same thing 😅

    • @nicktheocharis126
      @nicktheocharis126 Před 2 lety +109

      i was going to say that

    • @Pannekoek.
      @Pannekoek. Před 2 lety +408

      Yes I got immediate fallout 4 vibes. This is the era that fallout split off from our reality and created their own future based on the tech that was available in the 50's. Very awesome that they took this idea and used it in the game!

    • @gato38
      @gato38 Před 2 lety +82

      Totally Fallout 4 !!

    • @FurryestX
      @FurryestX Před 2 lety +104

      Preston Garvey: "Hey, i heard some settlements need help from the minutemen, on boston arena surroundings, look if you can go and do something"
      🤣

  • @princessbrennyn7611
    @princessbrennyn7611 Před 2 lety +2478

    I always wondered why in Fallout 4, the houses where made like this, they literally looked just like this. The researchers really did their work.

    • @mtsarkful
      @mtsarkful Před rokem +344

      "why do I get so much metal for scrapping an old house?" Now I know

    • @loserbibi988
      @loserbibi988 Před rokem +112

      I came here to say the same thing. I'm glad I'm not the only one who thought of this.

    • @HelheimMudkip
      @HelheimMudkip Před rokem +119

      Clicked the video because of fallout 4

    • @jmc1076
      @jmc1076 Před rokem +16

      @@HelheimMudkip yes

    • @GummyFantasy
      @GummyFantasy Před rokem +42

      thank god somebody made this comment

  • @purpleldv966
    @purpleldv966 Před rokem +1205

    I feel that this could have been a better video... Maybe if they would have focused on the actual house more, from living perspectives, maintenance, a few more technical details, drawbacks and advantages...
    The subject seems very interesting and thats why it could have made for a better video!

    • @EurrikkeEdward
      @EurrikkeEdward Před rokem +54

      Oh thanks for saving me the time

    • @foxinapothecary
      @foxinapothecary Před rokem +92

      Vox has been spewing these kind of videos lately
      all fluff but no substance

    • @sabihasayeed1670
      @sabihasayeed1670 Před rokem +73

      Yes, I clicked on this video, expecting the content you mentioned, but was sorely disappointed.

    • @willdrewing4049
      @willdrewing4049 Před 3 měsíci +30

      Definitely lazy journalism. Hobart made a neighborhood of steel mansions less than an hour away from the homes in this story.

    • @Yutani_Crayven
      @Yutani_Crayven Před 3 měsíci +44

      Or analysis of the economics of it, from a production as well as buyer viewpoint. That wasn't explored either. No word on why the company went bankrupt, what caused demand to be so low, how high demand would have had to be, what exactly caused prices to be the way they are, why nothing was done to change it, where prices would have had to be.
      There is no good information in this video other than "these houses existed and now they don't".

  • @ronsasso7832
    @ronsasso7832 Před 5 měsíci +297

    I live in a Lustron Newport---the last model Lustron manufactured. It's only a 2 bed/1 bath and 713 square feet, but it is truly amazing! There really isn't any wasted space. It didn't come with the built-in furniture features of the earlier models.
    I had a carpenter installing flooring in my house and he was stunned to see that there was less than 3/8" movement on the 70-year-old home from one end to the other (which is unheard of in wood homes). The Newport model also came with a different heating system (a gas furnace). Unfortunately, only 24 Lustron Newports were every manufactured. I have no idea how many remain. I know it is less than 20.
    The house is very low maintenance and nearly indestructible. It has easily handled tennis ball sized hail!
    Thanks for the video!

    • @heartsDmise
      @heartsDmise Před 3 měsíci +21

      Theres a youtube channel called "The 2nd Empire Strikes Back" and its with a couple who are restoring their Victorian home. The owner's father got inspired and bought a Lustron home and is repairing it. The updates are few since they only just started, but worth following!

    • @ronsasso7832
      @ronsasso7832 Před 3 měsíci +6

      @@heartsDmise Thanks for letting me know! Cool

    • @xtnuser5338
      @xtnuser5338 Před 2 měsíci +1

      It's not unusual to have less than 3/8" out of level on wooden homes. They certainly aren't all like that, but there are plenty that are. My first home, built in 1928, had less than 1/4" between many measured spots. It's much more dependent on the soils and foundations than it is on the material choices.

    • @ronsasso7832
      @ronsasso7832 Před 2 měsíci +1

      The 3/8" was going from one corner of the house to the other corner. The carpenter said he rarely sees that...particularly on a 70+ year old home.

    • @xtnuser5338
      @xtnuser5338 Před 2 měsíci +3

      @@ronsasso7832 Like I said, my

  • @PracticalEngineeringChannel
    @PracticalEngineeringChannel Před 2 lety +5663

    Oh man. Those cuts from Phil standing in different spots in the house to the same perspective in the ad images are so good! It helps show how difficult these homes were to modify.

    • @vzxvzvcxasd7109
      @vzxvzvcxasd7109 Před 2 lety +236

      This video really screams of American. It's really interesting that like trains, American pioneered prefab houses but they abandoned it because it doesn't fit the typical American dream of suburbs.
      But the rest of the world, we are racing towards prefab. Because material avalibility, labour and logistics are usually the most expensive things of a house. But in America, because the government was essentially giving out free houses, the focus of prefab houses turned towards the "experience" rather than the framework, which lead everything to fall apart. The same way the cars took over public transport.

    • @shaider1982
      @shaider1982 Před 2 lety +13

      Your videos are really.informative👍

    • @ariuss3009
      @ariuss3009 Před 2 lety +21

      Now we're waiting for a video from you going into the engineering side of things. Would be really interesting!

    • @astro_afro
      @astro_afro Před 2 lety +22

      Woah Practical Engineering! Good to see you here
      Also, I agree completely.

    • @kaitlyn__L
      @kaitlyn__L Před 2 lety +36

      @@vzxvzvcxasd7109 that’s a great observation. Also ironic because a lot of modern American timber frame houses have identical layouts too, at least before any owner modifications.
      Throughout the video I was thinking “that’d be plenty of room for an apartment”, but of course, a lot of Americans have very different expectations for houses versus apartments.

  • @godofplumbing
    @godofplumbing Před rokem +2174

    I have a couple of customers with steel homes. Their biggest complaint is that, they have no cell reception. The house actually acts as a massive Faraday cage.

    • @edhikurniawan
      @edhikurniawan Před rokem +201

      Good for health lol.

    • @themyththelegendphilswift3201
      @themyththelegendphilswift3201 Před rokem +66

      That basically stops them from ever coming back

    • @stuarthirsch
      @stuarthirsch Před rokem +234

      Not a big problem with an inside wifi router and good internet connection via cable or fiber to the house. Go to settings on your phone and select internet phone. However an outside TV and radio antennas would be required for OTA reception.

    • @kx7500
      @kx7500 Před rokem +75

      @@edhikurniawan evidence for that?

    • @disappointedmess209
      @disappointedmess209 Před rokem +73

      @@edhikurniawan "Citation Needed"

  • @Dogsnark
    @Dogsnark Před rokem +235

    The story of the Lustron home is one that has always intrigued me. Unfortunately, this video didn’t even do much to answer it’s own question in the title, nor get into much else that could’ve made it a very interesting exploration of this unique housing approach.

    • @RafaelBernatto
      @RafaelBernatto Před rokem +10

      Exactly! What a waste.

    • @thecloneguyz
      @thecloneguyz Před rokem

      Can you imagine when lightning strike would fry you inside your own house

    • @traceymarshall5886
      @traceymarshall5886 Před 4 měsíci +6

      I thought the same. I was interested to find out as ive never heard of these given that i live in Ireland. Im none the wiser why they were not so popular...seemed like weight and the bath was non standard size and difficult to make changes later on???

    • @heartsDmise
      @heartsDmise Před 3 měsíci +1

      Theres a youtube channel called "The 2nd Empire Strikes Back" and its with a couple who are restoring their Victorian home. The owner's father got inspired and bought a Lustron home and is repairing it. The updates are few since they only just started, but Ill bet following the channel can satiate that knowledge!

    • @haphazardprism
      @haphazardprism Před 12 dny

      I mean you could do you own research if your really that intrigued with them. A free video on youtube seems like a nice shortcut but it's not going to have every answer lol

  • @safistype5952
    @safistype5952 Před rokem +292

    I'm surprised that you never mention how the house handled weather, temperatures and how people felt inside them. No lightnings or electrocuting issues? And was it resource effective? I don't know how much steel there was at time. Its a rather intriguing design! I would definitely put everything on magnets :D

    • @daslynnter9841
      @daslynnter9841 Před rokem +18

      Considering this was after world war II when we made tanks and planes every day, I would say this is probably the height of steel production in American history.
      If you want to see cost of living through weather look at industrial America cuz most garages shops warehouses all have metal construction.

    • @Pinnix
      @Pinnix Před 9 měsíci +26

      I don't recall our home being uncomfortable winter or summer. It is in western NC so heavy snow wasn't a regular thing but not uncommon either.
      Mom always worried about lightning and warned us to stay away from faucets during storms, but she said same thing about our wood and brick house too. In any case nothing bad ever happened while we lived there.

    • @RichardTongeman
      @RichardTongeman Před 16 dny

      On a grander scale I imagine it’d be impractical to use steel

    • @schplengie1
      @schplengie1 Před 15 dny

      ​@@Pinnix Yeah staying away from water sources is pretty standard during storms no matter what home as plumbing can conduct the electricity of a lightning strike.

  • @OgawaBurukkuART
    @OgawaBurukkuART Před 2 lety +3939

    I was a little disappointed thee wasn’t more info on perks or downsides for the resident/consumer. Were they warmer in the summer and cooler in the winter than a normal home, etc.

    • @elizabethhunley4020
      @elizabethhunley4020 Před 2 lety +281

      I was in one in Iowa when there was a wind chill of -40 f and it was perfectly warm imo

    • @Autunite
      @Autunite Před 2 lety +271

      @@elizabethhunley4020 It could be perfectly warm, but more heating could be required compared to wood. Interesting question from Ogawa.

    • @eQualizeri
      @eQualizeri Před 2 lety +603

      Same, I was also quite disappointed that there was nothing on how it functions as an house. How does the insulation work etc. How does it compare to more typical houses? It's like this video was cut short.

    • @cgduude
      @cgduude Před 2 lety +144

      I remember my dad telling me that in a "traditional" home, even having steel studs practically negates any insulation in the walls, since it's so conductive. I imagine having an entire home made of steel means you don't even try to insulate, and just spend alllll your money on the heating/cooling bill.

    • @Nan-59
      @Nan-59 Před 2 lety +42

      Friends of ours recently moved out of their Lustron home. They're much happier in their larger traditional home.

  • @mintheman7
    @mintheman7 Před 2 lety +1317

    Steel is still very popular for framing, siding, roofing since it is durable, uniform and recyclable. They are actually making a come back due to rising timber and concrete prices. Lustron's mistake was trying to make everything in the house in steel including fixtures.

    • @peteranon8455
      @peteranon8455 Před 2 lety +103

      I was just thinking that I wouldn't mind having a nice, solid I-Beam running along every corner of my house.

    • @lancehobbs8012
      @lancehobbs8012 Před 2 lety +7

      When you say steel siding, is that vertical cladding to external walls? I would be very suprised , aluminium probably

    • @mintheman7
      @mintheman7 Před 2 lety +30

      @@lancehobbs8012 No I mean painted or galvanized steel. Just do a search of steel siding on YT and you will see many examples.

    • @nonyabizness.original
      @nonyabizness.original Před 2 lety +87

      i think that their 'mistake' was to build a house that would last ages without requiring or lending itself to constant maintainence, repair, and renovation. thus, a home that would not feed capitalism. a house the opposite of 'planned obsolescence'.
      for example, they didn't say in the video, but i imagine that the porcelain-coated steel roof still doesn't need replacing after 70+ years. no wood to rot, no concrete footings to fail, even in houses shown that have not been well cared for.

    • @lizzycolbert8884
      @lizzycolbert8884 Před 2 lety +48

      @@nonyabizness.original My husband and I have Lustron house and its in excellent condition no issues with it at all.

  • @LaurenEPersons
    @LaurenEPersons Před rokem +165

    I lived in a Lustron home in Parma, Ohio for about twenty years. My son was confused when he went into other homes and tried putting magnets on the walls! It had its problems. The casters on the sliding doors wore out so opening cupboards and closets became a chore. It was certainly a curiosity.

    • @MrTaxiRob
      @MrTaxiRob Před rokem +7

      I was about to comment on steel framed homes in the Cleveland area, but you got here first. There are whole neighborhoods of them out in Lorain County as well.

    • @MyNameIsUnavailable
      @MyNameIsUnavailable Před 3 měsíci

      Columbus born guy here, now Louisville Kentucky.
      How did house price compare during sale?

  • @Hopeless_and_Forlorn
    @Hopeless_and_Forlorn Před rokem +35

    In the late 1940s my family lived on Stanford Avenue in North Dallas. We kids were excited to see a strange new house being assembled on the next street over, Amherst. I can remember the hoopla about it being fireproof and maintenance free. Almost all of the post-WWII houses in that neighborhood have been replaced by larger and quite expensive houses, but I recently drove through the old neighborhood, and there was the Lustron yellow house, looking exactly as it had in 1949. Edit: Just checked Dallas property tax site, that tiny house is now valued at $592,000. It is sitting on some very desirable ground.

  • @yankumarrah
    @yankumarrah Před 2 lety +2773

    I never knew this was a thing; steel homes… I am more curious about the acoustics and thermals.

    • @swoleavocado
      @swoleavocado Před 2 lety +597

      I was hoping they touch on this but they didn't.

    • @Kamel419
      @Kamel419 Před 2 lety +465

      Same, or literally anything about what it's like to live in one

    • @AnnNunnally
      @AnnNunnally Před 2 lety +144

      I am trying to imagine these houses in Texas. Is porcelain really going to compensate for how hot the metal would get?

    • @photoklarno
      @photoklarno Před 2 lety +102

      @@AnnNunnally porcelain would be an anti-corrosive coating that doesn’t need to be re-applied over the years. A light colored paint would do the same job in reflecting incoming solar radiation. The walls still would need to be filled with fiberglass insulation.

    • @rockets4kids
      @rockets4kids Před 2 lety +58

      I imagine that living in these would be not much different than living in a very large car.

  • @fireaza
    @fireaza Před 2 lety +791

    This looks like the house from _Fallout 4!_ Since "steel house" is *exactly* the sorta whacky retro-futuristic thing the _Fallout_ series goes for, I can see why they used this style of building as inspiration!

    • @firbhamming2575
      @firbhamming2575 Před 2 lety +53

      This actually helps explain some of the wreckage it makes one realize it's more accurate than at first play

    • @crunchymix
      @crunchymix Před 2 lety +33

      That large amount of steel you can harvest from those houses.

    • @lizzycolbert8884
      @lizzycolbert8884 Před 2 lety +46

      Try actually have a Lustron home like I do and then playing Fallout4 seeing your own house in a game was awesome lol

    • @littlehaven7275
      @littlehaven7275 Před 2 lety +30

      How did I not even question that the houses in Sanctuary were all made of steel...

    • @mainstay.
      @mainstay. Před 2 lety +3

      @@lizzycolbert8884 Wow!

  • @nunyabusiness3786
    @nunyabusiness3786 Před 3 měsíci +6

    Lustron succeeded in making enduring homes that are bright, colourful and full of hope. I'm happy to know they existed.

  • @gordonstanley3912
    @gordonstanley3912 Před 3 měsíci +7

    Our family lived in a "steel house" in a Chicago suburb that had originally been built for the 1933 World's Fair in Chicago. Unlike the Lustron houses, this one did not have steel interior walls, just sheetrock. There was a srainless steel fireplace surround and several steel enameled lighting fixtures. My father always said it was built like a fortress.

  • @fallenshallrise
    @fallenshallrise Před 2 lety +326

    If they did a story on a 2022 start-up making modern, pre-fab, micro homes for $100k each ($8,500 in 1950 money) and the company sold 2,500 of them in 2 years it would be called a massive success.

  • @mrwarr
    @mrwarr Před 2 lety +774

    I’m playing Fallout 4 right now (again). I gotta take back some criticisms I made previously. I mean, the lighting is still horrible, but they nailed the vibe of these metal houses perfectly. Thanks for the history lesson!

    • @kentonbenoit9629
      @kentonbenoit9629 Před 2 lety +1

      No one cares bud

    • @hi_im_roman
      @hi_im_roman Před 2 lety +76

      @@kentonbenoit9629 i care

    • @Deriko31
      @Deriko31 Před 2 lety +36

      @@kentonbenoit9629 i duckin care

    • @notenoughcalories
      @notenoughcalories Před 2 lety +44

      @@kentonbenoit9629 no one cares about your disregard for his compliments, bud

    • @buitenzorg5970
      @buitenzorg5970 Před 2 lety +43

      I thought those houses are just retro futuristic version of 50s houses. Never expect it to be actual things

  • @sharonqaranivalu5152
    @sharonqaranivalu5152 Před 8 měsíci +4

    I'm freaking out because I lived in a steel house as a teenager, it was kinda cool. Brings back memories.

  • @Pinnix
    @Pinnix Před 9 měsíci +7

    Lived in one of these for several years in the 70s. Unique experience. Honestly it was well designed and felt quite airy and light for such a heavy industrial material. Loved the large windows and big mirrors on the built-in cabinet/dresser in the bedrooms. The interior pocket doors were pretty noisy but had a bit of a Star Trek vibe so my brother and I had fun with them.

  • @anthonykidd7978
    @anthonykidd7978 Před 2 lety +300

    I have worked on one of these homes before as an electrician. Makes you wish every house came with a manual like the Lustron homes.

    • @reynardfoxx6753
      @reynardfoxx6753 Před 2 lety +19

      I'd hate to experience a short in the walls on one of those Steel Lustrom houses. ⚡

    • @speedy01247
      @speedy01247 Před 2 lety +9

      @@reynardfoxx6753 if anything wouldn't the steel be a better conductor then you are? (not a electrician so this is a legit question)

    • @McKarpfen
      @McKarpfen Před rokem +11

      @@reynardfoxx6753 The house would act as a faraday cage, but coming home might have a shocking effect :D

    • @reclusiarchgrimaldus1269
      @reclusiarchgrimaldus1269 Před rokem +1

      John 3:16 NIV
      For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life. 🙏!

    • @guiguito5505
      @guiguito5505 Před rokem +2

      @@reynardfoxx6753 Aren't they covered in glass? As in there isn't exposed steel.

  • @Reality_TV
    @Reality_TV Před 2 lety +366

    The fact that you are sitting in a Lustron home in 2022 means they didn't "fail". They just didn't achieve the goals they thought they would. I bet with the right modifications, something like this would fly today, especially given the movement toward tiny, do it yourself homes that some have embraced. The fact that they were able to take the home apart and put it back together using the manual says a lot.

    • @Clownk1ller
      @Clownk1ller Před rokem +13

      I agree

    • @judyr.7249
      @judyr.7249 Před rokem +14

      Actually, something similar(not all steel, but steel framed kit homes are booming in Australia-and now America). Think traditional dry wall, insulation, plumbing, siding, but steel bones. The idea of a one stop shop home is nonexistent today, but might come back due to the housing crisis all across America(can’t speak to the nature of the world market).

    • @ethanhanover3263
      @ethanhanover3263 Před 3 měsíci +8

      I think by fail, he means that it didnt carry on to the mainstream home construction market

    • @noahthebongoer
      @noahthebongoer Před 3 měsíci +12

      Personally id say bankruptcy always is a decent reason to Call something a failure

    • @aaaaaaaaaaaaa373
      @aaaaaaaaaaaaa373 Před 3 měsíci +3

      Morton-building homes are wildly popular these days, once you get out of areas with HOAs.

  • @curtismarean6963
    @curtismarean6963 Před rokem +46

    Oddly enough, I would not mind living in one of these. There's something about that retro look that I love. Mid-century houses have a distinct feel about them.

  • @nickbutton9704
    @nickbutton9704 Před rokem +2

    I’ve seen tons of these across my home state of Indiana and always noticed they were different and quirky but never understood why. This video gives me a whole new appreciation for homes that I never knew were so special!

  • @amr99912
    @amr99912 Před 2 lety +1251

    Steel houses in the U.S. may be forgotten and failed, However it’s still amazingly interesting how much different infrastructure veers from all around the globe and how houses and buildings all have a unique feeling too them depending on the place.

    • @mambamolt_tt73
      @mambamolt_tt73 Před 2 lety +10

      fax. them steal houses foshio ain’t gonna save folks from getting in danger by the german monster moustache man, the usa should’ve built neutral underground bonkers just like how switzerland did.

    • @wholesomememer412
      @wholesomememer412 Před 2 lety +11

      @@mambamolt_tt73 i kinda agree but can you fix your grammer please.......

    • @naffal1538
      @naffal1538 Před 2 lety +21

      @@wholesomememer412 grammer

    • @robertkirchner7981
      @robertkirchner7981 Před 2 lety +9

      @@naffal1538 Bonkers grammer!

    • @tibodeclercq2131
      @tibodeclercq2131 Před 2 lety +4

      Women put in bags/towels may beforgotten here, However it's amazingly interesting how much different women empowerment looks from all around the globe and how women's rights all have a unique view too depending on the place.

  • @nelle6363
    @nelle6363 Před 2 lety +843

    As someone who's been through the nightmare of toxic mold illness and trying to find a home that doesn't rot from the slightest water damage like most paper homes today, these steel houses look heavenly.

    • @augustooliveira518
      @augustooliveira518 Před 2 lety +72

      Is it concrete and brick houses easy to find in the US?

    • @jonathanthomas2449
      @jonathanthomas2449 Před 2 lety +57

      @@augustooliveira518 no

    • @gusty7153
      @gusty7153 Před rokem +93

      @@augustooliveira518 the most reasonably affordable homes have walls made of paper and sheet-rock which is basically chalk but weaker and dissolves quickly.

    • @dragonsharker4793
      @dragonsharker4793 Před rokem +22

      @@jonathanthomas2449 they’re not really hard to find but they’re a lot more expensive

    • @dee5298
      @dee5298 Před rokem +25

      @@gusty7153 Truth. What is worse is a house trailer and many can't afford anything else. Those same people can not afford the proprietary hardware that everything in them are designed to use. That is a major problem because the proprietary hardware is cheaply made and breaks quickly. So, everything breaks and is unfixable without redoing entire systems, a fix that has its own unique problems. Ask me how I know.

  • @Putzing
    @Putzing Před 2 měsíci +1

    Small, weird old houses warm my heart like nothing else

  • @SergeantExtreme
    @SergeantExtreme Před 2 měsíci +1

    That Lustron only sold 2600 homes is a testament to how big a failure the project really was. By comparison, Sears sold over 70,000 kit homes by the time they shut down the kit home project.

  • @pavarottiaardvark3431
    @pavarottiaardvark3431 Před 2 lety +685

    @vox if you're ever in the UK it might be worth doing a companion piece on Britain's post-WW2 pre-fabricated houses. More than a million 'Prefabs' were built to replace housing stock lost in bombings, and while they were only intended to that 10 years, many of them are still standing.

    • @r1n8k
      @r1n8k Před 2 lety +20

      You can visit one kept in period conditions in the St Fagens Museum in Wales.

    • @satyr1349
      @satyr1349 Před 2 lety +6

      Absolutely my grandparents moved into one after suffering a corrugated steel "shack" is the best way I can describe.
      I can barely imagine what it was like, especially with a new born to take care of.

    • @PS-ug7nm
      @PS-ug7nm Před 2 lety +3

      If any other CZcamsr has done on that type of housing, please do share the link in the reply thread...

    • @nunyabusiness3786
      @nunyabusiness3786 Před 2 lety +6

      Never design a temporary solution in such a way that it'd fall apart if it became permanent

  • @jsoncpark
    @jsoncpark Před 2 lety +2597

    "Why people thought steel houses were a good idea"
    So why did people think they were a good idea? What was the benefit of a steel house? What was it like to live in one, and what were the differences from a regular home?

    • @mcmans.
      @mcmans. Před 2 lety +927

      0 Questions answered by this video SMH.

    • @jesusdavis2941
      @jesusdavis2941 Před 2 lety +180

      I ask myself the same question on wooden framed north American houses 🏘️

    • @twweety9
      @twweety9 Před 2 lety +407

      I'm happy I'm not the only one who felt nothing was answered

    • @erikwilliams8610
      @erikwilliams8610 Před 2 lety +135

      They actually answered who thought it was a good idea- a government stimulus agency and basically no one else.

    • @HillBillyBrown
      @HillBillyBrown Před 2 lety +18

      @@jesusdavis2941 what else would you frame a house with?

  • @lorettasanchez7481
    @lorettasanchez7481 Před rokem +3

    There are a couple of these homes on Fairway in my home town of Los Alamos, NM. I have often just stood and marveled at their uniqueness. Love your history of them!! Thanks

  • @DeanStephen
    @DeanStephen Před rokem +10

    We had a couple of old maid sisters with whom the family was friends who each lived in a kit home: one a Sears, one a Lustron. The former was larger and very traditional. The later, it felt like a very dated Jetson’s house. I easily could have lived in either. Loved both. Sadly the Lustron was torn down a few years ago so the land could be farmed.

  • @Seatux
    @Seatux Před 2 lety +747

    This is making me wonder a few things:
    1. Would getting cell reception be terrible inside? Its steel all way round
    2. Conversely would one need a Wi-Fi in each room because the steel walls would limit range?

    • @4G12
      @4G12 Před 2 lety +171

      Call reception would most likely be a nightmare. However, a well placed single WIFI router could work very well since it's a set of giant waveguides that tend to contain the signals within the house.

    • @Bas_Lightyear
      @Bas_Lightyear Před 2 lety +87

      @@4G12 until you close a door..
      No browsing unless that bedroom door stays wide open 😂

    • @aidancollins1591
      @aidancollins1591 Před 2 lety +19

      @@Bas_Lightyear Call reception would most likely be a nightmare. However, a well placed single WIFI router could work very well since it's a set of giant waveguides that tend to contain the signals within the house.

    • @Bas_Lightyear
      @Bas_Lightyear Před 2 lety +45

      @@aidancollins1591 ummm

    • @aidancollins1591
      @aidancollins1591 Před 2 lety +27

      @@Bas_Lightyear Call reception would most likely be a nightmare. However, a well placed single WIFI router could work very well since it's a set of giant waveguides that tend to contain the signals within the house.

  • @vawest2052
    @vawest2052 Před 2 lety +245

    My brother bought a steel shed for farm equipment and made it a tiny house, they still make steel structures, they're just not sold as homes. You can live in them, cell phones still work, you can insulated them like a regular house and everything, the outside is exposed steel so he coated it with rust proofing, you can get stainless steel but it's more expensive. It's easy to cut steel for electrical outlets, he painted it like a normal house, it sounds so good on rainy days, terrible when it hails.
    I'm in West Virginia and people turning steel sheds into homes isn't unusual, we don't have a lot rules about about houseing. I know a guy who bought a steel grain silo and made it his "vacation" home.

    • @gimpygardner3377
      @gimpygardner3377 Před rokem +11

      Many barn companies, like Morton, offer home plans. Also, check out a series called Barndominiums.

    • @curtischildress9580
      @curtischildress9580 Před rokem +6

      @@gimpygardner3377 Very true. Making over old barns into houses has been popular now since I first saw them being done back in the early 1980s. They end up looking beautiful.

    • @BelindaLouis_
      @BelindaLouis_ Před rokem +3

      How much did he spent all together with the project ? I’m looking into doing that . Buying a home in 2022 is not ideal for me . It’s so expensive . I’m from Florida and I’m researching what’s the strongest material for natural disasters .I’m trying to find a way to have a house and have my freedom from mortgage.

    • @curtischildress9580
      @curtischildress9580 Před rokem +3

      @@BelindaLouis_ A new shed of fair size might cost $10K at least. Making the inside livable with electric/water/heat & air/insulation & flooring & walls & ceiling & all extras could be $20K...labor is high, so are materials. Foundation is another expense to prepare plus building permits & everything takes time...2 months if the road is perfect & everyone works fast. Expect unexpected costs too...they happen, plus you need furniture...much can be thrifted.

    • @BelindaLouis_
      @BelindaLouis_ Před rokem +1

      @@curtischildress9580 thank you for your respond .

  • @donaldroehrig7817
    @donaldroehrig7817 Před rokem +5

    I drive by one almost daily. I always thought it looked different, but never knew until I watched this video. Still in great shape and they just recently put a new roof on it and it looks identical to the old. Makes me wonder who put the roof on and how they found the original style materials to do so.

  • @benjochs
    @benjochs Před 2 měsíci +1

    I’ve always been fascinated with these homes since discovering them in my Midcentury Modern craze. My old neighborhood actually had several Lustron homes and there was one converted to an Air BNB. I like the construction & exterior elements but the inside I would prefer to be more traditionally finished. Metallic walls and ceilings would feel trailer-y, I’d think.

  • @racegrooves
    @racegrooves Před 2 lety +219

    If you pause at 6:11 the newspaper has quotes stating that people thought that the early homes looked like porcelain tubs or hot dog stands 😆

    • @bunkerblue6158
      @bunkerblue6158 Před rokem +1

      Whack to see you here. I remember watching you when I was younger.

    • @RaceGroovesGaming
      @RaceGroovesGaming Před rokem +1

      @@bunkerblue6158 Cool, good times! I’m spending more time playing video games nowadays 💙🏁 I hope that you are well!

  • @bweber02
    @bweber02 Před 2 lety +36

    Now I know where Fallout 4 got its inspiration from! Lustron is like the epitome of midcentury sensibilities: streamlined, manufactured, and pastel.

  • @lessbs
    @lessbs Před 3 měsíci +1

    My aunt and uncle bought a Lustron home when they got married in the late 40's. My aunt still owns it. They need to take that Westchester floor plan and start using it for starter and retirement homes as it always seems bigger on the inside than what it looks from the outside. The overall footprint does not require that much space.

  • @chrisbarber2436
    @chrisbarber2436 Před rokem +7

    I now realize, after watching this, that my new house was a Lustron house. Still has the roof and frame, with some parts of the interior having the panels, but over the years much of the rest has been renovated to be more "standard".

  • @oceanstaiga5928
    @oceanstaiga5928 Před 2 lety +267

    Honestly to me the whole wood house thing is still weird, as someone who grew up around 99% stone houses whenever I see this (mostly American) wood houses it’s an oddity.

    • @pinkfreud62
      @pinkfreud62 Před 2 lety +48

      Because it's just makes sense when our country was millions of acres of wood to use it as a resource. Millions of homes are made with wood with no problems. Just use care and common sense.

    • @redragon9588
      @redragon9588 Před 2 lety +18

      wood houses are quite popular in Europe as well, especially in my country

    • @tauceti8060
      @tauceti8060 Před 2 lety +54

      @@pinkfreud62 Yes but when it comes to natural disasters like tornadoes and Hurricanes they,re to fragile.Steel or concrete is better when dealing with these disasters.

    • @acreativename7999
      @acreativename7999 Před 2 lety +33

      I've lived in Wood frame buildings older than the colonial USA and have never been to America, with proper maintenance and care, these ancient homes can still be nice places to live.

    • @Noctuoidea228
      @Noctuoidea228 Před 2 lety +8

      @@pinkfreud62 That may be true for large parts of the US, but also something like half the country is grasslands and there several very large arid regions. The types of houses built in those areas prior to British settlement were mostly made of clay and stone. Only after British/American settlement was a timber frame so valued that wood was shipped in from other parts of the country.

  • @pennydonnelly8542
    @pennydonnelly8542 Před 2 lety +87

    Back in 2000 my husband and bought a Lustron. I hadn’t heard of them before but educated myself on what it meant to own a funky steel house. It was small but the abundance of closet space made up for it. The magnet scene made me laugh. My son was little when we lived there. He liked taking the magnets from the fridge ad putting them all over the house.

    • @kianjsr
      @kianjsr Před rokem +7

      What made you leave/sell the home in the end? Is it still there today?

  • @mariabeatrize
    @mariabeatrize Před rokem +3

    The Lustron home was ahead of its time, honestly would prefer it as long as it has good insulation

  • @mystica-subs
    @mystica-subs Před rokem +2

    My great uncle and his family lived in one of these, in a tiny town in South Dakota. Never knew the story behind them! Thanks for this video!

  • @peabody1976
    @peabody1976 Před 2 lety +63

    My best friend bought one of these as his first house, and it was basically unchanged in many ways from its building, even as other houses in his neighbourhood had been expanded/torn down-rebuilt. It was a nifty house.

  • @GammaZed.
    @GammaZed. Před 2 lety +53

    My father lives in one of these houses and it really is a trip to the past. They sure have stood the test of time.

  • @KingStix
    @KingStix Před 3 měsíci +1

    primary draw back is steel conductivity leading to lower energy efficiency =higher electricity cost for heating/cooling

  • @fooltube9999
    @fooltube9999 Před rokem +7

    I'm more interested in knowing what the advantages/disadvantages and quirks of living in a steel house would be like. How well do heating and cooling work? How well does it stand up in earthquake/fire? Seems like it could be a night
    mare to rebuild if parts got "bent".

  • @rezkyputra5239
    @rezkyputra5239 Před 2 lety +134

    The Fallout 4 vibe is strong with these houses

    • @FurryestX
      @FurryestX Před 2 lety +8

      Preston : Did you said helping settlements?

  • @Berubium
    @Berubium Před 2 lety +58

    Thanks to Fallout 4 for introducing me to these fascinating homes. I’m doubly isolated from them as I’m west of the Rockies & north of the border, but I definitely want to check one out in person someday.
    The postwar housing & development boom is fascinating to me.

  • @RaphaeLoh01
    @RaphaeLoh01 Před 11 dny

    I lived in one of these houses before, it was a prefab house for miners. We called it the Aluminium hut, it was great! So cozy, so easy to clean

  • @ricfax
    @ricfax Před 2 měsíci +1

    I've seen a few homes with porcelain coated steel exterior siding and marveled at how well they looked and recall many service stations with the same but only a few homes, all post WWII. This video helped shed some light. Next time I get a chance, I'm going to visit one or two I remember to see if they are steel inside, too.

  • @KevinFromTheOffice
    @KevinFromTheOffice Před 2 lety +183

    Literally every house in Fallout games

  • @kerrykuss642
    @kerrykuss642 Před 2 lety +27

    I was born in 1950 and eventually became an architectural designer. I've never heard of this house. My whole family, extended family, has been in the building industry for generations. None of us has heard of this house. I find it fascinating! I would love to see one. Thanks for showing this video!

    • @andrewmcneal1444
      @andrewmcneal1444 Před rokem +1

      I know where you can buy one for less than 70k

    • @VivaKennedy2024
      @VivaKennedy2024 Před rokem +1

      @@andrewmcneal1444 where

    • @heartsDmise
      @heartsDmise Před 3 měsíci

      Theres a youtube channel called "The 2nd Empire Strikes Back" and its with a couple who are restoring their Victorian home. The owner's father got inspired and bought a Lustron home and is repairing it. The updates are few since they only just started, but Ill bet following the channel can satiate that knowledge!

  • @2M3TAL4U
    @2M3TAL4U Před 3 měsíci

    6:30
    Is a really good point. Not only are tubs 60" but theyre built for a 60" opening, so every standard tub rough opening is 60"+ a tiny bit. That 60 1/2" tub means to sell it to someone for a renovation they would have to adjust the opening by 3/4" . The people who would have done the job and planned for 1/2" would have not been able to fit. When the alternative you can simply remove and replace with any other standard size. Take the one that doesn't fit back and get a normal one
    it would have cost them big on returns if they did sell any solo tubs to consumers

  • @getintothewildwithjeffruma8777

    My town has one of these homes in it. As someone who rehabs homes I have always found it interesting when I drive by it. Thanks for the history of it.

  • @guringai
    @guringai Před 2 lety +33

    Details on comfort levels would be interesting. Details on insulation.
    Did they go mouldy the inside of external walls? ...with condensation being an obvious issue.
    What about sound? Echoes more or less than normal? Rattling or squeaky walls when windy?
    So many unanswered questions

    • @davepennington3573
      @davepennington3573 Před rokem +9

      Exactly! What kind of insulation is it? Rockwool would be OK, less moisture build up, but still. Probably rusted out in some areas and the fix would be difficult & expensive. How do you repair that finish?

  • @voiden7340
    @voiden7340 Před 2 lety +49

    Fallout 4 Vibes

    • @JonasRaphaelKallasch
      @JonasRaphaelKallasch Před 2 lety +4

      Not only vibes. Those are exactly the houses in the main characters neighborhood.

    • @skibididopyesdop
      @skibididopyesdop Před 2 lety

      @@JonasRaphaelKallasch Yes, only larger

  • @myriri3687
    @myriri3687 Před rokem +3

    They clearly need to do more of these. I mean look at how well they've endured.

  • @morg52
    @morg52 Před 2 měsíci

    I was first introduced to this concept when a neighborhood, Amoco, previously, Standard Oil, gas station was being demolished. The large blocks of stone that I grew up thinking it was made of, turned out to be porcelain coated steel.

  • @lizzycolbert8884
    @lizzycolbert8884 Před 2 lety +10

    My husband and I have a Lustron home , It keeps cool in the summer and retains heat very well in the winter. All we do is put up the heat for about an hour and turn it off then it keeps warm for 3-4 hours maybe longer. I also love the fact we have a lot of space for storage.

  • @2SNesbit
    @2SNesbit Před 2 lety +24

    My parents rented one (for about six months when I was in the third grade). Before seeing this video, I didn't know what a Lustron Home was. However as soon as I saw the steel panels on the exterior, I remembered living in one. Other than thinking that the square panels were "different", I don't recall that a time my younger self noticed that it was anything out of the ordinary as far as a house.

  • @justanothertroll9476
    @justanothertroll9476 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Living part of my life around Columbus Ohio I never knew about this, very interesting piece of history I'm glad they're able to preserve some of it

  • @markcollins457
    @markcollins457 Před 4 měsíci +1

    I had a service call to one of these house's.
    The house is located in Gibbstown NJ. I think Dupont had something to do with the steel coatings. The house didn't need much furniture because of all the built-in closets and cabinetry.

  • @dfherr86
    @dfherr86 Před 2 lety +110

    That is more of a failure of the company than a inherent flaw in steel houses. Yes it's 1000 sq ft and yes that was pretty standard at the time. Tiny houses today could be stainless steel modules cut on presses and tension control bolted into place. They would be affordable and a hit, especially with how expensive lumber is this year. Living in a massive faraday cage might have it's drawbacks, but it wouldn't be that big a deal in a tiny house.

    • @andynichols3464
      @andynichols3464 Před 2 lety +5

      Affordable is not the word that comes to mind when talking about stainless. Of course my initial thought is an apples to apples comparison using SS as a cladding on traditional metal stud framing with densglas and membrane. However, I am curious as to what kind of strength you can get forming the sheets into a wall panel. Eliminating typical framing and only needing to seam the edges might actually prove to be a more cost effective method. You could form sip like panels that could be erected similar to a tilt wall building but a 3x9 panel that can be installed by two workers not needing a crane. This is a very interesting topic.

    • @willg-r3269
      @willg-r3269 Před 2 lety +3

      It's not as if enameled steel isn't still around... it's a very common material for applications like bathtubs and sinks, and the reasons why it works so well in those cases (durable, easy to clean, protects the metal from water/rust, relatively cheap to manufacture) are the same reasons why it was tapped for Lustron houses, many of which are still intact and still sporting their original enamel steel wall/roof tiles with extremely little maintenance.

    • @dfherr86
      @dfherr86 Před 2 lety +2

      @@andynichols3464 That was sort of what I had in mind. Stainless steel modules and tilt up would be reasonably affordable. Especially if it was designed for modularity and deconstruction. The life of the building would be centuries. In places like Haiti that have to worry about hurricanes and earthquakes steel houses start to make a lot of sense.

    • @jimbaranski4687
      @jimbaranski4687 Před 2 lety

      @@andynichols3464 rr

    • @jean-martinvonsiebenthal2836
      @jean-martinvonsiebenthal2836 Před 2 lety +6

      Living in a Faraday cage could be a selling point for those people that are reportedly sensitive to EM waves...

  • @Daniel_Paterson
    @Daniel_Paterson Před 2 lety +8

    It's so weird how spot on the recreation of these houses is in Fallout 4.

  • @moconnell663
    @moconnell663 Před rokem +2

    I've been in a two of these homes! They seem pretty nice! Unfortunately running ductwork for central AC or heat is a bit of a challenge, and both had ductwork attached to the hallway ceiling. Just for fun, the realtor turned on the original heating system which was resistive electric elements in the ceiling panels, which was really weird.

  • @FlyingAce1016
    @FlyingAce1016 Před rokem +1

    I love how vox can get me to watch topics I'd never knew would be interesting

  • @nonesuch1309
    @nonesuch1309 Před 2 lety +26

    I grew up in a Lustron house in the 1980s in Fargo, North Dakota. So that's my baseline for what "normal" feels like :) BTW, the house is still there and it has served as a home for lots of people since the 1940s.

    • @danieltolan8443
      @danieltolan8443 Před 2 lety +2

      How was the insulation and heating? I feel like this couldn’t withstand a North Dakota winter

    • @nonesuch1309
      @nonesuch1309 Před 2 lety +7

      @daniel tolan If you wear the right clothes, nothing is too cold. We moved out when I was pretty young, so don't remember everything clearly, but I'm pretty sure we wore toques/stocking caps in bed. I do know that a drunk driver once crashed his car into the house when we were all asleep inside. As far as I know, the dent in the steel exterior panel is still there.

  • @kevinalexander7710
    @kevinalexander7710 Před 2 lety +74

    I actually lived in one of these for about 3 years. I didn’t know what a Lustron home was at the time. Winters were cold.

    • @incognitonegress3453
      @incognitonegress3453 Před 2 lety

      It's 1 up on Meyer Blvd on the S side of the street about 2 blocks E from 63rd st/71. *if ur n kc*

  • @DunmerSG
    @DunmerSG Před rokem +11

    Anyone else thinking of Sanctuary Hills and Fallout 4? This is the exact style they used.

  • @MyNameIsUnavailable
    @MyNameIsUnavailable Před 3 měsíci

    Born in Columbus in '75, its 2024, I'm 49, and I NEVER EVEN HEARD OR KNEW. Thank you, Vox. 😊
    More than you know

  • @patois12
    @patois12 Před 2 lety +16

    There's a Lustron house in my town and I always thought it was odd sitting awkwardly in the middle of an early 20th century neighborhood, and I certainly didn't think I'd ever know anything about it until I saw this random video on my CZcams feed. Once a few years back it was for sale so I looked in the windows and thought it looked like a charming place to live, almost like a cottage. It was the blue exterior two bedroom one shown in the video.
    I also know I would have appreciated an in depth discussion of the interior vs the exterior and perhaps a couple interviews with those whom had already lived in one and ways they've lived in it and decorated it. Also a discussion about what maintenance of the house involves

  • @good_deed
    @good_deed Před 2 lety +26

    There’s a bunch of Lustron homes around where I live. I love telling people about them as we drive by.

    • @KimSimful
      @KimSimful Před 2 lety

      We have a bunch here too and in the next town over. We spent a day driving around to see them all. Blue is popular around here. And yellow.

  • @frozenwarning
    @frozenwarning Před 17 dny +2

    When he already knows that the house is made out of steel, yet tests each room with refrigerator magnets and feigns (I hope) astonishment.

  • @OffGridInvestor
    @OffGridInvestor Před 3 měsíci +1

    Well we've got them in Australia. BRAND NEW. Essentially steel framed steel clad sheds turned into houses. But drywall ceiling and walls

  • @SoapBoxMediaTV
    @SoapBoxMediaTV Před 2 lety +141

    There was a lot of interest in steel being used for anything from kitchen cabinets to (very thick and heavy) lawn furniture post WW II. I've wondered if there must have been a glut of scrap metal available from recycling military equipment that probably lowering the price of steel at the time.

    • @methos-ey9nf
      @methos-ey9nf Před 2 lety +2

      Certainly a possibility

    • @dylanpeterson6192
      @dylanpeterson6192 Před 2 lety +4

      My favorite porch chairs are old steel ones.
      apparently, there is a market for them (or junkies are desparate again) because they've been getting stolen around here fairly regularly.

    • @martinoamello3017
      @martinoamello3017 Před 2 lety +2

      The steel industry needed to find new markets after the war.. Where do you think all those Robby Robots came from?

    • @rjbz554
      @rjbz554 Před 2 lety

      BINGO, follow the money controllers....

    • @royhuang9715
      @royhuang9715 Před 2 lety +3

      More like excessive production of steel from war time. Got to use it for something other than ships tanks so use it on houses.

  • @wildercat2593
    @wildercat2593 Před 2 lety +73

    This channel takes the simplest of topics and makes a 10 minute masterpiece with it 🤣

  • @cursed1054
    @cursed1054 Před 3 měsíci

    I have 2 years in experience building prefab steel walls for apartment buildings. The homes shown in the video here were a good idea however they relied on a centralized production to have all their parts. The problem with steel is its heavy and hard to modify a build afterward. It'll last 200-300 years, but you need to keep on maintenance to prevent corrosion. Transportation is also a problem because you could get more material on site to build said walls there vs at a shop. The biggest thing i figured out is in a small scale for standardization prefab steel walls is perfect. However once you need to do doorways or windows you slow right down needing that perfect square.
    Basically in commerical, its a thing. In residential, its just affordable to do it out of wood with some steel columns for support.

  • @CHIIIEEEEEEEEFFFFSSS
    @CHIIIEEEEEEEEFFFFSSS Před rokem +1

    There are 3 of these houses around the corner from my house and I'd always wondered about them. Thanks!

  • @fransisco5748
    @fransisco5748 Před 2 lety +7

    You took off your shoes before entering, I can see you're a man of culture.

  • @matthewholzinger1042
    @matthewholzinger1042 Před 2 lety +21

    Around me people have torn these down for McMansions. I looked at one years ago. Very well thought out. Still makes a nice hour for those that don't want a huge home. I'd buy one today. The odd thing was the combination washer, dryer, dish washer.

  • @gizzy2324
    @gizzy2324 Před rokem +1

    I grew up near one of these homes and was always fascinated by the blue shiny tile like exterior. I finally know the reason.

  • @frederickwise5238
    @frederickwise5238 Před 2 měsíci

    Thank you for the reminder. My dad worked for Lustron in Columbus for some time after the war and Curtiss Wright was no longer making airplanes.

  • @GerbenDavid
    @GerbenDavid Před 2 lety +6

    I first got into Lustron houses after I saw some of them in the game "Fallout 4" where everything has the style of the early 50s.

  • @kaymish6178
    @kaymish6178 Před 2 lety +11

    These things must have been an inspiration for the sanctuary houses in Fallout 4.

    • @FurryestX
      @FurryestX Před 2 lety +1

      Preston: did ya said? Helping settlements?

  • @albertperez2292
    @albertperez2292 Před rokem +1

    I’d never heard of Lustron before. Thank you for the information it was very interesting.

  • @kimberlyx4060
    @kimberlyx4060 Před 16 dny

    Century of Progress Homes located in Beverly Shores, Indiana has a metal home from 1933. I was lucky to see the inside of all of them. The people totally rehabilitated it. Armco-Ferro is the company name.

  • @wizzzer1337
    @wizzzer1337 Před 2 lety +357

    I can't imagine living in a steel house in either winter or summer if the air conditioning or heating fails... 🥶🥵

    • @eliljeho
      @eliljeho Před 2 lety +56

      Proper insulation… but converting shipping containers have similar…issues.

    • @oldred9122
      @oldred9122 Před 2 lety +87

      They actually had really good insulation with the magic of asbestos!

    • @draggy6544
      @draggy6544 Před 2 lety +56

      @@oldred9122 ah yes asbestos the miracle substance

    • @rotciv4ever116
      @rotciv4ever116 Před 2 lety +36

      @@draggy6544 glad there arent any downsides connected to this revolutionizing fabric

    • @jk-gb4et
      @jk-gb4et Před 2 lety +4

      @@rotciv4ever116 heheehehe

  • @kreepykrawlyman
    @kreepykrawlyman Před 2 lety +13

    Watching this reminds me of the houses in sanctuary in fallout 4

  • @albinhaformiga1070
    @albinhaformiga1070 Před rokem +2

    I like those steel houses I think they’re oddly charming. Also decorating your walls with magnets sounds fun

  • @greglecker8013
    @greglecker8013 Před 3 měsíci

    Thanks VOX! There's a Lustron home in my Mpls Neighborhood as well as a Sears kit home!

  • @KJSvitko
    @KJSvitko Před 2 lety +20

    Every community needs a local historical society.
    Historic preservation efforts are needed to protect unique structures and their history.

    • @caty0000
      @caty0000 Před 2 lety

      There are 2 of these in my town. One of them has recently added some stone around the foundation. It looks out of place on the enamel facade. 🙄

  • @CandiRhae00
    @CandiRhae00 Před 2 lety +58

    The Ohio History Center has one of these homes on display. There's also one in my little village that used to be an Airbnb location. I absolutely LOVE these homes.

    • @missccarr89
      @missccarr89 Před 2 lety +2

      Why not airbnbable anymore?

    • @denisecooper307
      @denisecooper307 Před 2 lety

      There is a steel house on my street in Parma, Ohio. I don’t think anyone is living there. The lawn is very neglected.

  • @doctortelco
    @doctortelco Před 2 měsíci

    As a child we had a family friend that lived in one of these homes in Asheville, NC. Leaving the house one evening, one of the panels fell off the house and hit me in the head. As my hair thins I am just now seeing the scars from my Lustron experience.

  • @Number6_
    @Number6_ Před 2 měsíci +1

    What would concern me is the electromagnetic effects on radio, tv, wifi, capacitance safty concerns, even emp and faraday cages. Which were unkown in the day.

  • @sinokoperkowa
    @sinokoperkowa Před 2 lety +16

    Wow, near my house in Poland in Zabrze there is an experimental steel house from 1927. It has a second floor and houses multiple families. But only the walls were steel. There were only 5 built an this one still stands.

  • @ISilencerI
    @ISilencerI Před 2 lety +7

    I had no idea the Fallout 4 houses were an actual thing once. All the way down to this shelf 4:15 its exactly the same wow

  • @Lauterec
    @Lauterec Před 2 měsíci

    I went to Roosevelt High School and there was a Lustron across the street I would gawk at every day. It was in unbelievably prestine condition for obviously being a mid-century house. I always dreamed of owning it one day!