Via Planetizen

Joe Cortright continues an ongoing crusade to elucidate the facts about the creation and consumption of McMansions in the housing market. ... According to Cortright, the falling premiums for McMansions might have to do with the aging process: "Like new cars, McMansions may have their highest value when they leave the showroom…" But according to Cortright, another factor could also be working against the McMansion: as demand for urban, walkable areas has increased, demand for McMansions built on the periphery of metropolitan areas has not gone unscathed.

Finally, says Cortright, the market factors that drove the boom in McMansions in the bubble years just no longer exist.

The bad news for the McMansion market is new—Planetizen was picking up stories that reported of a renewed trend toward houses of larger and larger sizes around the United States as recently as July of 2016 (and also in June 2014). Cortright, however, offered a dissenting opinion about how the real estate's data skewed toward a false portrayal of McMansion dominance in the market.