GottaWanna

GottaWanna t1_j3td1zv wrote

I believe that’s how my parents’ house is in rural PA, but I had mine surveyed during a neighborly dispute and it ends at my retaining wall, behind the sidewalk. So everywhere is probably different. Possibly even within the city.

Side note, I used to talk shit about people who walk on the road when there’s a perfectly good sidewalk along the street, until I started going for walks in my neighborhood. You don’t know street to street if you’re going to get a walkable sidewalk, or any sidewalk at all. Then you get a random post-war street in places like Marshall-Shadeland (Ridgeland and Newhampshire drives , and Ingram to note) with random to no sidewalk at all like it’s Pleasant Hills. So now, I have an understanding of the street walking in certain situations. But that also had me wondering about the ownership of sidewalks. I bet the streets I mentioned own at least out to the road. So who made it okay to have no sidewalk when planning these?

Overall, I bet it’s an old oversight. They were probably officially part of city infrastructure at one time, until they realized they wouldn’t be able to legitimately maintain them.

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GottaWanna t1_j3ru19z wrote

I’ve always wondered about this because my property line stops before the sidewalk, yet if you live on a corner lot, you bet your butt they’re going to do the bumpy pads there for you. I feel like the reality is that this is a mega grey area and largely unenforced.

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GottaWanna t1_j1xxn5h wrote

Forced air heating dries the air out more, so radiant heat provides a more comfortable heating solution. It can be more efficient as well, especially in older houses. My house has no insulation, but has forced air. I imagine my ducts are very cold and I probably lose a lot of heat just from that.

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GottaWanna t1_j1g269v wrote

I’ve been charting my utilities for years. What’s interesting is that if you oversimplify and assume a simple dollars per MCF rate (which is not how your billing actually works), the Winter rates from 2017-2021 remained largely unchanged at my current address. I saw my first real increase during the 2021-2022 winter.

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GottaWanna t1_j1ewjy2 wrote

I have around 1500 sq ft in a 115 year old house with no insulation. If not on the budget billing, my highest dollar bill was January 2018 at $246. I’ve kept a winter temp in the lower to mid 60s with a space heater in the room I’m occupying. It blows. Needs insulation and air sealing.

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