FEATURES

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    Making Time

    WE ALL KNOW THAT time is money, making it easy to see that time wasted is money lost—and there may be no industry where that point is made more plainly than in home building.

     
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    Tight Squeeze

    It's a curious thing. At the same time that houses are getting bigger and bigger, lot sizes keep on getting smaller and smaller. Just look at the numbers: According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the average size of new homes increased from 2,095 square feet in 1992 to 2,434 square feet in 2005.

     
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    Tumbling Dice

    The industry does not like the popular phrase “mobile home” —it reserves that term for units built before the federal government began regulating its product. Until 1976, house trailers were not subject to any building code. Since 1976, the industry has been covered by a federal rule known as the...

     

EDITOR'S NOTE

  • Tornado Watch

    The connection between tornadoes and the destruction of manufactured homes is so commonplace in news stories that one can almost understand why a congressman would be moved to ask HUD to investigate whether tornadoes were somehow attracted to mobile-home parks.

     

HOUSE BLEND

  • Project Heats Up

    STATE POLITICS INJECTED ITSELF INTO LOCAL planning issues in Loudoun County, Va., earlier this year when Gov. Tim Kaine directed the Virginia Department of Transportation to issue a study on a proposal to build an estimated 33,000 homes on the 9,200-acre Dulles South tract, near Dulles...

     
  • Aero Dynamic

    IRVING, TEXAS–BASED HANSON Pipe & Precast says it has developed a lightweight precast concrete wall system that could revolutionize the home building industry, particularly in coastal regions that are susceptible to strong winds and flooding.

     
  • Some Assembly Required

    LOWE'S, THE NATION'S SECOND largest home improvement retailer, has finalized an exclusive licensing agreement with New York designer Marianne Cusato to carry the house plans and related building materials needed to construct Katrina Cottages.

     
  • Immigration Issue

    FACING A FEDERAL LEGAL CHALLENGE, THE CITY of Hazleton, Pa., in September adopted a significantly revised version of its Illegal Immigration Relief Act, which penalizes employers and landlords for hiring or housing illegal immigrants and makes English the city's official language.

     
  • House Blend: November 2006

    - The Wisconsin state legislature passes a law that requires home buyers, not builders, to pay impact fees. - California awards $210.7 million in housing grants to 42 counties. - Global Green USA and actor Brad Pitt have announced that Workshop APD has won the Sustainable Design Competition for...

     
  • California Goes Solar

    GOV. ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER PULLED OFF an election-year coup late last summer by signing a new law that puts home builders at the forefront of developing solar power usage in the Golden State.

     

INSIDE STORY

  • After Andrew

    AS FLORIDA REGULATORS SEARCH FOR middle ground on regional hurricane standards, builders and insurers remain at odds. This year's storm season brought with it a renewed bluster over the so-called “panhandle carve-out,” which holds certain Northwest counties to less stringent wind borne debris...

     
  • Strange Bedfellows

    The marriage of convenience that joins actor Tom Cruise with NVR's chief executive Dwight Schar forms an alliance that's odd even by Hollywood's standards.

     
  • Clipped Wings

    THE FIRST CASUALTIES OF THE HOUSING industry's downward slide have started to emerge. The biggest case so far is East Brunswick, N.J.–based Kara Homes, the industry's 127th largest builder in sales last year, which on Oct. 5 filed for bankruptcy protection from 1,000-plus creditors.

     

TOP SHELF

  • Top Shelf: November 2006

    This month's top shelf products include an oversized casement window from Peachtree, Turkish-inspired bath designs from noted industrial designer Ross Lovegrove, and the Lancelot Professional line of stainless steel sinks from Moen.

     

MARKET SMARTS

  • Curbed Costs

    THE SMALL, TEXT-ONLY AD PLACED BY BROKER DJK RESIDENTIAL on Curbed.com, a market-specific real estate weblog (or “blog”), will never win any design awards, but the strategy behind it just might—or at least serve as a lesson to any professional home seller to break out of conventional marketing...

     
  • Artist at Work

    EVEN BEFORE IT PUT A SHOVEL IN THE GROUND AT RAVENNA, a 42-unit “boutique” community of oceanfront homes in San Clemente, Calif., builder John Laing Homes' South Coast division had a pretty good idea of how it would theme the grand opening of the models and first phase of sales. “Our market...

     
  • Showroom Spectacular

    INSTEAD OF TRYING TO COMBINE ITS SALES EFFORTS AND DESIGN selection process at its multiple communities around Boise, Idaho, Hubble Homes centralized the latter function with a 10,000-square-foot showroom adjacent to its corporate headquarters. Once buyers sign a contract, they have 45 days to...

     

THE NUMBERS

  • American Pipe Dream

    OVER THE NEXT FEW YEARS, home prices will decline in more than one-third of the nation's 379 metro areas. The affected markets account for half of the value of America's single-family housing stock, and some could experience price dips approaching 20 percent.

     

PRODUCTS

  • Open Door

    NOT SO LONG AGO, THE GARAGE door was a humdrum slab that lacked any style or design options. Today there are seemingly limitless options so home buyers no longer have to settle for the ordinary.

     
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    Suck It Up

    MANY OF THE ITEMS YOU PUT IN your homes appeal to buyers on an emotional level—a luxurious whirlpool tub that takes buyers' breath (and stress) away or a state-of-the-art entertainment room with all the bells and whistles. Sure, these items are way cool and look great, but do they really make life...

     

DIGITAL HOME

  • Keep the Noise Out

    THE PROMISE OF DISTRIBUTED AUDIO IS that everyone in the family can have a haven where they can listen to their own, personalized music. But what happens when all the music collides and the family is unhappy with the new system?

     
  • Digital Home: November 2006

    - The Streaming Music Manager lets homeowners access their music from wherever it resides on the home network. - Speaker maker Artison claims to have made a vibration-free, in-wall subwoofer.

     
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    Lennar Techs Up

    BUILDERS COPING WITH A MUCH slower housing market are beginning to see how home technology can give them a competitive edge.

     

TECH TOOLS

  • Software Bookends

    HOME BUILDERS LOOKING FOR A WAY TO understand HomeFront, the sales and warranty management software from Red Deer, Alberta, Canada–based Zybertech, should think of it as a pair of bookends that run on either side of BuilderMT's purchasing system and the Sage Timberline Office accounting and...

     
  • Tech Tools: November 2006

    - SoftPlan releases a training CD for its 3-D rendering moduleSoftView. - New Web site provides information portal about construction software for builders and contractors.

     

NATIONAL BEAT

  • Growing Up Green

    WHILE GREEN BUILDING continues to rise in popularity across the nation, many people remain unsure about what it means to build green or where to begin.

     
  • The Downswing Report

    ON SEPT. 13, I TESTIFIED IN THE U.S. SENATE on “The Housing Bubble and Its Implications for the U.S. Economy.” My statement outlined the basic causes of the current housing downswing, estimated the depth and duration of the downswing, and discussed the likely economic consequences of the falloff in...

     
  • Tools for Change

    THERE'S NO QUESTION THAT THE HOUSING market is winding down from the record sales and production levels of recent years. Sales and starts are down; interest rates are up; inventories of unsold homes are up; and cancellations are on the rise.

     
  • NAHB Briefs: November 2006

    - The NAHB encourages builders to plan for the future early by making homes user-friendly for all buyers. - The NAHB and UPS join forces to offer NAHB members discounts of up to 30 percent on shipping. - The NAHB actively seeks new foreign lumber markets to begin trade relations with the United...

     

WALKTHROUGH

  • Harvard Heights, Los Angeles

    HARVARD HEIGHTS, A MID-CITY DISTRICT BUILT ON THE hills just southwest of downtown Los Angeles, is a preservationist's dream. Thanks to a land covenant put in place by developers around the turn of the 20th century that required all houses built on the tract to cost upwards of $2,500, the...

     

OTHER ARTICLES

  • Golf-Course Draw

    WHY IT WORKED: A golf course is often a big draw for a community, but one designed by Tom Fazio is almost irresistible for the links-obsessed. Throw in well-priced homes, good amenities, and proximity to Amelia Island and you've got a winner.

     
  • Priced to Sell

    WHY IT WORKED: Buyers flocked to the well-priced homes at North Village, one of four initial neighborhoods at Harmony on the Lakes, a 630-acre master planned community that will eventually feature more than 1,400 homes, 100,000 square feet of retail and office space, and a day-care center.

     
  • Southwest Sophistication

    WHY IT WORKED: These sophisticated loft homes offered an alternative to the area's more expected choices, high-rise condominiums and same-style single-family developments. Their contemporary lines and innovative floor plans are a welcome break from the usual sea of red tile roofs and faux...

     
  • The Web's Role in the Revolution

    The chief advertising officer for one of the Internet's most successful business sites details his company's approach to the Web -- and how the Internet is changing advertising habits.