Daily Archives: April 4, 2011

Soft Spring Market Say Builders At NAHB

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Our informal poll of more than a dozen home builders throughout the country indicates that the spring selling season so far has been slow. The builders we contacted reported that interest in buying new homes is strong, based on traffic in their models. But getting shoppers to pull the trigger on a new home purchase? That’s difficult. 

“Our spring selling has started slowly with weak demand,” Tim Gehan, who builds in one of the better markets, Dallas. “We are still using significant incentives on a community-by-community basis to move houses.”

Bad weather didn’t help matters in some geographic regions. “We had two weeks of extreme cold weather in February which seemed to stall out sales,” reports Tom Wade of Artistic Homes in New Mexico. “We have seen the traffic pick back up over the last couple of weeks but few actual contracts.”

“It seems to be a spring market in traffic, but not yet in contracts,” reports John Wieland, whose company does business throughout the Southeast. “While we are not even with sales from last year with its incentives (federal tax credits), we are not vastly disappointed. We think the traffic will turn into sales eventually.”

The industry clearly has its work cut out convincing potential buyers to pull the trigger. Stories like the one that ran recently in Fortune magazine can certainly help make the case that now is a good time to buy. After all, if people wait too long, opportunities may disappear.

Many actually think now is a good time to buy a home; they just aren’t doing it. The University of Michigan’s most recent Consumer Buying Sentiment Survey made headlines for finding growing consumer pessimism about long-term prospects.

Few media outlets reported that the survey’s index of buying conditions for homes rose to 159. A full 78% of respondents said that they believe buying conditions are good, the highest level since May 2009.

Consumers cite low prices (63%) and low interest rates (41%) as the primary reasons for their view. Indeed, mortgage interest rates, which traditionally rise in the spring, have slipped under 5% again. They stand at 4.86% for a 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage, according to Freddie Mac’s most recent survey.

Lower prices have made new homes more affordable than they have been for a while. A new home affordability index kept by Hanley Wood Market Intelligence shows that 61.7% of households earning the median national income could afford to purchase a new home with a median price of $202,100, using a 20% downpayment and a 30-year mortgage at 4.95%.

Many builders are banking on incentives to get buyers off the proverbial fence. The Internet is laden with offers and chat between potential buyers about how to drive the best deal.

Las Vegas’ Harmony Homes offered buyers a $15,000 “credit” in March that could be put toward whatever they desired–design options, closing costs, upgrades. Brookfield homes touts a spring sale with up to $124,000 in savings on its Facebook page, which also encourages shoppers to register for its interest list in return for a $10,000 incentive. D.R. Horton offers $5000 toward closing costs and $10,000 in incentives at its Lake Arrowhead community in Atlanta with homes priced from the $190,000s. The list goes on and on.

http://www.builderonline.com/blogs/postdetails.aspx?BlogId=thompsonsblog&postId=102389

Frank Lloyd Wright’ s Willey House: Small, Affordable and Green

Robyn Griggs Lawrence thumbnailTo celebrate the 100th anniversary of Taliesin, Frank Lloyd Wright’s home and studio in Spring Green, Wisconsin, the Milwaukee Art Museum is featuring more than 150 objects designed by the legendary architect in “Frank Lloyd Wright: Organic Architecture for the 21st Century,” through May 15. Whether or not you can make it to Milwaukee, you can learn a lot about the iconic architect from the houses he built. One of my favorites is the Malcolm Willey House in Minneapolis, built by Nancy Willey in 1934 and restored to perfection by Steve Sikora and Lynette Erickson-Sikora.

The 1,350-square-foot house was abandoned and dilapidated when Lynette and Steve bought it in 2002. Previous remodels had left scars, including a kitchen filled with pumpkin-colored plastic laminate and coppertone appliances. The couple spent nearly six years painstakingly rebuilding the home—the first small, affordable home that Wright designed, which became a prototype for his later Usonian houses, unornamented, distinctly American houses that were affordable for the masses. In the process, Steve and Lynette came to deeply understand Wright’s genius, including his use of natural, indigenous materials.

Wright constructed the home using red tidewater cypress, which is not local but was durable enough to sustain the house through its years of abandonment. “If it hadn’t been built of cypress, it wouldn’t be standing now,” Steve says.

willey exterior 

Built in 1934 for Malcolm and Nancy WIlley, this Minneapolis home was restored in 2007 using cypress, plaster and regional brick. The shade provided by four mature burr oaks cools the house. Photo by Terrence Moore 

 willey homeowners 

Homeowners Steve Sikora and Lynette Erickson-Sikora listen to granddaughter Paige Norris on guitar. Photo by Terrence Moore 

 willey office 

The study with built-in desk, shelving and sleeping couch opens to the south side of the yard. Photo by Terrence Moore 

willey kitchen 

The fully functional vintage appliances demonstrate the relative simplicity of 1930s life. Photo by Terrence Moore 

 willey dining 

A plate-glass window separates the kitchen from the living/dining room. The moveable dining table integrates with the built-in cabinetry; its placement defines the dining area. Photo by Terrence Moore 

 willey living 

A wall of French doors—a pioneering feature in 1934–opens to join the living room to the garden, creating an airy, parklike pavilion. Photo by Terrence Moore 

 willey fireplace 

The uncontained fireplace feels like an indoor bonfire. Photo by Terrence Moore 

 willey bath 

The restored bathroom features plaster walls and a built-in vanity. Photo by Terrence Moore 

 willey bedroom 

The master bedroom’s corner windows swing out, spacially expanding the room. Photo by Terrence Moore 

A Bright Future for Solar Power – Renewable Energy – MOTHER EARTH NEWS

A Bright Future for Solar Power

Solar power installations picked up speed in 2009, and the trend is projected to continue thanks to falling prices and increased emphasis on renewable energy development.

By J. Matthew Roney, Earth Policy Institute
February/March 2011


solar panels

If we harnessed a mere 2.5 percent of the annual solar radiation striking southwestern land suitable for solar power plants, we could produce as much energy as the whole country currently uses.
PHOTO: ISTOCKPHOTO

Solar photovoltaic (PV) cell manufacturers worldwide produced a record 10,700 megawatts of capacity in 2009 — an impressive 51 percent increase from the year before. By the end of 2009, nearly 23,000 megawatts had been installed worldwide, enough to power 4.6 million U.S. homes.

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China manufactured 3,800 megawatts of solar photovoltaics in 2009, leading all countries for the second straight year. Rounding out the top five producers were Japan in second place, Taiwan in third, Germany in fourth and the United States in fifth.

While China now manufactures more than a third of the world’s photovoltaic cells, most Chinese consumers cannot yet afford the technology. Ninety-five percent of China’s production is exported, mainly to Germany, which installed a record 3,800 megawatts of PV in 2009, more than half the total amount installed worldwide. Italy was first runner-up in newly installed photovoltaics, followed by Japan, then the United States.

Over the past decade, installed PV capacity has grown 16-fold worldwide, in large part due to government incentives encouraging the use of solar power. Although PV production and installation costs have fallen substantially over time, solar incentives will continue to be necessary until solar reaches grid parity (price competitiveness) with heavily subsidized fossil fuels.

The most important incentive to date for the solar industry is the feed-in tariff, which guarantees generators of renewable electricity — including homeowners, private firms and utilities — a long-term purchase price for each kilowatt-hour they produce. This powerful incentive to invest in renewables has now been adopted by approximately 50 countries.

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The Imprisoned Reader’s Plea for Your Every Word

image of man in handcuffs

You, the writer, work so hard.

Every sentence struggles into existence. Perfection alone cuts admin’s mustard. It’s taking hours and hours. You’re fatigued to the point of exhaustion.

It isn’t worth it. Your email open rate is 42% and its click through rate hovers a lonely 1%.

For the thirteenth time you bang the splintery desk. Somebody’s going to die. Starting tonight.

Blood and tears, every sentence. They scan it briefly on their iPhones and head back to Facebook bored as ever. The weeds grow complacently. The wind blows west. A truck, a van, and four cars, parked at Target. Nobody on your blog.

They read it so quickly there isn’t time to yawn.

Most don’t get past the headline.

A few don’t get that far.

You wish they’d read every word. You hate them for not. Your ideas are conceived under agony and stress. You cry and weep under the pillow. Your dog finds you checking stats at two in the morning.

Before ever showering, you crouch at the cluttered desk and peck faintly at the empty document.

It ain’t easy.

Five drafts, and every one of them in the trash.

Guilt has noiselessly stealed over. You should be doing something more productive. This whole blog thing is wasting your life. They’ve been telling you that for two years.

Don’t you dare attempt selling anything – you can’t even get them to listen.

Those eleven premium eBooks you read cover to cover didn’t prove the get-rich-quick outline they promised. The whole thing’s a huge scam.

If you could just get them to read every word. If they would just value your art.

If you just had more subscribers, if you just had more comments, if you just started making money

Then you’d justify your digital existence. This whole writing thing would grow easier. Deep down, you’d be doing something worthwhile.

The first step is to get them to read every word.

Not every other headline and paragraph, every single word.

Live real, this is 2011. They’re busy and distracted. Is that even possible?

Well, yes.

The average viewing time of the Mona Lisa is 7 minutes.

Your average bounce rate is 56%.

How do you go from 56% to 7 minutes?

You create better art.

You make them read every word by making every word worth reading. It’s not a business of inclusion, it’s a business of exclusion.

Your delete key is your keyboard’s most valuable asset.

Your trash button is your admin’s most valuable link.

As Steve Jobs said, a product is judged by what’s excluded, not included.

You’re not at 56% because you don’t have anything good to say. It’s because you’ve mixed bad with good.

Your blog will grow at the rate you separate bad from good. If a sentence, a paragraph, a headline, a graphic, an entire post doesn’t have an awful good reason to be there, it better not.

This is a dangerous and powerful ideology. If you use that delete key more, they’ll start welcoming your inbox intrusion.

Not only that, but they’ll start reading your every word.

They’ll be captivated by what you have to say. Shackled in chains. Imprisoned. Their only plea will be, “what she writes is just … so good. I can’t help reading every word.”

Wouldn’t that be awesome?