Archive for February, 2010

Walk On It

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

After the walls, the floor is the most visible surface in a house. And because the floor is such a commanding presence, home buyers typically spend a great deal of their spending power to make a personal style statement with it.

The floor, says San Francisco Bay Area–based Interior Floor Design, is “the foundation upon which we build our castles, our empires, our humble abodes” and “a reflection of who we are, how we got here, [and] where we want to go … .” Well, the floor may not be as profound as all that for most people, but you get the idea: It’s a big deal.

Whether out of style preference or complacency, most consumers choose to stick with traditional options—wood, vinyl, ceramic, carpet. These materials serve buyers well, and they have proven themselves over the years. But for those willing to walk on the wild side, there is a vast world of materials to choose from: recycled rubber, cutting-edge Italian and Spanish ceramic tiles, reformulated linoleum, carpet tiles, woven vinyl, and even concrete.

After years as an “alternative” material, once exotic bamboo flooring has almost worked its way into being classified as a mainstream option. Today, it is regarded as a high-quality material that is durable, attractive, and sustainable.

Bainbridge Island, Wash.–based Teragren, known for a variety of bamboo products, has a new offering called Synergy. Unlike traditional end- or flat-grain bamboo, Synergy is a strand product that is manufactured by fusing bamboo strands with adhesive. The company claims that Synergy is about 150 percent harder than red oak and 125 percent harder than North American maple.

Most people are familiar with cork boards, fish bobbers, and wine stoppers, but fewer may be aware that the material can be used as flooring. “The resilient quality of cork makes it a great option for areas where people stand for long periods of time,” says Lancaster, Pa.–based Capri Cork. “It is easier on the limbs than other hard surfaces.” Because the individual cells of cork are closed, the material does not easily absorb liquids. As a result, it performs well in wet areas.

For those who want to step out even further on the edge, there is leather. But not just any leather. Mississauga, Ontario–based TORLYS recently unveiled a new floating floor system that is made with 65 percent recycled leather scraps from the manufacturing of jackets, belts, and handbags. The company mixes the leather with 35 percent natural ingredients such as resins. As the company explains it, the leather is adhered to a high-density fiber core and a cork backing for comfort, warmth, and quietness. So far the reviews have been good.

“We’re absolutely thrilled with the positive response we have received from the design community and consumers who are seeking a highly styled and sustainable alternative flooring,” says Charles Lammers, the company’s vice president of U.S. sales. “They love the combination of unique rich looks, durable wear, and environmental benefits.”

For the truly intrepid buyer, there is aluminum from AlumaFloor in Addison, Ill. The material is the epitome of urban cool, ideal for lofts, high-end condos, live/work spaces, or adaptive reuse projects. AlumaFloor can be designed in any shape a buyer wants, the company says, and is machined so pieces fit tightly and need no grouting.

Of course, there are things to remember no matter what flooring option you’re considering. First of all, alternative materials are not for everyone. The trick is to know when and where they are appropriate.

It is highly unlikely, say, that a family with kids will choose metal (though given the material’s durability it may not be such a bad idea). Leather seems highly impractical in a kitchen, but it may work nicely in a study or an office. And bamboo may be all the rage, but—depending on the finish—it is important to know its limitations with heavy foot traffic and high moisture. If you keep these things in mind, you will help your buyers choose a floor that they’ll be happy to walk on and show off to guests for many years to come.

by Nigel F. Maynard

http://www.builderonline.com/products/walk-on-it.aspx?cid=BLDR100224002&page=1

www.dvwise.com

Vintage Details Lend Character to New Homes

Tuesday, February 23rd, 2010

Does your house tell a story? A new home may be energy-efficient and pristine, but it may be hard-pressed to compete with the charm and lore of an older home. Then again, vintage homes, for all their charisma, tend to have wrinkles, sags, and leaks that reveal their true age.

So which is better, old or new? Some savvy builders are opting for a little of both in an effort to deliver homes with character. Some are doing so by integrating reclaimed or vintage materials as accents inside or outside the home. Others are faithfully replicating historic architectural styles–down to every last cornice detail, porch column, and gable end–in ways that look authentic, but with products and practices that perform like new construction.

Here are some examples of new or remodeled homes that tell great stories.

Barn Raising
Tommy Sancic’s company, Olde Wood Ltd., recycles vintage wood from old barns and farmhouses that have structurally outlived their use. His personal residence in Malvern, Ohio, which showcases his wares, is arguably packed with more history than some museums.

Clad in random-width pine siding sourced from local farms, the rustic home is topped with an antique slate roof, rusted tin trim, a foundation skirted in reclaimed barnstone, soffits made of old-growth walnut, and exterior support timbers salvaged from an old woodworking shop in Cleveland, circa 1880. (The roof’s slate tiles are 9 pounds each, bringing the total weight of the roof to 80,000 pounds.)

The guest suite is paneled in 18- to 22-inch planks rescued from a demolished historic train station formerly located fewer than 8 miles away. Brick pavers in the exterior landscaping were sourced from industrial buildings in Cleveland’s Flats area.

In addition, the home’s kitchen cabinets, flooring, backsplash, fireplace, support beams, floor joists, stairs, bathroom vanity, and shower tiles are all made from reclaimed materials. All wood available through Olde Wood Ltd. is de-nailed, kiln-dried, and milled as dimensional lumber.

by Jenny Sullivan

http://www.builderonline.com/design/vintage-details-lend-character-to-new-homes.aspx?cid=BLDR100223003&page=1

www.dvwise.com

Total Housing Starts Increase 2.8% in January

Sunday, February 21st, 2010

 The housing market finally may be finding its footing.
According to data released Wednesday by the U.S. Census, overall housing starts rose in January with a seasonally adjusted level of 591,000. Compared to the previous month, that represents a 2.8% in activity; annually, it translates into 21.1% increase over last year’s record-low levels of construction.

Single-family starts increased to seasonally adjusted pace of 484,000, which is 1.5% above December’s numbers and 35.6% jump over January 2009.

Permits, which are a crucial indicator of future construction activity, slipped 4.9% on an overall basis to a seasonally adjusted rate of 621,000. Compared to January 2009, this is a 16.9% jump from those admittedly weak levels during the depth of the downturn.

Single-family permits stayed nearly flat in January for single-family building, inching up just 0.4% on a monthly basis to a seasonally adjusted level of 507,000.

“The small increase may indicate that builders were stocking up on permits to meet an anticipated surge in demand from the second homeowner’s tax credit,” said Patrick Newport, U.S. economist for IHS Global Insight, who did note that “this surge has yet to materialize.”

Still, that single-family permit pace stands 48.2% above the same month one year ago.

Overall, the relatively small movement in the monthly numbers for both starts and permits seemed to give analysts comfort about the year head. “With the decline in activity following the original expiration of the housing tax credit firmly behind us, we believe this data continues to support our view that housing demand continues to stabilize if not slowly reemerge,” said Michael Rehaut, a housing analyst with J.P. Morgan.

by Alison Rice
Alison Rice is senior editor, online, at BUILDER magazine.

http://www.builderonline.com/housing-starts/total-housing-starts-increase-2-point-8-percent-in-january.aspx?cid=BLDR100218002

www.dvwise.com