March 2006

  • Builder's Choice Design & Planning Awards

    Well-designed housing deserves recognition and for 25 years BUILDER has honored the leaders in residential design. Enter BUILDER's most prestigious design competition. Categories include custom homes, production homes, design details, community design, remodeling and rehabilitation, and more.

  • Walkthrough: March 2006

    Delray Beach began as a small agricultural community settled by black families coming from the Panhandle of Florida in the early 1890s. A few years later, William Linton, the postmaster of Saginaw, Mich., visited the area in response to an ad for acreage for sale and wound up purchasing 160 acres...

  • What's New On Builder Online: News As It Happens

    SUBSCRIBERS TO OUR GROWING FAMILY of free e-mail newsletters know that they can find links to recent news articles of interest to home builders. But readers have requested a way to be alerted quickly when important events take place that can affect builders' operations. A brand-new e-mail...

  • The Nationals: Other Winners and Judges

    The 2006 National Sales and Marketing Awards: Other Winners and Judges.

  • The Nationals: Memorable Models

    Builders know that even the greatest plan can flop if buyers can't imagine themselves living in the house. That's where model merchandising becomes critical. These projects highlight the difference that details can make.

  • The Nationals: Special Spaces

    Before buyers spend years in a home, they'll spend critical hours in a welcome center, a sales center, or a design center. A disconnect at any one of these points can be the difference between a customer who is happy to refer friends and family and one who just wants to get the whole thing over...

  • The Nationals: Sending The Right Message

    While an ad has a couple of seconds to get prospects' attention before they turn away, a brochure can establish a relationship: People can carry it around with them and pore over it when the day gets quiet and they can concentrate on it. This year's gold award winners for best brochures gave their...

  • The Nationals: First Impression

    For many buyers, advertising is their first introduction to a community. What makes them stop flipping pages in a newspaper real estate section or a magazine and take a second look at one community over another? It's all about breaking out of the pack and running in a space all your own. These...

  • The Nationals: Drive To Succeed

    How do you move a lot of excess inventory and save thousands of dollars in advertising at the same time? Forrest Homes in Atlanta did it with bugs—big red ones on wheels.

  • The Nationals: Far From Ordinary

    Sometimes the best things happen when there is nothing to lose. Such was the case when Naples, Fla.–based B-Squared Advertising was invited to pitch Jack Parker Homes in Fort Myers, Fla., for the Lighthouse Beach account. It was up against the existing ad agency and figured the only way to have a...

  • The Nationals: Differences By Degree

    When the Irvine Co., based in Irvine, Calif., debuted its latest master planned community, Woodbury, more than 20 new product types from 20 builders were scheduled to roll out at the same time. There was so much to see that prospective buyers were bused from one sales center to another.

  • The Nationals: Introduction

    This year's entries in The Nationals showcase the best—and often, very expensive (one brochure costs $45 each to produce)—that builders have to offer prospective home buyers.

  • Southern Comfort

    Follow the brick-paved walkway past the columns of Tennessee fieldstone, the wrought-iron fence wrapped in climbing jasmine, and the blooming crape myrtles. You'd almost swear the Craftsman-style door you're about to knock on is the entrance to a refurbished house in a historic part of town. And Ed...

  • No Mistakes

    Fieldstone Homes Utah slashes weeks from its cycle time through strict quality control.

  • No Loose Ends

    A common-sense construction philosophy combined with back-office software keeps cycle time down for this Texas home builder.

  • Help Wanted

    Consider the irony that contractors like to bring up when they talk about the current state of production home building: Builders, they say, are pressuring them to compress their stages of construction. But cycle times keep stretching out, partly because builders' scheduling is unrealistic, given...

  • Time-Savers

    The building process is inherently slow, but here are some products and systems that can help you shave days off your schedule.

  • Orchestral Maneuvers

    Measure twice, cut once. The carpenter's adage has become so clichéd that it's lost much of its resonance. But it's still sound advice where productivity and efficiency are concerned. Building snafus that require mid-course remediation before the house is even finished can add weeks or months to...

  • Soft Push

    It takes Olthof Homes six fewer days to close a house now than it did last June. But the St. John, Ind.–based builder didn't find that time in the sticks and bricks of its homes. It shaved the days from its “soft cycle,” the time between when the buyer signs the contract and the builder breaks...

  • Running in Place

    It's “hurry up and wait” at most jobsites, as cycle times stretch out.But many builders see this as a systemic problem that needs fixing fast, especially if your market starts turning downward.