NBN Online for the week of February 26, 2007

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In This Issue:

Front Page
Rapid Changes Foreseen for Home of the Future
Apply for ‘Buy Now’ Advertising Assistance Grants From NAHB
Learning Program Knocks Down Language Barrier for Hispanics
Share Nation's Building News With Your Staff. It's Free.
Coast to Coast
Housing Remains Steady Amid the Gloom
Housing Forum
Letter to the Editor: Bringing a New Dimension to Toilets
Economics & Finance
Indianapolis Remains Most Affordable Housing Market
U.S. Shenanigans Threaten to Unravel Canada Timber Pact
Useful Links to Monitor Economic and Housing Trends
Tips
Builders’ Tip: How to Make Invisible Drywall Butt Joints
Sales and Marketing
Real Living Needs Shape Dream Home Buyers Want
Must-Have Tech Trends Setting Homes Apart
Business Management
20 Ways to Cut Construction Costs and Improve Profitability
Multifamily
Survey Finds Price and Location Drive Condo Sales
Remodelers
Remodelors Council Changes Name to 'NAHB Remodelers'
Chicago Remodeler Mike Nagel Named Chair of NAHB Remodelers
Women
Minnesota Builder Willenbring Is New Women's Council Chair
Education
Education Calendar
Legal
NAHB Submits Brief in Clean Water Supreme Court Case
Design
AARP-NAHB Awards Honor ‘Livable’ Community Design
Workforce housing
Information Sought on Affordable Housing Developers
Labor
Freddie Mac Joins HBI for Gulf Coast Construction Training
Building Products
Owens Corning Shingles Fast to Install, Reduce Callbacks
Stud University Provides Steel Framing Training
TV
NAHB-Produced Programs on HGTV and DIY This Week
Endowment
Apply for Herman J. Smith Scholarships by May 3
Association News
Michael T. Rose, Washington, D.C. Area Developer, Dies at 63
Builders Join ‘Silly String’ Drive to Save Soldiers’ Lives in Iraq
Piedmont ‘Gas Girl’ Receives Associate of the Year Award
Office Depot Deals: Music to Your Ears
GM Business Choice, Lowe’s Team Up to Reward NAHB Members
Lock in 2006 Visa/MC Processing Rates Before Increase
Calendar of Events
NAHB Career Center

Related Articles

Builders Join ‘Silly String’ Drive to Save Soldiers’ Lives in Iraq

Piedmont ‘Gas Girl’ Receives Associate of the Year Award

Office Depot Deals: Music to Your Ears

GM Business Choice, Lowe’s Team Up to Reward NAHB Members

Lock in 2006 Visa/MC Processing Rates Before Increase

Calendar of Events

Michael T. Rose, Washington, D.C. Area Developer, Dies at 63

 

 

Michael T. Rose

Michael T. Rose, 63, a well-known builder/developer who championed envionmentally sensitive communities and accessible housing in the greater Washington, D.C. metropolitan area for more than three decades and who was an active and influential member of NAHB at the local and national level, died in his home in Potomac, Md. on Friday, Feb. 23.

Rose, who founded the Michael T. Rose Family of Companies in 1975, was nationally regarded as a leader in developing communities and creating homes that were environmentally sound and in harmony with their natural surroundings.

Rose, his company and communities received numerous awards and recognition for environmental excellence, including The Chesapeake Bay Conservation Award by the Izaak Walton League of America and the National Arbor Day Foundation Award of Excellence.

He was also one of the first developers in the country to have one of his communities designated as an urban wildlife sanctuary by the National Institute for Urban Wildlife.

In addition, Rose was recognized for his efforts to preserve trees and conserve nature by the American Forestry Association (AFA) and has been cited in numerous books, magazines and newspapers, including the Washington Post, for his environmental sensitivity in the development process.

Rose joined NAHB in 1976 and was an active member of the federation for 30 years. He was a past president of the Maryland National Capital Building Association, an NAHB life director and a member of the NAHB Executive Committee for eight years.

He was the founding chairman of the NAHB Environmental Issues Committee and was past chairman of NAHB’s Association Planning Committee, Public Affairs Committee and Land Development Committee.

“In the early 1990s, Michael was pivotal in designing NAHB’s aggressive and comprehensive environmental program ― a program that has resulted in a string of victories for the association and has helped raise the bar for all of us on the best practices for building environmentally-friendly developments,” said 2006 NAHB President David Pressly during NAHB ceremonies last year honoring Rose's contributions to NAHB and the industry. Pressly also acknowledged that Rose helped “push and prod” NAHB into the era of electronic communications.

“He always seemed to be a step ahead of the rest of us in knowing where the market might be heading,” Pressly said, “and he was always willing to speak his mind — even when it went against conventional wisdom.”

Rose also was an active supporter of efforts to find a cure for paralysis and spinal cord injuries.

He served on the boards of directors of the American Paralysis Association/Christopher Reeve Foundation and the National Organization on Disabilities and was a founding director for the National Coordinating Council on Spinal Cord Injury. He also served as chairman of the President's Advisory Committee on Housing for Handicapped Families for the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development under President George H.W. Bush.

Rose is survived by his wife of 40 years, Carol; two sons and their spouses, Marc and Kim and Greg and Amy; four grandchildren, Sophia, Addyson, Carly and Theodore; and a brother, Jason.


 

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