What is your ERE housing score?

All the different ways of solving the shelter problem. To be static or mobile? Roots, legs, or wheels?
classical_Liberal
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Re: What is your ERE housing score?

Post by classical_Liberal »

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Last edited by classical_Liberal on Thu Feb 04, 2021 11:38 pm, edited 3 times in total.

wood
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Re: What is your ERE housing score?

Post by wood »

0.1 (work) + 0.1 (grocery) + 5.7 (cost) = 5.9

Efficient, yes!

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Seppia
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Re: What is your ERE housing score?

Post by Seppia »

Funny how I get basically the same scores in two very different setups.
When we were living in Manhattan my score was 0 + 0 + 15 = 15
Now we are living in Italy and it's 5.6 + 2.5 + 6 = 15.1

I guess it is an indication that the Housing Score works, because I would consider that DW and I live a very wasteful and unoptimized life compared to most people in here, but semi-acceptable overall
The methodology though seems to favor people who live AND work inside small-midsize cities*, not sure if this is by design or accident?

*living and working in manhattan, SF, Paris, London etc it's very hard to get a score below 10 because of housing costs, while working in rural/industrial areas outside of cities will most likely kill the option of walking to work.
For example I now work in an industrial area outside of Milan where there's nothing but warehouses and factories, zero public transport to get there, and living in the area would be completely miserable. Also, the closest grocery store is like 8 miles away.

IlliniDave
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Re: What is your ERE housing score?

Post by IlliniDave »

Mine is awful since I own and use two dwellings 1,147 miles apart. My primary residence scores about 23 and my secondary about 21 (allowing that with it work location is essentially n/a). Those numbers don't consider any sort of opportunity cost for the ~$300K total I have tied up in the properties combined (no mortgage on either). So if they would sum I would have a score of 44.

So individually they are in the "needs improvement" category and together are "wasteful". But since financial efficiency does not occupy the top of my value list I tolerate it without angst.

7Wannabe5
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Re: What is your ERE housing score?

Post by 7Wannabe5 »

Ego wrote:At this property we get paid a salary in addition to free rent/utilities/internet/phone/storage for living here. That said, there is some work involved in rolling out the trashcans, calling tradespeople, and dealing with tenants, so it is not really an apples-to-apples comparison.
Right, it can't be "apples to apples" because you have transcended the independent optimization model and entered into the interdependent optimization model. If you deduct scantest cost of paid shelter (maybe $3000/year) from 1 Jacob ($7000), you are left with approximately $4000 "budget" for everything else. If you divide this $4000/260 work days/year, you wind up with $15/work-day. So, in any situation of shared home accommodation, maintenance and production, the acquisition of a frugal "steward", "wife", "caretaker/provider", or "helpful house guest" becomes beneficial at a fairly low level.

IOW, anybody who currently owns or rents enough housing to possibly accommodate other human(s) at the legal level of (#bedrooms X2 +1) would obviously be able to reduce expenses by splitting costs with a house-mate or room-mate, but would also derive clear benefit from approximately 20 hrs of service/shelter barter if valued at or above approximately $12.50/hr. So, the Mary Poppins Rule might be that you will likely find yourself continuously welcome in any situation in which you contribute no money, but you do contribute 20 hours of utility/month (given little inherent negative utility.) EVEN if this utility is shared benefit (you would have to make your own bed and cook your own dinner anyways.) IOW, in a situation of shelter that is being treated as heated/vacuumed waste space, this is a WIN-WIN-WIN for all parties and in terms of energy conservation.

Fish
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Re: What is your ERE housing score?

Post by Fish »

Seppia wrote:
Fri Sep 29, 2017 3:34 am
The methodology though seems to favor people who live AND work inside small-midsize cities*, not sure if this is by design or accident?
If work or house location is a constraint (i.e. not willing to change one or the other) then the goal is to find a local minimum (not global). So this is really just a personal optimization exercise, not a competition. From a transportation efficiency perspective, being able to live close to both work and food sources is ideal. In large cities the jobs tend to be clustered in a small area and competition will drive the cost of nearby housing up (we're not the only ones trying to optimize, many humans intuitively do this too). I'm not sure it's methodology as much as it is reality.

Keep in mind that the "divide by 100" in housing cost is supposed to reflect your personal preference for financial vs. transportational efficiency and when performing your own optimization, you can adjust this (and divide by 50, or 200, or use a custom math function) to suit your preferences. Also, suppose your income is X when working in a small-midsize city, and 1.5X working in a high cost of living area. You could add 0.5X to your cost of housing in the small-midsize city to reflect the opportunity cost of living there. But this presumes you're willing to change both work and housing.


@iDave - The reason for calculating distance to work and grocery is that money and food are both necessities for most people. Since you're FI, you could replace "distance to work" with "distance to nearest suitable lake" to suit your preferences. Presuming cost equal, is a house next to the lake equally preferable to a house next to the grocery store or one halfway between? When you are retired and have all the time in the world, you might not be optimizing distance to grocery anymore. In that case you just set a constraint for it and leave it out of the objective function. Or you might decide that optimization feels "too much like work" and the inefficiencies are tolerable, so you do something more interesting instead, like fishing or playing the guitar. :)

Instead of comparing to an absolute rating scale (which was thrown in there just for fun), anyone who is optimizing should take the next step and start looking for suitable alternatives to see how much efficiency can be improved by changing jobs or moving house.

IlliniDave
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Re: What is your ERE housing score?

Post by IlliniDave »

Fish, that is pretty much what I've done, although not all facets of it were approached quite as systematically. My intuition has proved reliable more often than not so I often go with it. In the case of the cabin I intend to spend a lot more time enjoying the lake and wilderness than hanging around at the grocery store, so it is 18-19 mi to the nearest grocery store and waves from the nearest lake roll up on my property when the wind comes from the west or north. In terms of my actual residence, by the time I got serious about FI I was well established here and it wasn't an impediment to FI so not worth the hassle of selling and moving only to retire, sell, and move again in a few years.

There are some other considerations such as schools, recreation opportunities for children, and low crime, that led to the decision to wind up where I'm at. But those are less important now and if I was choosing again proximity to work would be a much bigger factor. When I retire and resettle in Illinois it will be a combination of proximity to supplies and to my parents that will be the initial consideration, though it's a small city and nothing is too far away. I'm hoping to be able to do a lot of biking around town in place of driving, though admittedly it will be more for exercise than for financial concerns.

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Seppia
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Re: What is your ERE housing score?

Post by Seppia »

@fish thanks for the explanation.
I don't see this as a competition, I'm too old and the only remaining competitive fire is mostly with myself :)
I was asking because assuming we consider lower scores to be better (less wasteful), the way it's setup seems to favor living and working inside a small/midsize city.
For a NYC resident, I see as semi impossible to get a score lower than 7, while for someone living and working in downtown Pittsburg it should be fairly easy
Of course one can tweak the variables and the multipliers, I was just curios is you had set it up in this particular way for some specific reason.

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Ego
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Re: What is your ERE housing score?

Post by Ego »

7Wannabe5 wrote:
Fri Sep 29, 2017 7:26 am
Right, it can't be "apples to apples" because you have transcended the independent optimization model and entered into the interdependent optimization model.
I like that... interdependent optimization. I think we need to begin a thread of examples.

Fish
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Re: What is your ERE housing score?

Post by Fish »

@Seppia - The difficulty of achieving cost- and location-efficient housing is not going to be the same in all areas. I think we can at agree on at least this much.

What the formula looks for is an intersection of your job, grocery outlet, and affordable housing. "Affordable" is used in an absolute sense here, consistent with the 21DM:
I think that a good guideline per person for living arrangements is $200-300/month/person. In some places this buys more than other places. As far as I am concerned, the number is absolute. If I want to live in a “nicer place” it simply translates into a (much) smaller place and vice versa.
There may not always be a low-score solution, especially if one is inflexible wrt location. I browsed the Manhattan craigslist and the "under $300" filter is useless because nearly all the results are weekly rates... and sometimes nightly. :shock: To get under $500/month you pretty much need to secretly share a room with an identical twin without any overlap in usage.

I am going to say that the formula works as designed because NYC is not a place where "convenient" and "affordable" intersect. That's reality. Again, if you have a requirement for a particular location, the advice is to do the best you can with the score and not worry about the absolute value.

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Lemur
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Re: What is your ERE housing score?

Post by Lemur »

Distance to work 34.4
Grocery 3.8
Housing 8.5
Score 46.7

F

You guys are impressive. I have a long commute that is killing me at the moment. Currently making active steps to eliminate this...(working on trying to find a different job and relocate). I'm still on Day 1 of the makeover.

Zikoris
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Re: What is your ERE housing score?

Post by Zikoris »

We live about 1/2 mile from work, and 1/2 mile maximum from our regular grocery stores, and walk to all of them. There's another grocery store that's 1.5 miles away which we bike or bus to once or twice a month, but I'll exclude it for simplicity. Our rent is $815, which we split, so $407 Canadian each, which is $318 USD.

So: (0.5) + (0.5) + 318 = 3.19. Highly optimized!

Farm_or
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Re: What is your ERE housing score?

Post by Farm_or »

14+30+290/100 = 3.34

Remote living can be compensated for by low housing? Especially if your "housing" generates income (just add water).

Fish
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Re: What is your ERE housing score?

Post by Fish »

Just to keep everything comparable, and to avoid confusing subsequent participants... please divide housing cost by 100 before adding up the three terms. I understand everyone will not be familiar with order of operations, but it is how the formula was intended.

Zikoris: 0.5 + 0.5 + (318/100) = 4.18 (and since you walk to work and grocery, you have the option of zeroing out those distances, for an adjusted score of 3.18)

Farm_or: 14 + 30 + (290/100) = 46.9

SavingWithBabies
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Re: What is your ERE housing score?

Post by SavingWithBabies »

Distance to work: 0 (work from home)
Grocery: 3.4
Housing: 19.75 (w/ utilities) / 2 adults

Score: 13.275

We're moving in ~6 months to get that housing down.
Last edited by SavingWithBabies on Mon Nov 13, 2017 2:44 pm, edited 2 times in total.

CS
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Re: What is your ERE housing score?

Post by CS »

12 It works only because I work at home (starting next year with new career - yay!) Could improve with more biking...

slowtraveler
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Re: What is your ERE housing score?

Post by slowtraveler »

Score = (Distance to work in miles) + (Distance to grocery in miles) + (Monthly cost of housing in USD /100)

0 miles to work
1 to 3 miles to food, normally walk 2 miles to food in a day, typically to restaurants but starting to cook more. This means driving once a week for about 2 miles one way on average. So can call it .5 miles per day.
1.7 for housing, will drop to 1 soon.

So 2.2 as an average right now, 1 as a low, 7.7 as a rare high.

2Birds1Stone
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Re: What is your ERE housing score?

Post by 2Birds1Stone »

7.5

oldbeyond
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Re: What is your ERE housing score?

Post by oldbeyond »

2 mi bike to work, 0.5 mi bike to grocery, $650 housing ---> 6.5. Seems like this index really penalizes commuting(living for free right next to a grocery store I'd be allowed a 9 mile commute by public transit to keep the same score...)

prognastat
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Re: What is your ERE housing score?

Post by prognastat »

11.3 miles to work by car -> 11.3
1.4 miles to grocery store by car ->1.4
$1500/month for 2 adults on housing -> 7.5
Total = 20.2

I really should move to cycling to the store which would drop my score to 18.8. Need to get some pannier bags to help with getting a large amount of groceries using the bicycle. I did get and install a bike rack to prepare for this. I really should procrastinate less.

If we carpool to work and it's the same location(which we do) do we get to half our work commute score?

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