NBN Online for the week of March 26, 2007

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

In This Issue:

Front Page
Aging Boomers May Be Hard to Budge From Current Homes
Leverage Yielding Home Buyers Big Financial Benefits
‘Buy Now’ Advertising Assistance Nears $1 Million. Apply Now.
Share Nation's Building News With Your Staff. It's Free.
Coast to Coast
Open House: Single Women Saying ‘I Do’ to Real Estate
Politics & Government
House Takes ‘Solid’ Step on Immigration Reform
House Bill Extends Relief for 2005 Hurricane Victims
Anti-Growth a Stumbling Block for Latino Home Buyers
Economics & Finance
Housing Starts Up Last Month, But Permits Down
New-Home Sales Drop to Lowest Level Since August 2000
ARM Resets Not Expected to Have Major Economic Impact
Housing Slowdown Making 2007 a Harder Year for Cement
Existing Home Sales Show Biggest Monthly Rise in Three Years
Useful Links to Monitor Economic and Housing Trends
Tips
Builders' Tip: Making A Grit-Free Cap for Pneumatic Tools
Business Management
Tax Incentives Available to Create Affordable Housing
Builders Search NAHB’s Technology Directory for Solutions
Design
Photo Gallery: Homes Gone Green
Charrettes Give Builders Quick Glimpse Into Design Process
Public Needs to Be Sold on Density as Building Boom Nears
50Plus Housing
Register for 50+ Symposium by March 30 and Save $100
Multifamily
Market Realities, Trends Highlight Pillars Conference
Building Systems
ICC-Developed Log Building Standard Approved by ANSI
ICFs Critical Backbone to Green Building Tour Home
Log Homes Council Raises $13,000 for Juvenile Diabetes Research
Home Depot to Sell Modular Housing at New Orleans Stores
Education
Sign Up for Free Storm Water Compliance Audio Seminar
Education Calendar
Green Building
Awards Honor Achievement in Green Home Building
Draft of Green Building Standard Available for Comment
NAHB Builders Honored for ‘Building With Trees’
Workforce housing
Poll Finds Affordable Housing a High Priority for Americans
Labor
Lowe’s Scholarship Fund Continues to Build Careers
Building Products
Insulated Concrete Form Walls Tested for Terrorist Blasts
TV
NAHB-Produced Programs on HGTV and DIY This Week
Endowment
Thomas Gipson Homes Work for Builders' Blitz Honored
HELP for Growing Construction Programs on the Way
Challenge/Build/Grow Initiative Proposals Due by April 16
Association News
Get Free 'April Is New Homes Month' Resources Online Now
Lock in 2006 Visa/MC Processing Rates. Offer Ends March 31.
Office Depot Deals: Music to Your Ears
GM Business Choice, Lowe’s Team Up to Reward NAHB Members
Calendar of Events
NAHB Career Center

Related Articles

Charrettes Give Builders Quick Glimpse Into Design Process

Public Needs to Be Sold on Density as Building Boom Nears

Photo Gallery: Homes Gone Green

Photo Gallery, which follows, is a regular feature of NAHB HouseKeys, the consumer-oriented e-newsletter from NAHB for home owners and prospective home owners.

Photo Gallery showcases a portfolio of homes, with each feature focusing on a different theme. The feature that follows, which was originally published in NAHB HouseKeys on March 20, showcases homes designed and built green.

Green doesn't always mean solar panels and straw bales. This home, built in Chapel Hill, N.C. by Chandler Design Build, took a more subtle approach — focusing instead on using the most energy and resource efficient systems to build a home that is sustainable for the environment as well as for the resident family's pocketbook.

An Energy Star® Home, the home was a finalist in NAHB's National Green Building Awards and followed NAHB’s Green Building Initiative Guidelines.


 

 

 

 

The Galleries at Turney, built by Modus Development of Phoenix, Ariz., features eight detached residences. In addition to high-efficiency Bosch appliances, the homes also utilize low water-use plumbing fixtures, low-emittance windows and doors, high-efficiency heating and cooling systems, and low volatile organic compounds (VOC) paint. Innovative design features include a “rainscreen” façade system of corrugated zinc paneling and a fiber-cement skin that “floats” over the home and shields it from the harsh effects of the sun.


 

Waldsee BioHaus, an environmental living center at Concordia Language Villages in Bemidji, Minn., is the first building in North America to be certified as a “Passive House” — one of the world’s toughest energy standards — by Germany’s Passivhaus Institute. Germany’s Passivhaus standard is the world’s leading criteria in energy efficient construction.

The center uses 85% less energy than comparable U.S. buildings by using innovative and broadly applicable insulation, heat recovery and air exchange systems and high-quality windows and doors with low-E (emittance) glazing.


This Albuquerque, N.M. home, built by the Strosnider Company, is designed to maximize living space with elevated ceilings and abundant natural light throughout. 

Features include engineered lumber, blown-in insulation throughout, low-E windows, Solatube skylights, a foam-seal air filtration package and Energy Star® digital auto programmable thermostats. As a result, the home's air quality is improved and it has an average 30% reduction in utility costs and a significant reduction in water use.


 

 

 

An important aspect of building green is incorporating an environmentally-friendly lifestyle for residents. The “Pull-a-Part”™ town house, designed by national architectural firm BSB Design, does just that. It's a townhome-style structure pulled apart with just enough spacing between the units to give both the home owner and builder the privileges of a single-family home and to avoid the insurance issues that come with an attached product.

With a long, 40- to 50-foot-wide stretch of a communal front yard, or paseo, and private backyards for each of the homes, the community is nestled in an environment that promotes walking to shops, schools and recreational facilities. The homes and community design provide increased affordability and sustainabilty and foster less car use.

 

 


 

This home, located in Paso Robles, Calif., and developed by Estrella Associates, Inc., is an example of how the production housing market is addressing green building. It was built using PolySteel insulated concrete forms (ICF) rather than traditional wood-framed construction, an innovative practice that reduces reliance on lumber (sustainable building), improves energy efficiency and soundproofing, and increases resistances to termites, water intrusion and seismic forces.


This home located in Pacific Highlands Ranch, San Diego is built by Pardee Homes of Southern California.

Pardee has been a pioneer in green building in Southern California and Nevada, and was the first regional builder committed to building only Energy Star® homes, which can save home buyers up 30% or more in energy costs.

Pardee’s innovative LivingSmart® program, which encompasses a comprehensive array of green building standards, plus multiple, user-friendly ways for buyers to expand their choices, is offered at several Pardee neighborhoods in Southern California and Las Vegas.

 


The next Photo Gallery will showcase outdoor spaces. To submit homes for consideration, e-mail Niki Clark at NAHB. Put "Photo Gallery: Outdoor Spaces" in the subject line of the e-mail.

For more information about NAHB HouseKeys, or to subscribe, visit www.nahb.org/HouseKeys.



HouseKeys Articles Available to NAHB Members

NAHB member companies are invited to use non-bylined articles in NAHB HouseKeys for their consumer outreach, including Web sites, newsletters or magazines.

NAHB will provide a graphic that can be posted on your own Web site or in print products to promote NAHB HouseKeys to home buyers and prospects.

For more information, visit www.nahb.org/HouseKeys, or e-mail Niki Clark at NAHB.


 

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