Posts Tagged ‘trends’

Design Trends for Move-up Buyers

February 2, 2016

Looking for the latest “must have” design features to wow your move-up buyers? Experts offered the following tips during January’s International Builders’ Show in Las Vegas:

  • Kitchens that impress. Kitchens will always be the center of the house. You can’t make an island too big.  Double islands and drop-down islands that become a table are also popular options.
  • Laundry connections. Stackable washer and dryers in an upstairs bathroom where you can get light into the laundry space. The laundry space is the ‘kitchen of the future’.
  • New technology. The latest homes are replacing traditional wall outlets with USB outlets and providing one cable outlet with Wi-Fi for the rest of the house, Sauls said.
  • Great rooms and open floor plans. “How do you make a smaller house feel larger? Break down barriers. People want to see from the front to the back of the house, he added.
  • Outdoor rooms. Good quality outdoor spaces are replacing formal living room and dining rooms. They incorporate glass door systems that create a seamless transition between the indoor and outdoor section of the home. Many of these outdoor outdoor spaces include kitchens with full amenities.
  • Spa master baths. They are characterized by light, open airy spaces. Many builders are getting rid of tubs in favor huge, luxurious showers.

It’s all about how you manage the space. Features can be scalable and affordable.

 

Plansource, Inc., http://www.plansonline.com, remains a portal of information for homebuilders and the homebuilding industry.

10 Design Trends for Next 10 Years

January 15, 2016

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Top 10 residential design trends for the next 10 years:

  • Technological integration becoming more prevalent,  with both dedicated support for personal devices, along with automated controls for temperature, security and lighting
  • Increased consumer awareness about environmental health issues leading to more widespread use of low or no volatile organic compounds for paint and composite wood, natural fiber upholstery, carpets without polyvinyl chloride backing and air purification systems
  • Growing demand for design strategies that strengthen homes against natural disasters including elevating residences, windows with impact glazing, dedicated safe rooms and backup power generation
  • Increasing use of energy-efficient and other sustainable design elements and products such as solar panels, water reclamation systems and tankless water heaters
  • Aging-in-place and universal design elements to accommodate an aging population including wider hallways, added handrails and one-level living spaces
  • Kitchens serving as focal point of the home highlighted by open design concepts
  • Heavy emphasis and investment in outdoor living spaces
  • Need for space devoted to home offices reflecting changing work patterns
  • Infill development promoting smaller, better designed homes
  • Strong preference for urban lifestyle characteristics resulting in higher-density development that provide additional amenities to residents

 

Plansource, Inc., http://www.plansonline.com, remains a portal of information for homebuilders and the homebuilding industry.

Reprinted from AIA

Florida? Better Climate Can Make People Relocate

January 11, 2016

What states are the top picks for Americans looking to move? Florida, California, Hawaii, Colorado, and New York, according to a new survey by Harris Poll of more than 2,200 U.S. adults.

Besides looking at the most desired moving locations, the survey asked respondents to name their top reasons for wanting to move. The number one moving motivation for respondents was wanting to live in a better climate. In fact, the survey found that more than six in ten residents who live on the East Coast – 64 percent – and 61 percent of Midwesterners say they’d consider moving in order to live in an area with a better climate and weather.

These are the top moving motivations for survey respondents:

  • 52% said they’d consider moving to another state to live in for a better climate or better weather.
  • 41% said they’d consider moving for a job opportunity.
  • 35% said they’d factor in proximity to family.
  • 25% said they’d consider a move for health reasons
  • 18% said they’d move to be closer to friends.
  • 16% said they’d relocate to be closer to a significant other.
  • 14% said they’d move for greater educational opportunities.
  • 13% wanted to live in an area with a more accepting lifestyle.
  • 11% said they wanted to move to a place with political views that are more accepting.
  • 11% wanted to move to an area where recreational marijuana is legal.
  • 7% said they’d consider moving to a place where their religious views are more accepted.

Plansource, Inc., www.plansonline.com, remains a portal of information for homebuilders and the homebuilding industry.

 

Reprinted from Realtor Today

6 Stellar Reasons to Buy A Home in 2016

January 6, 2016

Is it really 2016 already?  For those of you who happen to be planning on buying a home in the new year—or even just trying to—there’s a whole lot to celebrate. Why? A variety of financial vectors have dovetailed to make this the perfect storm for home buyers to get out there and make an (winning) offer. Here are six home-buying reasons to be thankful while ringing in the new year:

Reason No. 1: Interest rates are still at record lows

Even though they may creep up at any moment, it’s nonetheless a fact that interest rates on home loans are at historic lows, with a 30-year fixed-rate home loan still hovering around 4%.

“Remember 18.5% in the ’80s?” asks Tom Postilio, a real estate broker with Douglas Elliman Real Estate and a star of HGTV’s “Selling New York.”“It is likely that we’ll never see interest rates this low again. So while prices are high in some markets, the savings in interest payments could easily amount to hundreds of thousands of dollars over the life of the mortgage.”

Reason No. 2: Rents have skyrocketed

Another reason home buyers are lucky is that rents are going up, up, up! (This, on the other hand, is a reason not to be thankful if you’re a renter.) In fact, rents outpaced home values in 20 of the 35 biggest housing markets in 2015. What’s more, according to the 2015 Rent.com Rental Market Report, 88% of property managers raised their rent in the past 12 months, and an 8% hike is predicted for 2016.

“In most metropolitan cities, monthly rent is comparable to that of a monthly mortgage payment, sometimes more,” says Heather Garriock, mortgage agent for The Mortgage Group. “Doesn’t it make more sense to put those monthly chunks of money into your own appreciating asset rather than handing it over to your landlord and saying goodbye to it forever?”

Reason No. 3: Home prices are stabilizing

For the first time in years, prices that have been climbing steadily upward are stabilizing, restoring a level playing field that helps buyers drive a harder bargain with sellers, even in heated markets.

“Local markets vary, but generally we are experiencing a cooling period,” says Postilio. “At this moment, buyers have the opportunity to capitalize on this.”

Reason No. 4: Down payments don’t need to break the bank

Probably the biggest obstacle that prevents renters from becoming homeowners is pulling together a down payment. But today, that chunk of change can be smaller, thanks to a variety of programs to help home buyers. For instance, the new Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac Home Possible Advantage Program allows for a 3% down payment for credit scores as low as 620.

Reason No. 5: Mortgage insurance is a deal, too

If you do decide to put less than 20% down on a home, you are then required to have mortgage insurance (basically in case you default). A workaround to handle this, however, is to take out a loan from the Federal Housing Administration—a government mortgage insurer that backs loans with down payments as low as 3.5% and credit scores as low as 580. The fees are way down from 1.35% to 0.85% of the mortgage balance, meaning your monthly mortgage total will be significantly lower if you fund it this way. In fact, the FHA predicts this 37% annual premium cut will bring 250,000 first-time buyers into the market. Why not be one of them?

Reason No. 6: You’ll reap major tax breaks

Tax laws continue to favor homeowners, so you’re not just buying a place to live—you’re getting a tax break! The biggest one is that unless your home loan is more than $1 million, you can deduct all the monthly interest you are paying on that loan. Homeowners may also deduct certain home-related expenses and home property taxes.

 

Plansource, Inc., http://www.plansonline.com, remains a portal of information for homebuilders and the homebuilding industry

Reprinted from Realtor.com

 

January 5, 2016

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What’s Hot, Not in Home Decor in 2016

The Wall Street Journal recently had interior designers weigh in on the top design trends likely to make a big splash in 2016 as well as what’s likely to fall out of style. Here are some design trends to keep in mind when staging your listings.

What’s In

Black metals: This metal was once reserved for outdoor furniture or bed frames, but not anymore. This unflashy metal is appearing as simple hardware, bathroom fixtures, and even flatware, British interior designer Martyn Lawrence Bullard told The Wall Street Journal. Black metal is also being blended into wood and glass.

Curvy home décor: Rounded tables and curvy aesthetics will likely appear in more furnishings. Radial and bullnose edges soften hard materials like marble, says Glenn Lawson of Lawson Flenning in Los Angeles.

Old-world style: “People want the traditional and dressy, with a shot of nostalgia, to feel like everything is going to be OK,” Tobi Fairley, an interior designer in Little Rock, Ark., told The Wall Street Journal. Expect to see more brocades, tapestries, Georgian and Empire antiques, as well as fringe, cording and tassels.

Scandinavian flat weaves: “With elegantly balanced geometric compositions, these rugs are a sophisticated answer to the omnipresent neutrals and sisals,” said Los Angeles designer Madeline Stuart. The Scandinavian designs are being weaved into both contemporary and traditional spaces.

What’s Out

Rosy metallic: Copper and rose-gold metals were big in 2015, but, alas, the rosy-gold hues may have a look of being “cheap” in 2016, warns Barclay Butera, a designer with offices in Los Angeles and Park City, Utah.

The industrial look: “Enough of looking like we are living in the garage,” says Joe Lucas of Lucas Studio in Los Angeles. The millennial-coffeehouse design is finally showing signs of fading, co-signs Timothy Brown, an interior designer based in New York.

Sisal and jute: These two types of fiber rugs may have overstayed their welcome in home décor, designers say. “They don’t feel soft or cushy on bare feet and are not very child- or pet-friendly,” says Timothy Corrigon, a Los Angeles designer. “It wears quickly, stains easily and is virtually un-cleanable,” adds Philip Gorrivan, a designer in New York.

 

Plansource, Inc remains a portal of information for homebuilders and the homebuilding industry.  http://www.plansonline.com

Reprinted from NYT

Top 10 Trends from the 2015 Houzz and Home Report

July 30, 2015

Houzz released its fourth annual Houzz and Home Report in June. The report, an overview of renovation, custom building and decorating in 2014, is chock-full of useful facts and data. The survey collected information from more than 260,000 Houzz users globally and more than 170,000 respondents in the U.S., representing the largest-ever dataset.

Top 10 trends from the 2015 Houzz and Home Report:

  1. Millennials are active homeowners.
    • Few Millennials own homes, yet the ones who do are outpacing their Baby Boomer parents—and everyone else—in home renovations, decorations and repairs.
  2. But Boomers are still spending the most.
    • In fact, Boomers are spending twice as much or more on kitchen remodels as Millennials.
  3. Homeowners’ go-to resources change as they age.
    • As they age, homeowners begin to rely less on their family and friends and more on service providers—or themselves—when making decisions about home renovations. This should serve as motivation to tell your story effectively, so they’ll be more likely to turn to you when they’re ready to act.
  4. Home improvement challenges vary by generation.
    • Millennials struggle with staying on budget and securing funding/financing; Boomers find it harder to locate products and providers. Are you providing budget-friendly options? Is your brand visible to your target audience?
  5. We’re putting our wants before our needs.
    • Interior remodels—usually discretionary—are outpacing necessary maintenance projects like roofing and exterior paint. Home automation system upgrades for thermostats, lights and electronics also beat out the essentials, while home entertainment purchases aren’t far behind.
  6. Scope is the major driver of kitchen and bathroom remodel costs, and they’re not cheap.
    • Houzz users are spending as much as $48,000 for a new kitchen and $22,900 for a new bathroom. Major kitchen remodels include, at a minimum, replacing all kitchen cabinetry and appliances within the existing footprint.
  7. Many homeowners planning a kitchen remodel spend at least six months gathering ideas.
    • Do you have a strategy to get into their consideration set long before they begin selecting products? If not, you may miss your chance.
  8. One in 20 Houzz users renovated most of their home’s interior in 2014. Wow!
    • In 2014, kitchen, bath and living/family rooms accounted for most interior renovations.
  9. Home pros are a popular bunch.
    • Of the homeowners in this study who renovated their homes in 2014, 84 percent got professional help. About half of those used a general contractor; the other half hired a specialty service provider. Older generations are quicker to hire contractors and design pros than their younger counterparts.
  10. Products marketed as healthy, green or smart aren’t an automatic sell.
    • Renovation considerations like preventing or addressing health concerns, integrating green or sustainable materials and integrating smart technology are still unimportant to many consumers. If you’re marketing these products, you must be able to effectively reach your target audience and show them the benefits and value of your products

Written by Leslie Gillock

Plansource, Inc., www.plansonline.com, is a residential design firm that remains a portal of information for homebuilders and homeowners.

New Home Design Trends

October 14, 2014

Nick Lehnert, executive director at Irvine, Calif.–based KTGY, and Mollie Carmichael, principal at John Burns Real Estate Consulting in Irvine, assembled for BIG BUILDER 14 ethnographically informed design trends. All 14 of these trends fall within three primary assertions in today’s new-home market: scale trumps size; livability trumps salability; technology can solve for both scale and livability. Below are this year’s top design trends in the new-home market.

1. Scale and Function

The latest American Institute of Architects’ Design Trends Survey notes that households have a “growing interest in going smaller due to an effort to contain energy costs, and a significant higher number of architects report demand for smaller homes.” Scale and function are the solution here, not sheer square footage.

2. ”Private” Space

Boomers, empty nesters, and Gen Y cohorts express a desire for less maintenance and more privatized outdoor space, breaking away from the traditional “public” backyard. This design trend can be achieved by creating spaces that are private from the neighboring house by either positioning architecture around the outdoor space or by allowing the outdoor space to pierce architecture, affording more interior living spaces to be exposed to the outdoor area.

3. Indoor/Outdoor Connectivity

Bring the outdoors into the home experience. These thresholds to the outdoors offer more light and exciting access to “private” outdoor space. The result makes the interior feel like it extends beyond walls.

4. Covered Outdoor Rooms

Outdoor rooms expand the utility of the adjoining interior rooms and become outdoor retreats, still covered and protected but open to the outdoors.

5. Personal Touches

Whether it is a resale or a new home, the consumer is looking for and purchasing feature elements—such as kitchen products, bath fixtures, and custom flooring—that reflect their lifestyle and aesthetic preferences. Now take this trend to the architecture/structure of the house. Each consumer will “live” the interior space of a home differently.

6. Super Kitchens

The kitchen is viewed as the “hub” of the house. While providing the main function of a place for food preparation, the kitchen also serves as an entertainment/conversation area. Kitchens are now open to other rooms, visible and exposed. An island offers additional seating capacity along with prep space, and pantries need to be able to store more packaged foods, which often are purchased in bulk at stores like Costco. As the hub, it becomes a consumer’s dream to design these elements together with function, practicality, and flair.

7. Spalike Master Baths

The bathtub is not dead—rather, it has become an afterthought in most designs. However, trends reveal that women tend to take more baths than men as they’re more apt to dedicate the time. It is an experience and offers an opportunity for relaxation, so why not design the setting to enhance the experience?

8. Larger Media Areas

Many households these days possess at least one large flat-screen TV. The new, larger sizes of these televisions create a design need for more wall space and more seating capability.

9. More Garage Space

Garages are more than “housing” for vehicles. In fact, the garage is one of the only places within a “programmed” house that will offer the consumer what we call idea space. Creating a larger garage to accommodate more functions becomes a value to the consumer.

10. Smarter Storage

Always an important factor, storage rarely gets designed into a home, leaving the consumer to create their own space. Smarter, well-designed storage is especially useful within smaller spaces.

11. Office Space

The office/den is trending to a higher need and the “want” issue dictates the best location within the home. Who uses it and where it is located becomes critical to the consumer and how they value the space. As a “utilized” office space, the front of the home off the entry is not considered an intelligent and practical location. The better location is closer to the “living” area of the house—the kitchen hub and family room.

12. Entry and Exits

Buyers are looking for entry drama and home announcement when greeting guests. As such, the entry and exits become important for impact. Over the past 10 to 15 years, we have stacked living over the entries. To be able to create some level of volume increases demand.

13. Dual-Use Homes

Multigenerational living has become part of the “next” culture. Families are staying together longer and the coupling of families becomes economic as well as cultural.

14. Technological Advances

Technology products create a need for a new lifestyle that revolves around the constant use handheld electronic devices. We will be designing small “server” rooms as smart technology continues to enter the home.

 

Reprinted from Builder Magazine

Plansource, Inc., remains a portal of information for homebuilders and the homebuilding industry. http://www.plansonline.com

15 Fastest Growing Metros

October 14, 2014

Reprinted from Builder Magazine

 

Metrostudy does a 100% count within markets across the country of move-ins into newly-built homes.  This is a powerful and reliable measure of end-user demand.  The top two markets have outsized percentage changes because they are starting from a low base number.  In terms of the large markets, Central Florida has seen a 24.3% increase in new home demand in the past year, and Charlotte, NC, has seen a 23.4%.  Atlanta, which was savaged by the downturn, has seen a 22.9% increase.  New home construction is picking up in all of these markets, as builders scramble to meet increased demand.

Here are the top 15 markets by change in move-ins:

Rank Market 2Q13 Move-Ins 2Q14 Move-Ins % Change
1 Reno 233 464 99.1%
2 Rio Grande Valley 336 466 38.7%
3 Central Florida 3,104 3,859 24.3%
4 Charlotte 1,643 2,027 23.4%
5 Atlanta 2,508 3,082 22.9%
6 Northern Virginia 865 1,037 19.9%
7 Jacksonville 1,119 1,303 16.4%
8 Sarasota/Bradenton 647 739 14.2%
9 St.George/Mesquite 296 336 13.5%
10 Austin 2,216 2,497 12.7%
11 Houston 6,072 6,797 11.9%
12 Nashville 1,101 1,217 10.5%
13 Dallas/Ft.Worth 4,775 5,249 9.9%
14 Central California 1,496 1,627 8.8%
15 South Florida 938 1,020 8.7%

New Bathroom Trends

October 3, 2014

What’s the greatest thing since indoor plumbing? His-and-hers shower stalls. But say bye-bye to the bidet.

Luxury bathrooms have undergone some notable changes since 2008, considered the peak of the real-estate bubble, according to a survey by the Home Innovation Research Labs (HIRL). The biggest casualties are whirlpool bathtubs and stand-alone bidets, down 9.4% and 34.9%, respectively, over the six-year period.

   

In the study, conducted between January and March, roughly 1,400 home builders cited trends in new construction in 2013. Analysts at HIRL, a subsidiary of the National Association of Home Builders, then compared the findings with its 2008 survey results.

“Since the recession, there have been a lot of trade-offs,” said Ed Hudson, director of the group’s market-research division. Luxury homes have shrunk slightly, from 4,190 square feet in 2008 to 4,049 square feet in 2013. Home buyers, even on the luxury end, are more conscientious about what they look for in amenities, he said.

In some cases, buyers toned down the guest bathrooms to focus on the master suite, said Scott Hobbs, president of custom home builder Hobbs Inc. in New Canaan, Conn. “People choose to spend money where they’re most going to enjoy it,” he said.

Aesthetically, new homes today are less ornate than they were in the go-go days of the housing boom, said April Saxe, an agent with Houlihan Lawrence who sells multimillion-dollar homes in Westchester, N.Y. “The [whirlpool] tub has certainly been on the way out,” she said. Instead, that space may be going toward a new soaking tub or shower stall.

Even for buyers who weren’t hit hard by the downturn, decorum dictated some stylistic changes. The bathroom is less showy and much more contemporary since the recession, said Leo Birov, founder of Heritage Luxury Builders in Northfield, Ill. “Everything looks more transitional now,” he said, with popular features including heated floors, steam showers and computerized controls.

But that doesn’t mean bathrooms are less luxurious. Mark Pulte, founder of luxury home builder Mark Timothy Inc. in Boca Raton, Fla., said he is building showers with a half dozen body sprays, his-and-her shower heads and waterproof keypad controls for all the nozzles.

He is noticing one demographic shift on the ultrahigh end. Younger clients want one large his-and-hers shower with two entrances; “the older crowd wants separate showers.”

Plansource, Inc., http://www.plansonline.com, remains a portal for information on the homebuilding industry.

Reprinted from WSJ and Builder magazine

Home Trends for 2014 and beyond

September 17, 2014

Nick Lehnert, executive director at Irvine, Calif.–based KTGY, and Mollie Carmichael, principal at John Burns Real Estate Consulting in Irvine, assembled for BIG BUILDER 14 ethnographically informed design trends. All 14 of these trends fall within three primary assertions in today’s new-home market: scale trumps size; livability trumps salability; technology can solve for both scale and livability. Below are this year’s top design trends in the new-home market.

1. Scale and Function

The latest American Institute of Architects’ Design Trends Survey notes that households have a “growing interest in going smaller due to an effort to contain energy costs, and a significant higher number of architects report demand for smaller homes.” Scale and function are the solution here, not sheer square footage.

2. ”Private” Space

Boomers, empty nesters, and Gen Y cohorts express a desire for less maintenance and more privatized outdoor space, breaking away from the traditional “public” backyard. This design trend can be achieved by creating spaces that are private from the neighboring house by either positioning architecture around the outdoor space or by allowing the outdoor space to pierce architecture, affording more interior living spaces to be exposed to the outdoor area.

3. Indoor/Outdoor Connectivity

Bring the outdoors into the home experience. These thresholds to the outdoors offer more light and exciting access to “private” outdoor space. The result makes the interior feel like it extends beyond walls.

4. Covered Outdoor Rooms

Outdoor rooms expand the utility of the adjoining interior rooms and become outdoor retreats, still covered and protected but open to the outdoors.

5. Personal Touches

Whether it is a resale or a new home, the consumer is looking for and purchasing feature elements—such as kitchen products, bath fixtures, and custom flooring—that reflect their lifestyle and aesthetic preferences. Now take this trend to the architecture/structure of the house. Each consumer will “live” the interior space of a home differently.

6. Super Kitchens

The kitchen is viewed as the “hub” of the house. While providing the main function of a place for food preparation, the kitchen also serves as an entertainment/conversation area. Kitchens are now open to other rooms, visible and exposed. An island offers additional seating capacity along with prep space, and pantries need to be able to store more packaged foods, which often are purchased in bulk at stores like Costco. As the hub, it becomes a consumer’s dream to design these elements together with function, practicality, and flair.

7. Spalike Master Baths

The bathtub is not dead—rather, it has become an afterthought in most designs. However, trends reveal that women tend to take more baths than men as they’re more apt to dedicate the time. It is an experience and offers an opportunity for relaxation, so why not design the setting to enhance the experience?

8. Larger Media Areas

Many households these days possess at least one large flat-screen TV. The new, larger sizes of these televisions create a design need for more wall space and more seating capability.

9. More Garage Space

Garages are more than “housing” for vehicles. In fact, the garage is one of the only places within a “programmed” house that will offer the consumer what we call idea space. Creating a larger garage to accommodate more functions becomes a value to the consumer.

10. Smarter Storage

Always an important factor, storage rarely gets designed into a home, leaving the consumer to create their own space. Smarter, well-designed storage is especially useful within smaller spaces.

11. Office Space

The office/den is trending to a higher need and the “want” issue dictates the best location within the home. Who uses it and where it is located becomes critical to the consumer and how they value the space. As a “utilized” office space, the front of the home off the entry is not considered an intelligent and practical location. The better location is closer to the “living” area of the house—the kitchen hub and family room.

12. Entry and Exits

Buyers are looking for entry drama and home announcement when greeting guests. As such, the entry and exits become important for impact. Over the past 10 to 15 years, we have stacked living over the entries. To be able to create some level of volume increases demand.

13. Dual-Use Homes

Multigenerational living has become part of the “next” culture. Families are staying together longer and the coupling of families becomes economic as well as cultural.

14. Technological Advances

Technology products create a need for a new lifestyle that revolves around the constant use handheld electronic devices. We will be designing small “server” rooms as smart technology continues to enter the home.

 

Plansource, Inc., http://www.plansonline.com, remains a portal of information for builders and the homebuilding industry.

 

Reprinted from Big Builder