NBN Online for the week of December 17, 2007

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In This Issue:

Front Page
Fed and Senate Take Steps to End Mortgage Credit Crunch
Washington Builders Limit Runoff From Record Rainfall
Nation's Building News Will Not Be Published During the Holidays
Read Our International Builders' Show Preview on Jan. 14
Coast to Coast
Lennar Homes Underscores Its Commitment to the Northeast Housing Market
Politics & Government
Senate Energy Bill Passed Without Tax Incentives
House-Passed AMT Relief Bill Faces Uncertain Future
Bill Would Let Bankruptcy Judges Alter Mortgage Terms
Legislative Conference Set for April 30
Economics & Finance
Builders Look for Signs of Improvement
Florida Builders Must Adjust to New Market Realities
NAHB Teleconference Looks at What’s Ahead for Housing
Useful Links to Monitor Economic and Housing Trends
Tips
Builders' Tip: Steel Corners Make Clean Corners
Sales
Let Buyers 'Option Up' With More Packaged Options
50Plus Housing
A Community With Sol Thrives in Tucson
First AARP-NAHB ‘Livable Communities’ Honored
Remodelers
Slow Times Are the Go Time for Tuning Up Your Business
Building Systems
SIPs the Way of the Future, SIPs User for 20 Years Says
Free Builders’ Show Lunch Focuses on Concrete
Education
Education Calendar
Disaster Relief
Brad Pitt Seeks Donations to Build 150 New Orleans Homes
Research Center
NAHB’s Bob Jones to Address EnergyValue Housing Awards
Green Building
Feb. 14 ‘Green Day' Highlight of Builders’ Show
New Green Standard Comment Period Starts Dec. 21
Consumer Spending on Green to Double Next Year
Legal
Proposed Bill on Clean Water Goes Overboard
Labor
Complete RCS Lineup Being Offered at Builders' Show
Building Products
Strong Door, Small Cut Saw Best of What’s New in 2007
TV
NAHB-Produced Programs on DIY, Fine Living and HGTV
Endowment
Seiders Discusses Housing Cycle at Penn State Lecture
View Free Construction Management Seminar Webcast
Association News
Robert Holmes, Leading California Contractor, Dies at 86
Drive Away With a New $500 GM Offer This Holiday Season
End Public Speaking Anxiety With ‘Spokesperson Training' at IBS
UPS Offers Up to 30% Discount to NAHB Members on Shipping
Introducing the Hertz Green Collection. Reserve and Conserve.
Calendar of Events
NAHB Career Center

Related Articles

Fed and Senate Take Steps to End Mortgage Credit Crunch

Nation's Building News Will Not Be Published During the Holidays

Read Our International Builders' Show Preview on Jan. 14

Washington Builders Limit Runoff From Record Rainfall


Record-breaking rainfall in the Northwest inundated parking lots and overwhelmed storm water management systems in Washington state two weeks ago, but the Kitsap Home Builders Association came through unscathed thanks to pervious pavements, a rain garden and other low-impact development features installed by member volunteers that kept excess water at bay.

In 48 hours, the Bremerton, Wash. area was saturated by about 13 inches of precipitation, a record even for the rainy Northwest, or at least for the city itself, said the association’s executive director, Art Castle. “When I came in to work Monday morning, the rainfall was still at its peak and I saw a river running down the street,” he said.  But at the HBA headquarters, “there was no surface runoff from the site,” he said.

Low-impact development uses features that stop or slow the release of storm water from a site, enabling the water to gradually seep into the ground rather than flow from the site into a storm water or sewer system.

The HBA applied for and won a Public Involvement and Education grant from the Puget Sound Action Team to install and then demonstrate low-impact development projects. The association is also participating in an effort to develop voluntary low-impact development standards under a U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Section 319 grant that is being managed by the Washington Department of Ecology.

Association members broke ground for the project on May 1, and soon began digging up the parking lot and landscaping and replacing them with pervious pavement blocks, adding pervious concrete and asphalt, installing native plants and other drought-resistant vegetation,and putting a green roof on a storage shed. Where possible, the existing pavement was recycled to create the new surfaces, and old plants were moved to gardens in other areas.

Sixty volunteers donated time, materials and services worth $3.50 per every dollar of the $40,000 installation grant.

When the deluge arrived, the low-impact features of the site came through with flying colors, as a video that Castle posted on the HBA site demonstrates. On Monday, Dec. 3, the video shows only a trickle of rainwater leaving the HBA parking lot even as rain floods the surrounding businesses and streets.

The HBA is working on a voluntary standard for low-impact development that Bremerton and surrounding jurisdictions can use to help encourage its use. Right now, builders have an impervious surface limit of 5,000 square feet — including driveways, sidewalks and the house itself — before a requirement kicks in to hire a professional engineer to create a storm water plan, which can add costly consulting and installation fees, Castle noted.

But if the builder installs pervious pavement for the driveway, sidewalk and other outdoor surfaces, the first 5,000 square feet do not count toward the limit, potentially saving the builder and home owner thousands in fees and materials costs.

The association plans to finish the standard by the spring of 2008.

For more information, e-mail Calli Schmidt at NAHB, or call her at 800-368-5242 x8132.


 

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