NBN Online for the week of April 4, 2005

(Plain Text Version) for full graphical version, click here.

In This Issue:

Front Page
Pervious Concrete Helps Control Storm Water Runoff
Production Builder Offering Zero-Energy Homes in California
Layouts for Living
Floor Plans: Affordable Home Makes Maximum Use of Space
President's Message
NAHB Is Your Business Partner
Politics & Government
Coalition Examines Causes of Pennsylvania’s Slow Economy
Economics & Finance
FHA Elderly Home Builders Sought for Online Survey
HUD Increases Adjustment Caps on Five-Year FHA ARMs
Business Management
Tax Tips: Use the Right Construction Codes
Seniors Housing
There's a Market for Affordable Seniors Housing
Education
National Designation Month Draws 1,700 Participants
Education Calendar
Research
PATH Surveying Builders, Consumers on Innovative Homes
Regulation
New Videos Educate Texas Builders on Storm Water
Tips
Builders’ Tip: Cutting Engineered Joists
Sales
Know Your Prospects and Their Commitment Will Follow
Legal
Conference to Address Alternative Dispute Resolution
Labor
Project CRAFT Scores a Decade of Success in Florida
Building Products
Recaptured Gypsum Used in Concrete Floor Underlayment
TV
NAHB’s Newest TV Production, ‘Rock Solid’ Debuts on DIY
2005 International Builders’ Show on HGTV
Coast to Coast
Definition of ‘Ditch’ Is Muddy at Best
Builder's Engineer
Cactus League, Here I Come!
Association news
IBS Headed for Las Vegas Eight Times Through 2020
NHE Grantees Receive Common Ground Award
Tulsa Resource Campaign Raises Non-Dues Income
Jacksonville Builders Help Fund New Homeless Shelter
Five Inducted into Northern Nevada Housing Hall of Fame
New Look for NAHB Web Site Coming Soon
NAHB Spring Board Meeting Set for April 11-17
Robson Seeks Office of NAHB Vice President and Secretary
Get GM Discount on More Than 80 Vehicles
Subscribe Your Employees to NBN for Chance to Win a Digital Camera
Help Tsunami Survivors Rebuild Their Homes
Calendar of Events
NAHB Career Center

PATH Surveying Builders, Consumers on Innovative Homes

PATH (Partnership for Advancing Technology in Housing) is conducting short online surveys among contractors and consumers to gauge their interest in the major concepts that have been included in the PATH Concept Home.

The survey includes questions related to reducing on-site material waste, alternative building products and systems, and "open building" to separate the home’s systems.

The feedback will be used to help the Department of Housing and Urban Development formulate policies.

PATH’s ongoing Concept Home program is focusing this year on a high quality, affordable home that can be built in 20 days. The home will be designed to accommodate the changing lifestyles of its occupants, to adapt easily to technological advances and to be easy to repair and remodel. It will look custom built.

Seven innovative systems and technologies will make the home possible: a flexible floor plan, the separation of home systems, organized and accessible utilities, standardization of measurements and component interfaces, improved production processes, integrated subsystems and alternative basic materials.

PATH plans to develop different Concept Homes for different home markets throughout the country — from urban infill multifamily housing to single-family homes in the suburbs. The homes will also be designed for different regional climates and household sizes.

Research blueprints and specifications will be made available to home technology manufacturers that are interested in developing specific products, processes and homes in line with Concept Homes performance criteria.

PATH will also be studying the institutional and regulatory barriers preventing Concept Home concepts from being introduced in the marketplace, including financing, building code discrepancies and quality certification.

The project is also hoping to enlist innovative builders to build, market and sell Concept Homes.

PATH says that it is applying radical concepts from the automobile and toy industries to promote thinking about new approaches, technologies and materials in the home of the future.

To download the surveys, click here.


 

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