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Week of March 22, 2004

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President's Message

* For Working Families, Affordable Housing Is in Short Supply

Housing Forum

* It’s Not Easy Building Green

Housing and Economics

* Escalation Clause From NAHB Provides Insurance Against Rising Materials Prices
* Weather Cools Down Home Starts a Bit in February
* Builders See Strong and Steady Single-Family Market in March

Legal Issues

* NAHB Fights for Reasonably Priced Flood Insurance

Green Building

* Leaders in Green Building Helping to Develop Guidelines
* Awards Recognize the Best and the Brightest in Resource-Efficient Home Building
* Interior Clay Finish Chosen for National Green Building Award

Multifamily

* New Mailbox Regulations Still Raise Some Concerns
* Pillars Awards Showcase the Best in Apartments and Condos
* Apartment Management Sessions Offered at Multi Housing World

Small Builders and Remodelers

* To Do or Not to Do…Handyman Service

Seniors Housing

* Show Your Prospects (and Their Guests) That They Have Arrived
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Member Dividends

* The Best Paying Non-Job I Ever Had

Women's Council

* Marketing Yourself: Be Prepared for the Interview

Housing Finance

* Bank Listing Service Potentially Worthwhile Resource for Projects in New England

Labor

* NAHB Members Help Students Finance Their Education

Building Products

* New Treated Wood Windows Resist Decay and Termites

Builder's Engineer

* Joe Drut’s Meltdown

Building News Coast To Coast

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NBN Back Issues

 

Large Production Home Builder Shows Smaller Builders the Way to Green Building

Setting an example for smaller builders who have been watching the green home building movement from the sidelines, the more than 600 attendees at NAHB’s annual Green Building Conference in Austin March 14-16 heard from a high production builder how a successful push into the market for resource-efficient, environmentally sensitive homes is yielding rich dividends.

Joyce Mason, vice president of marketing for Los Angeles-based Pardee Homes, said that her company’s evolution to becoming a green builder started in 1998 with its participation in ENERGY STAR®. Administered by the Environmental Protection Agency, homes become qualified under the program when they are independently verified to be at least 30% more energy-efficient than homes built to the 1993 national Model Energy Code or 15% more efficient than the state energy code, whichever is more vigorous.

Mason said that being able to attach the ENERGY STAR label on a home is a relatively easy way for builders to advertise to consumers that they are offering a product that taps into the advantages of green building, which include energy savings, environmental stewardship, healthy indoor air quality and good design.

Pardee is now building all of its homes to the ENERGY STAR standard, she said. The company built 2,300 homes last year and expects to deliver 2,600 homes in 2004.


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Speaker after speaker at the conference emphasized that there is a wide range of building techniques and technologies that can be used to produce green housing, and Mason indicated that her company is choosing green products that are generally in the mainstream.

Because the company releases its finished homes in groups of eight to 15, "We use items that are readily available and that can’t be hard to get,” she said. Products also must have a proven track record and lengthy warranties and local subcontractors need to be knowledgeable about installing them.

Mason also advised builders to look at the whole house system and the whole house environment first, and to “know the climate and region that you’re in.” For example, Pardee’s activities tend to be concentrated in markets such as Las Vegas, where there is extreme heat and dryness and water shortages are a specific concern.

Pardee stepped up its green building commitment in 2002, with its first “Living Smart” home in San Diego. Buyers are offered three plans that provide premiums in energy savings ranging from 15%-63%. Currently committed to this program are 2,300 homes in three regions and 11 neighborhoods, Mason said, and all of Pardee’s homes may eventually be included.

In its marketing, Pardee provides its home buyers with options that fall into three categories, she said:

  • Earth Smart products include cellulose insulation, primarily in the attic; carpet from recycled soda bottles and flooring from sustainable materials such as bamboo and cork; driveway pavers that allow water to percolate into the earth; engineered and certified wood from managed forests; and fiberglass entry doors that hold up and insulate better than wood.
  • Health Smart products include low VOC (volatile organic compound) paint; a central vacuum system, which Pardee offered even before it became a green builder; and formaldehyde-free insulation.
  • Energy Smart features include ENERGY STAR refrigerators and other appliances that use 10%-50% less energy; General Electric Advantium ovens that cook with light and are eight times faster than conventional ovens; programmable thermostats; fluorescent lighting that uses 66% less heat and lasts up to 10 times longer than incandescent; photovoltaic trellises for solar energy; and sealed duct systems.

Mason said that there is enormous potential for advancements in green building in the Sunbelt, which accounts for roughly half of all the new housing in the country. Only about 10% of the homes being built in this region meet minimal energy standards, she said.

Nationwide, more than 32,000 homes were built green using local green building program guidelines from 1990-2002. In 2002 alone, more than 13,000 green homes were constructed.

There are now 31 successful green building programs in the country, 11 of which are operated by home builders associations in Arizona, California, Colorado, Georgia, Hawaii, Missouri, New York and Washington.
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