Tin foil takes rust off quite well, then you can use other products to shine it up. If the rust is really bad you'd cut out the panel and weld a new one on then sand back the weld and polish.
@chip.chippa64167 ай бұрын
@@Idle_Hands Thats nice and now AI chat had been incorporated to the game, you can tell Codsworth yourself, and im sure it will take the piss out of you.
@Peatingtune8 ай бұрын
Wow, imagine people actually satisfying a need for housing! What a time that must have been to live in.
@robbie66258 ай бұрын
And at reasonable prices that even blue-collar workers could buy!
@Minalkra8 ай бұрын
@@robbie6625 The price of lots and labor plus the red tape are the issues of today, from what I can see. It's entirely possible to buy a pre-fab well built shed from somewhere like Home Depot and retrofit it for habitation but my GOD the amount of paperwork and inspections required to do so are prohibitive. There are 'kit homes' you can buy for a couple grand still out there. They vary in quality and are generally of simple wood construction - the cheapest I've seen are single bedroom units for around $5,000 (a few years ago). You still need a land lot, a foundation of some description, the water, sewage and electricity are outside the scope of the build ... it gets pricey once you tack on all that. It can be $10,000 just to get connected to a water company. And that doesn't include the multiple construction inspections, the electrical inspection, the plumbing inspection. Anyway, I'll shut up now.
@rolandswift43117 ай бұрын
@@robbie6625 modular and manufactured homes are still available and fairly affordable, as long as you're not trying to live somewhere where they've banned them. A new 4-bedroom 1400 square foot mobile home goes for about $100,000 with full-service instillation, and a 2-bedroom 770 square footer (probably closer to what's being shown here) is right around the $50,000 mark. These are prices for new units directly from the manufacturer, by the way. It's still a good chunk of change, but nowhere near the $400,000-$500,000 range of a lot of newer homes being built.
@zer0deaths8627 ай бұрын
Prefer the good old days when you can wander out into the wilderness and build your own home wherever you wanted.
@sufferingincorporatedtm17817 ай бұрын
@@zer0deaths862 just wait 200 years and you can :)
@BrainboxccGames8 ай бұрын
nah you don't put a dryer in the utility room, this is where you keep your robots box and spare fuel! 😂
@mekkler7 ай бұрын
And your paper sack full of plutonium for the car.
@tombeegeeeye57653 ай бұрын
No one refilled Cogsworth for 210 years. One hell of a fuel,
@ReneRivers8 ай бұрын
That is amazing. I would have never guessed they modeled the houses in FO4 after actual houses.
@Fluffykunn8 ай бұрын
Being inside of one is very bizarre. The best analogy I can give is imagine being inside a mobile home but all the walls are metal. Depending on the wall insulation (one i was in had the walls retrofitted with foam insulation) , the sound inside has a strangely sterile note, but you're basically inside a metal box.
@neutral.chaotic8 ай бұрын
A lot of the "downtown" Commonwealth areas have very decently accurate Bostonian architecture, too :)
@adamb898 ай бұрын
@@FluffykunnYeah I toured one during an open house last month. I was tempted to buy it since it was in my price range and I like Fallout, but within 5 minutes of walking around I was like yeah nope, there's a reason these didn't take off lol
@demandred19578 ай бұрын
@@adamb89If the bank would have loaned me the money on the blue one I toured, I would have snatched it up. It was in perfect original condition, but had the heat upgraded to central air, but the original heat was still in place as well.
@tomhenry8978 ай бұрын
Well,set in the future it’s 50/60s style
@kjlucky65018 ай бұрын
Imagine buying one of these homes and making it a fallout themed airbnb! That would be so cool:)
@Brotund268 ай бұрын
That is a great idea!
@yeahboyiiiii2227 ай бұрын
I own an airbnb and I built it around fallout, but slowly the theme has gone, people dont love it as much as I do
@deaaronfox57 ай бұрын
@@yeahboyiiiii222 can you show me? idk if yt lets you link but if not what's it called/where at?
@kjlucky65017 ай бұрын
@@yeahboyiiiii222 you should consider advertising it here:) plenty of people here seem to be interested in a Fallout themed stay
@debsy101games7 ай бұрын
Wouldn’t one rather live there?
@xlerb22868 ай бұрын
The small town that I grew up in must have had a good Lustron salesperson. There are about half a dozen Lustron homes there, and that in a small town that didn't see much development at all in the immediate post WW2 years. They've held up pretty good. Most of them look like new, though I'm sure the interiors have been remodeled several times over. My parents knew the couple that owned one of the homes so I remember visiting them on occasion as a young kid. Winters get pretty cold here so I don't know how well the heating systems worked.
@1cornicon6798 ай бұрын
my small town had just one i think. every time my friends and i walked past it we were in awe at how shiny it looked. i was so disappointed when i learned how impractical these houses actually are, i wanted one for so long!
@xlerb22868 ай бұрын
@@1cornicon679 I hear that. I always thought they were nice trim looking houses. Thinking more on it I remember there was one that always had a box fan running pointed at the big picture window. They must have had a problem with condensation.
@jerryprice54848 ай бұрын
I live in Dowagiac MI where there are two Lustron homes. I also know of one in Kalamazoo MI
@MRTOWELRACK7 ай бұрын
@@xlerb2286That said, that seems more like an HVAC design issue which plagues many homes from that era. If updated with what we've learned (improved HVAC, rust resistant steel, etc.), I wonder if steel buildings could be a great solution for some cases.
@xlerb22867 ай бұрын
@@MRTOWELRACK I'd think they could be. I don't know that it's the best approach with all the alternate options we could explore these days, but it's sure worth another good look in any case. I mean, those houses are ~70 years old and with reasonable maintenance they've held up pretty well.
@Helfirehydratrans7 ай бұрын
We need to bring back this kind of house that you can literally put up with three tools Because we do have pre-fabricated houses but they’re really expensive
@ElishaFollet7 ай бұрын
And the corporates who owns them are more interested in renting only then actually selling
@Alex_FRD8 ай бұрын
I'm surprised by the amount of people who didn't know that this (and many other things in Fallout) are based on real things from the 50s.
@robbie66258 ай бұрын
I love the reimagining of how nuclear power works in the game lol. The world would have been pretty much irradiated long before the bombs dropped.
@BlackRedDead19437 ай бұрын
simply because i believed better in humanity than this bad joke of a house could be anything but a parody xP
@RandomPersonOnTheInternet12347 ай бұрын
pretty sure most know if theyre fans of the game...
@dabrams847 ай бұрын
It's because you have to be old enough to have been exposed to 1950s popular culture in old movies and stuff like that.
@ZiddersRooFurry7 ай бұрын
@@BlackRedDead1943 They're not terrible. My grandfather owned one and with some insulation and better heating they're pretty cozy.
@rmartinson198 ай бұрын
I wonder what a modern iteration of a Lustron home would look like? Steel is a lot more expensive now than it was then, so it wouldn't be very competitive, price-wise. But on the other hand, with better modern metallurgy we have types of stainless steel now that are as strong as anything they would have built the Lustron out of, but would never have the rust issue. Now obviously that would balloon the price even further, but I think there might be a solid - if rather small and niche - market for such an inherently durable home. The heating and cooling issue is an easy fix in the design stage, especially with more modern techniques and technologies in play. Modularity would also be a priority, and I think we have the ability now to make a Lustron-style home where the owner has almost complete lego-like freedom to rearrange the floor-plan to whatever is desired. Add in superior modern materials science for the exterior, and I think we could probably cook up something even more durable - and much more flexible where decoration is concerned - than the original Lustron's enameled panels were. Man, thinking about this just makes me wish I had the money to give something like this a go. You just know it would be a hit with prepper types if you marketed it right. A steel-clad home? One you can transport out and set down anywhere with a concrete foundation? One that takes damn near zero structural maintenance ever, unless someone goes out of their way to break something? A home whose floorplan could be customized and altered almost any way they want (even AFTER its initial assembly)? There's a whole lot of paranoid people who would pay good money for all that...
@octavianpopescu47768 ай бұрын
I'm no expert on construction or architecture, but I think it would be more glass than steel. Like office buildings, with a steel frame and large glass panels. It also matches current-day architecture trends.
@rmartinson198 ай бұрын
@@octavianpopescu4776 Yeah, but I'm not talking about matching current day architecture trends. I'm talking about taking the original idea for the Lustron home and updating it with modern materials and technology, while still being more or less faithful to the core idea of a steel-framed house that requires minimal structural maintenance.
@nekoali28 ай бұрын
The new version of a Lustron home in concept would probably be concrete 3D printed homes. Cheaper and faster to build than a traditional wood frame house, sold as a kit and assembled on site with a 'futuristic' vibe to it. It would be durable in the short term, but flaws in the construction would quickly start to manifest. Any damage to the structure would be much more difficult to repair than a typical house construction, and remodeling would be almost impossible. A neat idea, and good in concept, but not as future-proof as they might be advertised. Other concrete-based homes from previous decades show the difficulties faced in the future by these new, 3D printed versions.
@decayingsun57988 ай бұрын
Makes me think of modular homes that are a thing today. Built of contemporary materials in a warehouse and shipped to the home site to be erected. I think if a modern Lustron house manufacturer popped up the designs would be modular instead of or in addition to the set floorplans, come in additional colors, and potentially in different architecture styles. The appeal of a strong home that you could assemble yourself would be pretty high I think.
@enderclasscraft64118 ай бұрын
those amazon box houses
@NightDen8 ай бұрын
Love the architecture and style of these houses.
@cendresaphoenix19748 ай бұрын
Same
@edu79798 ай бұрын
i dont tbh
@century22987 ай бұрын
It's a Lustron home ! Made in Columbus Ohio.
@rollitupmars7 ай бұрын
@@edu7979ok who asked
@HappyDude17 ай бұрын
i just love everything from that period the style the clothes the cars the houses the music....
@shoopnooop29528 ай бұрын
If the siding panels were still made it could be a decent option compared to the corrugated steel sheets for the siding.
@serioussoldier79778 ай бұрын
Really nicely done presentation man. would be cool to see the lustron reimagined into a concept home today, keeping most of the aesthetic q’s but revamping the materials and amenities.
@kingdomofvinland88278 ай бұрын
I think it would be cool to have a house like this
@DrivenByBricks8 ай бұрын
I was really impressed by the depth of research in your video. It's fascinating to see how Bethesda incorporated real-life architectural elements into the game and it made me appreciate the attention to detail in Fallout 4 even more.
@Letizia28107 ай бұрын
I love the 30s, and the 40s, 50s architecture, home and restaurant design. And the 60s and early 70s aesthetic. It looks so cozy, welcoming and inviting to me. Also efficient and spacious…
@JohnnyX507 ай бұрын
Nice use of the UK Thames Television Ident! :D Fallout 4 still remains one of my favourite games and you can play it in many styles as you like, always changing your approach. Either just to pass time and do nothing, or really get stuck in or just go out on a random shooting spree lol Oh and thanks for that. The Ident tune sent me on a 2 hour internet troll to find out what ever happened to Rod, Jane and Freddy and who sang the bloomin Rainbow song! And WHAT was Zippy anyway!
@DjOdyssey19718 ай бұрын
Codsworth Approves.
@ogreinhard49968 ай бұрын
Had the opportunity to clean carpets at one of these homes, with the same layout in the video, very cool house; Except it was very cold, lots of drafts. 100% metal building isn't the best idea in the cold north lol
@GorgonzolaChedda8 ай бұрын
And I am wondering if it would be any better in the warm south. I feel like the lustron thermostat settings are either fridge or oven.
@finfan838 ай бұрын
Really glad someone knows about Lustrons, was afraid everyone is oblivious to those. Thanks for recording this video.
@filanfyretracker8 ай бұрын
I had no clue there was that many mail order homes, I honestly only ever knew of Sears.
@Bob-qk2zg8 ай бұрын
The historical divergence in Fallout can be determined by the Lustron houses, the design of weapons, the Philco Predicta televisions, and the vertibirds evolving from the Hiller X-18... 1959.
@thunderspark16338 ай бұрын
Except there is evidence in game, considering it is a fictional universe you can innore these if you want, that the dirvergene actually happend much sooner and was just not a one time event but a cumulative one. I will agree that the Divergence when the Timeline, actually splits from our own universe, is arround that time. But the Divergence is just not a single point.
@Bob-qk2zg8 ай бұрын
@@thunderspark1633 True. Example: the X-18 was invented in 1955 not 1959. Example: AK-47 assault rifles were from 1947. I think the developers had to pick a year to reject further advancement. So it is "cumulative".
@nazaG_898 ай бұрын
@@thunderspark1633 true, nuclear fusion was achieved and changed the whole world but the transistor was not invented until they destroyed themselves basically so the timeline is pretty interesting in many ways and open for stuff of the what if?
@RedSiegfried8 ай бұрын
Comments that happen when people don't realize "The Divergence" is a literary device used by the writers to explain the setting and not an actual event that happened in the game world.
@Horsemanray8 ай бұрын
@@RedSiegfried You can't explain a concept like retro-futurism to gamers. They need everything mapped out for them or they start getting rowdy at their local gamestop. So now Fallout has a dIvErGEnCE where everyone eats 200 year old salisbury steak.
@Leahi848 ай бұрын
Even though I can see all of the massive problems with these homes, I still feel like it would be cool to live in one, at least for a little bit. Though I'm very thankful we didn't end up in a timeline where Lustron homes took off and became the major house type in the country.
@GreymansGoose8 ай бұрын
I think that the company went out of business, or gave up on the project before they had a chance to work out all the kinks... Had they continued on, and continue to grow the project it would probably be leaps and bounds better by design in the 1970s. But, that being said, the 70s were all about fall colors. Could you imagine those houses coming in Orange and brown?
@onomatophobia3277 ай бұрын
@@GreymansGoose and Avacado green
@James-rm7sr8 ай бұрын
It also explains why in Fallout 4 you really wouldn't be able to fix them. Scraping them and building on the cement slab would likely work better. Which we see the desired replacement normally being wood or cement. I normally go cement. Fallout 4 player made wood homes look like some scrap wood made to be a shelter.
@markshaw2708 ай бұрын
Scrapping
@hhs_leviathan8 ай бұрын
Personally, I prefer mixing barn and warehouse parts. That way, you can get pretty reasonable wooden building with metal accents and nice big windows.
@Chasmodius7 ай бұрын
All they need are roofs, so I often don't bother giving them walls at all. Other than the defensive wall, which is actually the wooden floor with concrete foundation (it's cheaper per concrete than the concrete walls, and comes with a platform for turrets).
@mjw79947 ай бұрын
There are a few Lustron homes in my town and I've always loved them. I think they just look so cool and different from boring, traditional, wood stud houses.
@markksargent8 ай бұрын
Like what you did here. No idea that Lustron existed. I was a HUGE fan of Fallout 3, played it until I nearly went blind. So glad they made it into a series. Liked, already subbed!
@Markus_Andrew7 ай бұрын
This was very revealing. I live in Australia, where Lustron homes were unheard of - so much so that I never knew they existed until I watched this video! Now I can clearly see where the designers of Fallout 4 drew their inspiration for the houses of Sanctuary Hills. Being a fan of the pulp sci-fi era and a history buff, I was already well aware of the 1950s influences for many other game elements - the "futuristic" concept cars, the art deco/mechanistic architecture, the in-game billboards and product labels, the retro-futuristic hardware, etc - but this was quite new to me. Thank you so much for uploading, here's a big like!
@NorthernChev7 ай бұрын
There’s a Lustron home just down the street from me. It’s in excellent condition. Hasn’t changed in the 50 years I’ve been here. Still just as nice as it’s always been.
@krackerman36288 ай бұрын
Loving the universal Ikea chair and stool at 7:54
@JeyBeeHH8 ай бұрын
Really the most interesting video I've ever seen related to Fallout 4. I'm still fascinated that the Sanctuary Hills houses actually exist. Thank you.
@albusron34907 ай бұрын
You mentioned how these things were manufactured here in Columbus, Ohio, well, there's actually a Lustron on display in the Ohio History center off I-71 by the State Fairgrounds. I visited the museum ages ago, probably not long after Fallout 4 came out, but I didn't realize the prefab they have on display was the basis for the player's home in the beginning of Fallout 4.
@Bod89988 ай бұрын
Lol see ya rinsed the Thames TV tune 5bring back memories of me childhood
@ianbillmorris8 ай бұрын
He seems to be an American too so I'm surprised he'd even heard it before. But yes, brought back a few memories to me too
@AnastasiaLUVSU7 ай бұрын
@@ianbillmorrisBritish TV exists here and has for decades.
@FlamingRobzilla8 ай бұрын
I always wondered about the prevalence of steel construction in Fallout 4. This was a very interesting and well made video. It scratched an itch I've had for years. Thanks.
@scorpiaplayz42208 ай бұрын
Wow I mean it's unfortunate that the Lustron homes had issues but still wow, honestly those homes feel more original than the modern homes of today.
@EeveeFromAlmia7 ай бұрын
Yaknow, this actually explains how the houses are still standing and not rotten like timber should - and all the rust. What I thought was a plot hole was just an artifact of fallout being set in another world
@dmitrybahrt92277 ай бұрын
Can we please bring back buying properties for $1000 or less?
@BallinAndCantGetUp197 ай бұрын
I mean even adjusting for inflation, 13,290 bucks for a house is damned good
@1rjona7 ай бұрын
That would require a depression followed by a world war, reduction of population to 1950 level and return to the gold standard after stealing everyone elses gold
@Letizia28107 ай бұрын
Yes please, exactly what I was thinking. Looked at those prices and couldn’t close my mouth 👁️ 👄 👁️
@BallinAndCantGetUp197 ай бұрын
@@Letizia2810 Honestly this style of mass produced housing should be subsidized and heavily implemented, just tweek the materials and improve the design a bit. That'll never happen though, there's more money to be made with used houses than in building new ones.
@johnwang99147 ай бұрын
@@BallinAndCantGetUp19And far more profit margin in new luxury homes and condos. However, attempts at government subsidized prefabricated housing has been tried in the various communist regimes where everything is centrally dictated with disappointing limited success, with the most recent example being the construction of pandemic isolation hospitals out of prefabricated concrete motel components in China though in truth, most of the out of home isolation occurred in stadiums and gymnasiums... Sure, housing could be made inexpensively on an industrial scale but people simply wouldn't want those homes and companies would always profit more but catering to luxury not affordability.
@PhilipCockram7 ай бұрын
If you ain't been to Greygarden you should go ....whole place is run by Robots .
@Kutanamar7 ай бұрын
All I know is that I've gotta get back to Diamond City. Biggest town I ever saw.
@MatthewCaunsfield8 ай бұрын
A fascinating tour of these houses, thanks!
@YTDoubleG8 ай бұрын
You possibly have the best profile pic on KZbin. At least in the top 20.
@nPcDrone7 ай бұрын
2076 was such a good year.
@arcdecibel99868 ай бұрын
I would buy one of these today if they were for sale. All the problems are easily fixed with products that are readily available, and I HATE painting THAT much. I suck at it. No way I'll ever paint something that looks as cool as a retro 50's house, anyway, so this would be a no-brainer, and it's definitely a step up from container homes. It's not that I'd HAVE to live in these places, mind you, it's just that I refuse to pay more than 150K for a house. I don't care if it's Buckingham Palace, no house is worth that much to me unless I can immediately sell it for more.
@AK-bx3ft8 ай бұрын
It's the first time I ever seen an American use the old LWT title and music in their intro =D
@DanaTheInsane8 ай бұрын
Those of us Americans who grew up in the 70s watching public television knew it fairly well. They used a LOT of British television. I think I first saw it on Monty Python of all places. Forgive me for paraphrasing, but they played the intro, and the announcer said "We have an action packed evenings entertainment tonight on Thames, but first here is a rotten old BBC programme!"
@AnastasiaLUVSU7 ай бұрын
Many Americans should know that intro if they watched PBS. I was born in the late 80s and i Knew of that intro because of PBS. I watch a lot of British TV but mainly from the 90s. Anyways "Fresh Fields" is where I first saw it.
@Frank-t7n8 ай бұрын
The Barton County Historical Museum in Great Bend Kansas. Has a Lustron house that is open most all year round. It is one of a few museums that has one. Great Bend Kansas had a dealer. That sold many of them threw central Kansas.
@exoticspeedefy79168 ай бұрын
Fyi, the heating system was actually there to melt snow that might clump on the roof. As the system was built to allow heat to flow through the tiles
@vylbird80147 ай бұрын
And it's radiant heating anyway - it'd work fine on the ceiling. The real problem is just the lack of insulation - you'd need a substantial furnace just to keep up with the rate of heat loss.
@Micah__8 ай бұрын
This was super interesting. I’m glad this video popped up!
@RobertoMaurizzi7 ай бұрын
LOL, I'm sure not so long ago I watched a video about tiny homes or Boxabl's Casitas and the problems they're having today are STILL the same they had with the Lustrons (permitting, utilities, unforeseen costs...)
@SAL101018 ай бұрын
The picture at 3:45 is the Lustron house in the Ohio Historical Center in Columbus
@century22987 ай бұрын
The one that was nearest to me was disassembled and moved to become the Historical center in Whitehall, right beside the factory it was made in ! ( Beside the Columbus Airport )
@AllisonWong-de7el7 ай бұрын
MIND BLOWN!!!! You have NO idea the chills I got watching this video!! The hours I spent in the Sanctuary area, and then to see such similar house designs!! Shared, subscribed, and what ho! You have some interesting videos tucked away here!!
@SaladSentinel7 ай бұрын
I've seen a few Lustron houses still standing. Always a treat to spot one. That's what a resident of Columbus, OH do.
@mouseblackcat52638 ай бұрын
Need a Plastic Version 😮 That I could believe would actually last 200 years without maintenance.
@Agg1E918 ай бұрын
How cool would it be to live, today, in a replica of a video game house based on a real model of house from the mid 1900s. Minus the Cogsworth, unfortunately.
@nessuno19847 ай бұрын
I've seen a few videos and read a few articles on the houses the Fallout 4 houses were based on but you have gone into much more depth and explored them fully. Very well done.
@Nympoo18 ай бұрын
Really cool, interesting video, thank you
@TT.Hell.8 ай бұрын
Really appreciated this, I always wondered if the houses had a real model.
@GhostFirefx488 ай бұрын
Now I see the comparison the house are Lustron homes which were made during the 40s n 50s for veterans who returned home from the war..they ran about 10,000 a home.
@Captain_Char8 ай бұрын
need these to make a comeback
@GryphTKai18 ай бұрын
I actually worked in the office building that was once the Lustron factory just near the Columbus Airport. One of these homes is still up right across the street from Lincoln High School in Gahanna, next to a BP gas station.
@MrBrodman988 ай бұрын
Just bought a Lustron IRL, thanks for making this!
@YABBAHEY18 ай бұрын
Added bonus of knowing exact sunrise/sunset too. Metal house has got to be loud pings, bongs & bangs all day. BTW Tucker was derailed by the big 3's government influence. Just like the 100 mpg Volvo in the 70's they quashed it.
@ElishaFollet7 ай бұрын
Why would the government be so interested in screwing over a car?
@YABBAHEY17 ай бұрын
@@ElishaFollet Payola
@markissboi35837 ай бұрын
steel coated walls so you can hang pictures with magnets seems a good idea
@andyandreson39897 ай бұрын
My cousin owned two of these type homes. Our town had several. I know one was torn down, but he may still have the one.
@HunterKiller7628 ай бұрын
This was quite an interesting watch. Thank you
@brentwaters74657 ай бұрын
I feel like today’s galvalume coatings would make that kind of house last forever. But then one can just use the existing 3’ wide metal sheets so. No point in it.
@mikehughes49697 ай бұрын
When I was a ki back in the 70s a buddy of mine lived in one of these. It was nice, if a little small, and I hung out there all the time. Always thought that pass through was cool.
@billytheman8 ай бұрын
As a old carpenter all I can say is good riddance, a house with no wood is a bad idea, rust, rust, rust. No can fix.
@dukenukem83818 ай бұрын
Answer is to build houses out of titanium
@dinisfigueira99188 ай бұрын
@@dukenukem8381 or with bricks
@dukenukem83818 ай бұрын
@@dinisfigueira9918 Made from plutonium
@loyalopposition-us8 ай бұрын
As an old homeowner all I can say is a house with wood is a bad idea. Termites, termites, termites, fire!
@alexanderrahl70348 ай бұрын
@@loyalopposition-ustermites arent much of an issue. Ive never even known anyone to have them. And fire is a pretty rare occurrence. But rust is an inevitability, and it spreads like a rot or disease. Even after you clean rust from something, if you dont get all of it, it just seems to spread from those spots and come back. Itll happen out of sight too, and its more expensive to deal with and replace rusty metal in the framework of a metal house, than bad wood
@fluffnera8 ай бұрын
I love these little bits of history and stories.
@superpixelchris8 ай бұрын
Absolutely fascinating video! Thanks so much
@warrenlemay81347 ай бұрын
Love that you have brought attention to the real-life history behind the design of the game environment!
@wakcedout8 ай бұрын
The fallout world from what I’ve gleemed is the future people in the 50s saw without the invention of the semiconductor. Hence why electronics are so bulky and old fashioned looking. So best imagination is the fallout universe is one where the semiconductor never gets invented. Now I’m hoping I’m using the right term here as I’m referring to microchips which have lead to the powerful computing at small scales we have today.
@bobbob-gi1yp8 ай бұрын
Awesome video, these houses are like the precursor to shipping container homes
@wonderlandparty60547 ай бұрын
As soon as I heard the intro tune I subscribed.
@Miraculor7 ай бұрын
I know the intro tune. What is it from?
@synedrus_8 ай бұрын
This was an awesome video! Very informative and engaging!
@Auggg118 ай бұрын
Amazing video. More of these types of real world breakdowns of video game things would be watched by me!
@VINTAGE19598 ай бұрын
Great video! I really appreciate this. You were very detailed. You definitely should cover some other Fallout architecture and it's real world counterparts. Perhaps you could make a video on the Lucky 38 and the 1962 Seattle space needle. Modern day las vegas has the stratosphere, which is based off of the 1950s and 60s space needles of the time. But it was made in the 1990s. There was a much shorter and different looking version of that from the 60s called 'The Landmark'.
@ShiryouOni7 ай бұрын
Awesome, thanks for this! I absolutely love that house.
@johnl61768 ай бұрын
I bet Lustron homes wouldn't have handled 200 years of nuclear fallout though.
@tombeegeeeye57653 ай бұрын
They didn't the roofs were fill of holes and several collapse. The ones at the West Everett estates didn't look much better.
@discostew1157 ай бұрын
First time watching. I love the intro, super 1990s Dateline or PBS
@wrmprixa997 ай бұрын
Very cool recognition for the Aladdin Home Co.! They were once based out of Bay City, Michigan.
@cookiessprite8 ай бұрын
Honestly, I love them. They look amazing.
@stoneangel7778 ай бұрын
Love the Thames theme in the intro
@anthonysmith93087 ай бұрын
We have four of these in my town. They are in the same part of town. Two have car ports and the other two have I closed walk ways to the garage, made of the same material.
@StonedNight8 ай бұрын
I lived in Portsmouth Ohio and grew up on North Hill road and there were two down the street from my grandfather's house and then two blocks away set another one eventually the two down from my grandfather's house got sold as a lot and one was used to refurbish the other which still stands to this day
@AlphaRaptor2k68 ай бұрын
There is one in my town. It's now a coffee drive thru. Funny, that all around where I live now, there are rather small bungalows that are almost tiny house small homes. That and I live in a manufactured home(which also came on a few truck loads) built in 2011, replacing one of those tiny bungalows.
@logansvideos958 ай бұрын
Fantastic vid! I worked at a historic preservation office in Kentucky where a fellow intern was doing a project on these
@QuantumRift7 ай бұрын
Love the Lustron Homes - there's a complete one at the Ohio Historical Center in Columbus OH, and it is inside the museum. You can walk thru it sit down at the tables, watch TV, read magazines etc. It's is so cool, and I'm 66 years old.
@santaclaus54118 ай бұрын
petition for housing corps to make homes similar to this again
@Felcaster7 ай бұрын
Great deep dive, this is investigative reporter quality work. Thanks for broadening our knowledge on this specific detail. :)
@Arkancide8 ай бұрын
A world where the 1950s never ended culturally or aesthetically... 250 years of a glorious existence. I know thing got bad and worse during that time, but boy oh boy. I think I'd rather have been born in the 1980s in THAT world instead of this one. No internet, a more idealized American value system, 1950s era diner culture alive and well, and various other good points. Thank you for telling us about the Lustron homes!
@vylbird80147 ай бұрын
Racial segregation, cars without seatbelts, women banned from most colleges, multiple moral panics... it's easy to view the past with happy nostalgia. The 50s was also the decade of the red scare, and a time when states were passing laws banning comic books out of a fear the stories would corrupt the youth. And a time when the government was running entrapment campaigns in the military trying to trick homosexuals into revealing themselves so they might be imprisoned, out of a concern that the gays might be subverted by communists. It was a time of intense pressure to conform: You'd better look right, dress right, speak right and worship right, because if you were seen as an outsider you would be ostracized at the very least. But I will concede that the aesthetics of the era were pretty cool.
@tardisrider258 ай бұрын
For real, I saw one of these still in my neighborhood in surf blue. The took the outside off now. in retrospect that's sort of sad now.
@demandred19578 ай бұрын
Nice! There are TWO Lustrons on the same street in Mexico Missouri. One is the Eggshell blue one that is right by the bridge in Sanctuary, and the one on down the street is gray and it has a matching garage. I tried to buy the blue one, and they only wanted 50k for it.. But the bank deemed it a "mobile home" and would not loan on it.. sigh.
@jda48878 ай бұрын
very instructive video , well researched. Thank you.
@glgarage74908 ай бұрын
One of these houses still stands in my town, and I believe the original owners still live there
@illeagle6668 ай бұрын
Great video! Didn’t know about Lustron homes, reminds me of Levittown and the associated homes.
@UncleMikeDrop8 ай бұрын
I bet a Lustronesque home would make much more sense with 31st century advancements in material science and miniaturization.
@barrymantelli80118 ай бұрын
I think in 1000 years we'll have different materials science altogether.
@UncleMikeDrop8 ай бұрын
@barrymantelli8011 We basically, already do. Just look at polycaronates.
@thefancydoge86688 ай бұрын
The one thing that would be hard to find a replacement for is the wood framing.
@Starghost19998 ай бұрын
Great Vid! Found one within driving distance so that's one thing im doing this summer!
@ramcharger1547 ай бұрын
There are tons of grain silos that are a blue enamel over steel and many are still shiny and corrosion free for over a half a century 😂😂❤❤
@chowbox878 ай бұрын
This is super cool to see, I’m an architecture nerd and actually just did a modded playthrough of fo4 where I fixed up the sanctuary houses to a rusted version of their prewar glory and watching the b roll in this was like “oh yeah I’ve places ss2 plots in that exact spot”
@kennethlindahl92068 ай бұрын
These homes are scattered in Spokane WA We are a rail hub so transportation wasn't a problem When working on the one that I did as a handyman I can tell ya some things are ezer but most jobs are harder to work on than a stick and sheet house I never noticed a Lustron tag so maybe another company??? A buddy of mine has one as a rental I will ask him the brand
@sonofsandwiches68928 ай бұрын
3:21 OMG -- I actually live just next to Park Hills, KY !!! The house pictured there is similar to the houses there now. Although, its mostly an upscale, if older area of Cincinnati. Creepy!!
@henrikmonkee8 ай бұрын
Looks like you did some research my good man, interesting concept.
@YorkGod18 ай бұрын
Great Game! Best to take your time with every playthrough to appreciate every detail & every story!