The New American Home 2010

WORK IN PROGRESS: A rendering of the finished home reveals a desert contemporary style perfectly suited to the Las Vegas climate and the home's infill location.

WORK IN PROGRESS: A rendering of the finished home reveals a desert contemporary style perfectly suited to the Las Vegas climate and the home's infill location.

Credit: RM Design Studio

By the time you read this, Las Vegas builder Adam Knecht of Domanico Custom Homes may indeed have found the $1.8 million he needed to finish The New American Home 2010 for the upcoming IBS. But as of early November, the nearly 6,200-square-foot, desert contemporary house remained only 75 percent finished and eerily quiet as subcontractors waited for Knecht to secure financing and get the project moving again.

It’s a shame, too. Big and beautiful, well-appointed and well-suited within an infill enclave of seven other like-sized luxury homes, the house was on its way to achieving some remarkable performance thresholds (including a preliminary estimate of 47 percent whole-house energy savings compared to the Building America benchmark) and a Platinum rating from the NAHB’s Green Building Program.

Using 10-inch-thick insulated concrete forms as its primary structural system and advanced framing materials and methods for the rest of the shell, a comprehensive insulation package that optimizes different technologies for their most-appropriate applications, and a dedicated effort to divert construction waste away from the landfill—among several other examples—The New American Home 2010 presents what it has since the program’s inception in 1984: leading-edge ideas and solutions that builders can readily apply to their own projects.

Should financing not come through in time, the NAHB is considering several options to present the unfinished house to IBS attendees, including a virtual presentation using photo-realistic renderings of the completed house. “We are weighing how best to continue the program and serve all interests under these unusual circumstances,” says Tucker Bernard, executive director of the National Council of the Housing Industry—The Leading Suppliers of NAHB, which cosponsors the annual project with Builder.

WORK IN PROGRESS: As of late October, plastic and thin-foam sheeting protected cabinets, appliances, and other finishes that had been appllied before work essentially ceased.

WORK IN PROGRESS: As of late October, plastic and thin-foam sheeting protected cabinets, appliances, and other finishes that had been appllied before work essentially ceased.

Credit: Rich Binsacca

KTGY Group of Irvine, Calif., designed the stucco-and-stone–sided house. It features five bedroom suites (including a guest suite on the ground level), a grand, open foyer with accordion-fold doors to a courtyard and pool area beyond, corner-connecting, telescoping sliding glass doors flanking the family room’s stone-faced fireplace wall, and an upstairs “man cave” with a private balcony.

A zero-edge swimming pool is part of an overall outdoor experience that includes a contemplative garden and an extensive covered outdoor kitchen and bar area—an oasis in the heart of an established infill neighborhood only a few blocks west of The Strip. Summers/Murphy & Partners of Dana Point, Calif., created the desert-themed (and drought-tolerant) landscape design.

Tours of the house during IBS 2010 are unlikely and to date unscheduled. Check www.buildersshow.com for updates as the opening of the annual trade show on Jan. 19 approaches.