NBN Online for the week of May 12, 2008

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In This Issue:

Front Page
Housing Bill Moves Forward One Week After Builder Visits
Foreclosure Hike Tied to Single-Family Permit Drop in Most States
Catch 'The Big Hunt' Webcast On National Membership Day, May 20
Wichita Builders Give Buyers a Boost in Confidence
Layouts for Living
Floor Plans: College Vista Leaves No College Faculty or Staff Behind
Coast to Coast
Restrictions Are the Rule for All Sorts of Once-Easy Credit
Politics & Government
Tight Credit for Builder Loans Could Prolong Housing Slump
Policy Makers Honored for Pro-Housing Initiatives
Ad Campaign Focuses on Urgent Need for Housing Stimulus
Economics & Finance
Fannie Mae Cited for Efforts to Fix Housing Finance Problems
Banks Tightening Lending at 'Historic Highs' in Fed Survey
Useful Links to Monitor Economic and Housing Trends
Tips
Builders' Tip: An Efficient, Less Frustrating Way to Paint Doors
Technology
Central Vacuums Meeting Demand for Healthier Homes
50Plus Housing
‘Easy Living’ Home Wins Livable Communities Award
Multifamily
FHA Commissioner Honored for Affordable Housing Efforts
Remodelers
Remodeling Outlook Brighter for Some Than Others
Remodelers Report Slow But Steady First Quarter
'Remodel Now' Material Touts Benefits of Remodeling
Building Systems
Systems Built Home, Church Makeovers Get Extreme
Women
Note From Alaska: Spring Board Energized Newcomer
Education
University of Housing Seeks Feedback on Education
Education Calendar
Green Building
Developers Honored for Building With Trees
Research
Research Center Testing Facilities Wow IAS Directors
Design
Enter the Best in American Living Awards Competition
Legal
DEWALT Recalls Table Saws With Laceration Hazard
Building Products
Many Tax Rebate Checks Could Be Spent on Improving Homes
TV
NAHB-Produced Programs on DIY, Fine Living and HGTV
Endowment
Evans Scholarship Fund Awards $52,000 to 15 Students
Association News
Gary Garczynski Inducted Into National Housing Hall of Fame
Terwilliger Inducted Into National Housing Hall of Fame
NAHB Committee, Council Application Forms Available Online
GM $500 Private Offer: Easy as 1-2-3
UPS Offers Up to 30% Discount to NAHB Members on Shipping
Calendar of Events
NAHB Career Center

Systems Built Home, Church Makeovers Get Extreme

 

 

Four hundred volunteers helped rebuild a home that was destroyed by Hurricane Katrina on the season finale of "Extreme Makeover."

Building Systems Councils member Deltec Homes, Inc., a panel and component manufacturer based in Asheville, N.C., recently completed the makeover of a home and church destroyed by Hurricane Katrina for ABC’s “Extreme Makeover: Home Edition."  The rebuilding project, which involved manufacturing and installing nearly 700 building system components, will air Sunday, May 18 as the show's two-hour season finale.

Joe Schlenk, Deltec’s sales and marketing director, said the show’s producers specifically contacted Deltec for the project — rebuilding a 4,000-square-foot home of the Usea family and the 3,000-square-foot Noah's Ark Missionary Baptist Church in Westwego, La. just outside of New Orleans ― because the company boasts that it never lost a home to a hurricane or high winds.

He said eight company-built homes were in the path of the hurricane when it cut its devastating path through Louisiana, Mississippi and other parts of the South in 2005. The hurricane caused some minor cosmetic damage to the Deltec homes, but no structural damage, he said.

Deltec engineers its homes and panels specifically for the jurisdictions where they will be built, Schlenk said. For example, the homes the company builds for the New Orleans area are engineered to withstand high winds.

 

 

Deltec panels, components and "radial engineering" were used to make the Usea family home hurricane resistant.

The home and church rebuilt during the “Extreme Makeover” episode use “radial engineering” to disperse energy and wind pressure throughout the structures to make them highly resistant to damage by high winds, Schlenk said. “There is a lot of technology in the structures,” he said, while noting that this type of engineering and construction greatly reduces the potential for serious damage in coastal environments.

Deltec manufactured 108 wall panels, 300 floor trusses and 276 roof trusses for the “Extreme Makeover” rebuilding effort. It took the company 2,640 man-hours to build the components. Four hundred volunteers helped install them.

“Extreme Makeover” budgets 106 man-hours each episode to rebuild a home. “Without systems building, you couldn’t undertake a project of this magnitude,” Schlenk said of the Westwego project.

About 300 Deltec employees and friends will gather at the Ashville factory on Sunday to watch the season finale.

 
 

The newly-finished home of the Usea family of Westweago, La.

 

 

The newly-finished Noah's Ark Missionary Baptist Church.


 

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