-
Neighborhoods used to be built this way. Back in the day, at the turn of the previous century, there were no developers, no master plans, and no model-home complexes with a choice of six floor plans. Houses would go up individually on roomy lots, respectful of the regional style and the scale of wha...
By the first year or two of this decade, many home builders had soured on the Internet. The fraud case surrounding Enron and the wave of dot-com crashes in the late '90s widely discredited the Web as a business model. The building industry even had its own homegrown dot-bomb: the ill-fated BuildNet.
For a well-heeled retiree in the market for a spot in paradise, Wailea Beach Villas in Maui, Hawaii, is a spectacular choice. As part of the 1,500-acre Wailea Beach Resort, its neighbors include the Grand Wailea Resort Hotel & Spa to the south, the Outrigger hotel to the north, and the upscale Shops...
The folks at Jenamar Communities had some hurdles to leap when it came to developing and building Jubilee at Hawks Prairie, an active adult community in Lacey, Wash. It was the first Pacific Northwest project for the Granite Bay, Calif.–based company, which focuses on the design and construction of ...
There are countless statistics showing that Americans are living longer, but how about this one: According to the Massachusetts Board of Registration of Real Estate, in 1960 only 3,000 Americans were over the age of 100. By 2012, that number will change to 2.45 million. And all of them will need som...
This past September, nearly 1,000 prospective buyers turned out for “Toll Advantage Day,” an invitation-only event that Toll Brothers conducted to showcase three mid-rise projects in the New York metro area. A picnic was followed by a tour of Hudson Tea, a 523-unit condo conversion of a former Lipto...
In a recent study of 2,000 baby boomers commissioned by Builder's parent company, Hanley Wood, and conducted by the market research firm DYG, 60 percent of respondents anticipated “downsizing” with their next move. But downsizing, they clarified, meant fewer rooms, although not necessarily less squa...
For the president of Carrollton, Ga.–based Patrick Malloy Communities, which will close over 400 homes in the Atlanta market this year with prices from the low $100,000s to mid-$300,000s, all the signs of a slowdown are there. Traffic has been dwindling. Cancellations have been rising. Large, nation...
-
The New American Home would not be possible without the support of the members of the National Council of the Housing Industry (NCHI)/Supplier 100, as well as a legion of local and regional suppliers and installers. More than 40 NCHI members contributed products to this year's house and provided con...
-
The New American Home is a two-year commitment that stretches the limits of even the most organized and efficient builder. In 2007, the team met the additional challenges of historic-district oversight and a tight downtown lot. Working together, the team of Homes by Carmen Dominguez, architect Blood...
Despite the fact that concrete is a common structural material in Florida, precast concrete walls and floor panels are less popular, especially in the residential realm. As with other aspects of its design and operation, The New American Home 2007 stretches the industry by building with this paneliz...
The architect used what was left in terms of the home's allowable height to blow the third level to a 10-foot ceiling, making this space the most loft-like of the three living areas. It also has the advantage of mostly unencumbered natural light, which the design leverages through extensive windows ...
Like a tree house set in the limbs of a mature oak in the neighborhood, the master suite that occupies the entire second level of the home is a true getaway.
Like the street-level retail and small professional offices provided under the condos sprouting up around Lake Eola, the home's main floor offers occasional and functional spaces for the household.
-
Interest in wood-plastic composites—commonly used for outdoor decking and indoor molding—is growing as builders look for low-maintenance, rot-resistant materials. One problem: Composite boards are thick and heavy.
Businesses in the Buffalo, N.Y., area have sued the state of New York in federal court over the Scaffold Law.
Childhood polio may have thrown up roadblocks for Lennar chairman Bob Strudler, but it never stopped him from achieving success and inspiring others to greater heights. Strudler died Nov. 7 in Houston at age 64. The cause was complications of an infection.
-
- Vancouver, Wash.–based lumber supplier Abitibi-Consolidated reports $225 million in refunded softwood duties as part of the U.S. and Canada tariff dispute.
- The Northeast Florida Builders Association reports that the slowing housing market is a sign of stabilization, not gloom and doom.
- The 2...
When markets turn soft, things get interesting. With housing starts correcting to a more sustainable pace and inventory piling up, builders are reevaluating the rote and the slapdash when it comes to design and pondering how savvier floor plans and features might serve as a differentiator in tougher...
-
Symphony Village reflects a couple of trends that have been bubbling up in the 55-and-over world for the past few years. According to Bob Karen, an industry veteran who planned and secured all of the entitlements for the community, the 495-unit project epitomizes what he calls the “new norm.” That m...
-
In recent years, The New American Home has been a beacon of innovation with regard to energy and resource efficiency, earning local and national distinction for low energy consumption and the use of sustainable construction materials and methods.
About the time that Brian Catalde got involved in the Building Industry Association (BIA) of Southern California, he read a book titled The Wisdom of Crowds: Why the Many Are Smarter Than the Few and How Collective Wisdom Shapes Business, Economies, Societies and Nations, by James Surowiecki.
-
The New York Times article in December 2006 on housing price statistics caused quite a stir among those who follow industry numbers. The story called attention to the fact that the widely reported OFHEO numbers fail to take into account any mortgages over $417,000 (the cap for Fannie Mae and Freddie...