Posts Tagged ‘lake norman custom home builders’

HBAs honored at EOC conference

Wednesday, September 2nd, 2009

Locals HBAs in North Carolina took home seven Association Excellence Awards at the 2009 Executive Officers Council Seminar in Louisville

Caroline Sutton, executive director of the Asheville Home Builders Association, received the 2008 David G. Lloyd Memorial “New Executive Officer of the Year” Award, which honors the most outstanding executive officer in the country with three years or less experience.  During her tenure, Sutton and her staff have doubled the AHBA membership, added unique networking events and added an extensive education program for those in the home building industry.  This year marks the second consecutive year a North Carolina executive officer took home the prestigious award, with Raleigh-Wake HBA’s Tim Minton receiving the award last year.

The Lake Norman HBA received an impressive five awards: 

Best of the Lake Design Competition, an annual competition that allows designers, builders and trade craftsmen to showcase their talents and projects received the Best Member Recognition Program/Event award;

LNHBA Parade of Homes Plan Book was recognized as Best Communication to Members-Special Events Publication;

The Big Hunter 2008 LNHBA Membership Drive won for Best Membership Recruitment Plan Implemented;

Lake Norman HBA University received the Best Education Plan Implemented Award; and

LNHBA’s Web site, www.lnhba.com, was honored for Best HBA Web Site

The Asheville HBA took home honors for the Best Communication to Members – Newsletters/Newspapers for it monthly AHBA Blueprints newsletter.

Congratulations to Sutton and the Lake Norman and Asheville HBAs for their dedication and hard work.

Source: www.nchba.org

DV Wise

‘Extreme Makeover’ Home Also Extremely Green

Wednesday, September 2nd, 2009

August 20, 2009 – A deserving Central Illinois family soon will have a new green roof over their heads thanks to the efforts of Bloomington-based Brady Homes and the Extreme Makeover, Home Edition television show – as well as the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) National Green Building Program.

The home builder is working with Energy Diagnostics of Valparaiso, Ind., an NAHB Research Center-accredited verifier, to ensure that the home meets the requirements of the National Green Building Standard. The Research Center administers the certification program for NAHBGreen, the program that includes the Standard rating tool.

To comply with National Green Building Standard requirements, homes must meet benchmarks in energy efficiency, water efficiency, resource efficiency, indoor environmental quality, and lot and site development. In addition, the builder must provide education and a homeowner’s manual to help ensure the home is operated and maintained to retain its green advantages.

The Extreme Makeover home will include a geothermal heat pump as a renewable energy source, Energy Star®-rated appliances to conserve water as well as energy, native and drought-resistant landscaping, a sealed duct system, advanced framing techniques that use fewer raw materials and ventilation features that help create better indoor environmental quality.

The home is also designed to achieve a 5-starEnergy Star New Home Certification, the highest available.  Energy Diagnostics forecasts the annual energy savings for this home will be more than $2,700 over one built to prevailing building codes.

Brady Homes is building the new home in Philo, a small town outside the city of Champaign, where homeowner Nathan Montgomery operates a food bank and counseling center on a shoestring budget – one that has prevented the Montgomery family from making needed repairs on their own home.

Nathan, his wife Jenny and their four children are now on an all-expense-paid trip to Disney World courtesy of the television show’s producers while Brady Homes works around the clock to create a green home for the family to return to next week.

NAHB Green Building Subcommittee Chair Eric Borsting congratulated Brady Homes and principals Ed and Bob Brady for their generous gift – and the foresight to include green features in the new home. “Thanks to Ed and Bob, the Montgomerys will have a warmer, safer, more comfortable home – with the additional advantages of homes built to this green standard,” he said.

Ed Brady thanked the hundreds of volunteers working on the job site this week as well as the suppliers who have donated appliances, building materials and fixtures for the Extreme Makeover project. “I am very proud to build a new, green home for a family that has given so much to its community,” he said.

The new home is the sixth in Illinois to be certified by the NAHB National Green Building Program and the first in the county. There are more than 350 certified homes nationwide, with more than 4,000 in the certification pipeline.

The National Green Building Standard, the scoring tool used by many participants in the program, is the first green building rating system to be approved by the American National Standards Institute for single-family homes, apartments and condos, housing developments and home remodeling projects.

Source: www.nahb.org

DV Wise

Housing Affordability Continues To Hover Near Highest Level In 18 Years

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009

August 19, 2009 – Bolstered by affordable interest rates and low prices, nationwide housing affordability during the second quarter of 2009 continued to hover near its highest level since the series began 18 years ago, according to the National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo Housing Opportunity Index (HOI) released today.

The HOI showed that 72.3 percent of all new and existing homes sold in the second quarter of 2009 were affordable to families earning the national median income of $64,000, down only slightly from the record-high 72.5 percent during the previous quarter and up from 55.0 percent during the second quarter of 2008.

“The increase in affordability – along with the $8,000 federal tax credit for home buyers – is stimulating demand, particularly among young, first-time buyers,” said NAHB Chairman Joe Robson, a home builder from Tulsa, Okla. “But to keep the recent upturn in home sales going into next year, Congress will need to extend the tax credit for another year and make it available to all buyers in an effort to encourage activity in the trade-up market.”

Robson noted that the tax credit, which expires on Nov. 30, is currently limited to just buyers purchasing their first home.

Indianapolis, once again, was the most affordable major housing market in the country during the second quarter. Almost 95 percent of all homes sold were affordable to households earning the area’s median family income of $68,100. Indianapolis has now topped the affordability list 16 consecutive quarters.

Also near the top of the list of the most affordable major metro housing markets were Youngstown-Warren-Boardman, Ohio-Pa.; Detroit-Livonia-Dearborn, Mich.; Dayton, Ohio; and Grand Rapids-Wyoming, Mich.

Several smaller housing markets posted even higher affordability scores than Indianapolis, with Kokomo, Ind. outscoring all others. There, almost 98 percent of homes sold during the second quarter of 2009 were affordable to median-income earners. Other small housing markets ahead of Indianapolis on the affordability scale included Lansing-East Lansing, Mich.; Mansfield, Ohio; Elkhart-Goshen, Ind.; Lima, Ohio; and Bay City, Mich.

New York-White Plains-Wayne, N.Y.-N.J., where just over 21 percent of all homes sold during the period were affordable to those earning the median income of $64,800, was once again the nation’s least affordable major housing market in the second quarter. This was the New York metro area’s fifth consecutive appearance at the bottom of the list. Other major metro areas near the bottom of the affordability chart included San Francisco; Honolulu; Los Angeles-Long Beach-Glendale, Calif.; and Santa Ana-Anaheim-Irvine, Calif.

Among smaller metro areas, San Luis Obispo-Paso Robles, Calif. was the least affordable market, followed by Ocean City, N.J.; Santa Cruz-Watsonville, Calif.; Flagstaff, Ariz.; and Santa Barbara-Santa Maria-Goleta, Calif., respectively.

Please visit www.nahb.org/hoi for tables, historic data and details.

EDITOR’S NOTE: The NAHB/Wells Fargo HOI is a measure of the percentage of homes sold in a given area that are affordable to families earning that area’s median income during a specific quarter.

Prices of new and existing homes sold are collected from actual court records by First American Real Estate Solutions, a marketing company. Mortgage financing conditions incorporate interest rates on fixed- and adjustable-rate loans reported by the Federal Housing Finance Board.

The NAHB/Wells Fargo Housing Opportunity Index is strictly the product of NAHB Economics, and is not seen or influenced by any outside party prior to being released to the public.

Source: www.nahb.org

DV Wise