NBN Online for the week of March 27, 2006

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

In This Issue:

Front Page
Green Home First to Use NAHB Guidelines in a Subdivision
Working Families With Children Locked Out of Homeownership
Find Employees Through New NAHB Online Career Center
Reader Survey: Tell Us What News Is Important to You
Coast to Coast
Slowing Home Market to Ripple Through Many Layers of Jobs
Economics & Finance
Canada Causing Builders to Find New Sources of Lumber
Slide Out West Cuts New Home Sales in February
Rise in February Home Resales Suggests Stabilizing Market
California Builders Want to Reverse the Tide on Home Prices
Eye on the Economy: Rebounding From a 'Soft Patch'
Tips
Builder’s Tip: Sharing Compressed Air
Business Management
Two Sure Ways to Improve Profitability
50Plus Housing
Former Del Webb CEO to Builders: ‘Do Your Homework’
Learn How to Market and Sell to the 50+ Home Buyer
Multifamily
Real Rents Slip in January as Energy Costs Rise
Attend Upcoming Multifamily Conference in Scottsdale, Ariz.
Remodelers
Extension of Comment Period Sought for Lead Paint Rule
Sales
26 Design Trends for 2006
Education
CAPS Credits Available at Pre-50+ Symposium Courses
Education Calendar
Commercial
Insurance Rates Are Going Down
Womens Council
Woman Builder Works Miracles for Katrina Shelter Victims
Labor
Sacramento BIA Participates in Workforce Development Grant
Building Products
Energy Star-Rated Appliances Save Water, Cut Bills
Builder's Engineer
In the Toilet, Part 2
TV
NAHB-Produced Programs on HGTV & DIY This Week
Endowment
$1 Million Gift From M/I Homes to Further Education
South Carolina Builders Help Feed the Hungry
Kentucky Students Graduate Pre-Apprenticeship Program, Get Jobs
Association News
NAHB Spring Board Meeting May 9-13
Spokesperson Training Still Available for 2006 Spring Board
GM $500 Exclusive Offer for NAHB Members
Calendar of Events
NAHB Career Center

Related Articles

Working Families With Children Locked Out of Homeownership

Find Employees Through New NAHB Online Career Center

Reader Survey: Tell Us What News Is Important to You

Green Home First to Use NAHB Guidelines in a Subdivision

The green home building movement received a major boost on March 13 with an announcement by Cherokee Investment Partners that it is building a demonstration home under the NAHB Model Green Home Building Guidelines that will be the first of its kind in a traditional subdivision.

The acquisition firm, which is a world leader in sustainable revitalization of environmentally impaired properties, said that its Mainstream GreenHome has been designed to look and function as a traditional home and will be used to persuade conventional builders and the home buying public to embrace green building on a national level. It is being built by Corban Homes. The announcement was made in Albuquerque, N.M. in conjunction with the NAHB Green Building Conference.

"Cherokee's commitment to the environment matched with their energy for green construction make them a perfect fit for creating a mainstream green house," said NAHB President David Pressly. "They are coming into the project with their builder just as any traditional home builder would, facing the same issues anyone else would, and they are going to prove that green building isn't so radical and that those hundreds of green decisions are important to our environment and the future of home building."

“We have an opportunity to influence large-scale development and vertical construction,” said Tom Darden, CEO of Cherokee. “Starting with the tens of thousands of homes that will be built on the sites we currently own, we have launched our Green Initiative and …this seems like something we should have been doing years ago.”

The 4,000-square-foot house itself, according to Jonathan Philips, senior director of Cherokee, is being built by a builder who hasn’t built green before on a lot that is not optimal for building green. “We are trying to learn about the economics of a large-scale project,” he said, and are looking for an approach to green building “that may be effective on a subdivision basis.”

As a firm that specializes in brownfield redevelopment, Philips indicated that Cherokee is hot in pursuit of sustainability, smart growth and environmentally sensitive land planning. “We have been certified,” he said, “and we take our fiduciary responsibility to the environment very seriously.”

“Our focus is on products and techniques that appeal functionally and aesthetically to the average American home buyer,” said Brad Wood, project manager of Cherokee’s Mainstream GreenHome.

Wood described several sustainable features that are being incorporated into the home:

  • A ground source heat pump is expected to help decrease the home’s heating and cooling costs by as much as 75%, augmented by spray-in foam insulation that creates a highly insulated building shell to minimize heating and cooling loads. The attic and crawlspace will be unvented, yet insulated and conditioned, to improve energy performance while improving the overall air quality of the home. Energy Star-certified appliances, windows and roofing will also help minimize the home’s energy consumption.

  • Helping to reduce water use by 50% over a conventional home, a rainwater catchment system will collect, filter and store rainwater from the roof for irrigation and non-potable uses such as toilets and laundry. An interlocking system of porous, permeable pavement crates will store storm water and release it over time to allow for natural absorption.

  • Structural softwood and interior hardwood products will use sustainable woods certified through various national certification programs.

  • Photovoltaics will be used to generate a portion of the home’s energy needs. A unique solar thermal hot water system on the roof will meet most of the home’s hot water needs. Also, waste heat from the geo-source HVAC system will be recycled into free hot water.


Whirlpool is providing all of the appliances for the home, said Butch Gaudette, the manufacturer’s director of trade relations, including Gladiator garage work products and an Energy Star-rated KitchenAid® refrigerator and Duet® laundry.

The GreenHome will be located near Cherokee’s headquarters in Raleigh, N.C. Initial grading and foundation construction have already begun, and the official groundbreaking for the home is scheduled for April 3.

Non-subdivision homes incorporating NAHB’s green guidelines have been built in State College, Pa. and Albuquerque, according to Ray Tonjes, chairman of the NAHB Green Building Subcommittee.

For more information on green home building resources at NAHB, e-mail Calli Schmidt, or call her at 800-368-5242 x8132.


 

Sponsored by
McGraw Hill
Construction

 
 
> Click here to tell us about your experience in the Gulf Coast...
 
 

Sponsored by
Freddie Mac

 
 
> Montana State Representative Bob Lake Cautions Against Extensive GSE Reform
> Freddie Mac CEO Syron Dissects GSE and Tax Reform Proposals in Speech to Home Builders
 
 

Sponsored by
NAHB

 
 
> Building for Boomers & Beyond: 50+ Housing Symposium 2006
> NAHB Multifamily Pillars of the Industry Conference and Gala
> Spring Construction Forecast Conference