Archive for Updates

Preparations are under way for the 2010 Homearama Event in Patriot’s Landing.  Sponsored by HBAR, and hosted by East-West Partners, the event will showcase 6 fully decorated, energy efficient homes and is expected to draw thousands of people.  Our home will have a number of creative and fun ideas.  The master bath tub was special ordered and delivered to our office today!

It will also utilize numerous energy efficient construction techniques, and it will be Energy Star certified by a third-party inspector.  One of the most innovative energy efficient features is the Links System from Schlage / Trane.  This system allows you to use your computer and/or smart phone to control door locks, lighting, cameras and thermostats remotely.  When someone enters your home while you are away, you are notified by text message.  You can adjust thermostat settings at any time, from any where.  Check out this video for a short overview of the system and it’s various components:

You can also learn more about the system on Schlage’s web site.

Stay tuned to our blog over the summer for more updates about our Homearama house, and some of the creative features!

When it comes to selecting the right floor plan for their new home, homebuyers often spend a great deal of time walking through decorated model homes, finished homes, and homes under construction to find the perfect plan.  Many prospective buyers browse the internet looking at elevations and floor plans online.  While this process is important, the selection of the right floor plan should come after the right community is chosen.    Here are four questions that should help narrow the search:

  • What part of town do we want/need to live in? Most often, the part of town is dictated by such considerations as school district, proximity to work or friends or family, or some other high level need that makes one area more desirable than another.  Before choosing a plan, eliminate at least 75% of the locations because they do not meet some or all of the requirements listed above.
  • What type of neighborhood do we desire? Some buyers want subdivisions with full amenity packages such as pool, golf, or tennis. Other buyers specifically do not want a neighborhood with a Home Owner Association that dictates rules that each house must conform to.  Wanting a neighborhood with children the same ages as your own for playmates is often a major consideration for young families.  Age-restricted neighborhoods are often the perfect pick for the empty nester buyer and may be the driving force in the selection process.
  • What price range of house do we want to target? Once geographic location and type of neighborhood has narrowed the search, the price range of the homes for sale should be used to further define the 2 or 3 neighborhoods that fit within the search criteria.  As we all know, the value of the location and the size of the homes being built has a direct impact on the price range of every community.  We may want a golf course neighborhood, but don’t want to pay the price these homes end up costing.  Price range is usually a consideration and can be used to limit the search.
  • What size of lot do we want? Finally, we can narrow the search even more by deciding upon the desired lot size.  Some communities on well-located (and expense) land, often contain small lots that keep the price range of the homes within limits.  Communities with larger lots may be located further out from the central business district where land is less expensive.  In some cases the limitations of the lot size may eliminate certain types of houses such as single story plans simply because the house will not fit on the smaller lot.  If lot size is important, it can help eliminate some of the neighborhoods under consideration.

All of the above considerations precede the actual selection of a floor plan. By answering the four questions, you can eliminate a lot of the community choices and make the selection process much less confusing and more time efficient.

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LOCATION! LOCATION! LOCATION!  LifeStyle Builders and Developers, Richmond’s New Home Design Leader will be expanding it’s presence in Chesterfield County, offering homes in both Elm Crest and Mount Blanco.  Elm Crest is an exciting new neighborhood perfectly situated in the heart of Midlothian off of Courthouse Road.  We will be offering homes from four of our plan collections with prices starting in the $290s!  Mount Blanco is the newest, waterfront section in Meadowville Landing just off Route 10 in Chesterfield County and provides an easy commute to Fort Lee or Richmond.  Our Colonnade Collection will be offered and prices will start in the $290s.  In New Kent County, Lifestyle Builders will be offering homes in Patriots Landing, a community with stunning home sites and incredible amenities, where LifeStyle Builders will be participating in the 2010 Homearama!  What is Homearama?  Check back in with us for details in the upcoming months!

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May
29

Strike Now

Posted by: Ed Melton | Comments (0)

The Good News:

30 Year Fixed Rate home loans sank to 4.78% the week of May 26th, the lowest rate in 2010 and inching closer to the record of 4.71% set in 2009. This, along with the high inventory of available new homes,  makes it a super time to be house hunting.  A $200,000 loan would mean a principal and interest payment of only $1,046.  If taxes, mortgage insurance and hazard insurance typical in the Richmond area are added in,  one would have a total monthly payment in the range of $1,300 to $1,450 requiring gross yearly income of about  $45,000 to $52,000.  There is a spread here because each locality has a different tax rate and each loan instrument has different income to debt ratio requirements.

The Bad News:

FHA (The Federal Housing Administration) has announced that sometime this summer, they will SLASH the allowable maximum “seller concessions” from 6% of the home sales price to 3%.  Seller concession rules allow buyers to ask the home seller to pay for a variety of settlement costs such as loan origination fees, points, state and local transfer fees, appraisals, and pre-paid items such as taxes and insurance.  Currently, on a $200,000 home, a seller could agree to pay up to $12,000.  That will go to $6,000 this summer when the new rules go into effect.  FHA is still the best deal in town for cash out of pocket as they still only require 3.5% down.  On the $200,000 home this would mean $7,000 versus a Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac that are requiring a minimum 10% down with excellent credit scores.

Both the Good News and the Bad News add up to one thing:  Now is the time to strike and buy that new home!

Categories : Market Update, Updates
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May
18

Why Are New Homes Getting Smaller?

Posted by: Lloyd Poe | Comments (0)

One sign of the end of the housing boom was the death of what the media liked to call “The McMansion” which were very large houses out of scale (and often character) for their neighborhoods.  Several years ago at the height of the building cycle, entire new neighborhoods consisted of street after street of overly large houses in the 5,000 – 8,000 sq. ft. range. In infill situations, older existing neighborhoods of 1500 sq. ft. houses began seeing those smaller houses torn down and much larger new homes of 3,000-5,000 sq. ft. constructed on the same lot usually dwarfing existing older homes.  That trend changed abruptly several years ago.

Which raises the question, “Why Are New Homes Getting Smaller?”  The answer may not be what you have been led to believe.  Historically speaking, in times of prosperity, new homes tend to grow in size.  Some economists speculate it tracks the higher consumer confidence that exists during a healthy economy as wealth accumulation is often invested into the new home for both status and practical reasons.  Even existing homes “grow” in size during this part of the cycle as remodeling projects often add extra square footage onto the existing structure.

As the housing market has significantly cooled over the past three years, new homes have begun to retreat in size and all the numbers support that trend.  Some, who observed that the prolonged booming housing market fueled demand for larger and more opulent housing as a status symbol, argue that discreet and constrained spending needed to return to home ownership.  Perhaps they are right, but I think the return to smaller new homes has more to do with economics that a resetting of our global social conscience.  It is not that we have suddenly been convicted of the error of our ways as a result of some moral epiphany, it has more to do with who can buy and what can they afford.

As the market begin to slide and housing values took a tumble, many buyers who had purchased during the height of the market, simply had little or no equity and could not afford to sell and move up or down.  Then, when the first-time buyer tax credit became available, that buyer was motivated to consider a new home.  They had financial constraints and were, for the most part, price sensitive with affordability being a limiting issue.  In response, builders of new homes began to introduce new, smaller floor plans to meet that market demand and the dominance of the first-time buyer and the house they could afford began to pull down the average size of all new homes sold.  Most move-up buyers simply were out of the market and are only now beginning to shop for a new home.

A friend of mine and a new home marketing specialist once told me, “Square footage is the ultimate amenity!”  Though we do see a trend to smaller (but nicer) mid-range housing, and a desire for new homes that are “fresh” in appearance and more practical in design,  the universal benchmark will, over the long run, continue to be size (assuming locations are equal).  It is not solely an issue of status; it is also practical.  Growing families need more living and storage space and move-up housing provides that.  As the economy improves, financing loosens up, and employment opportunities return to normal, I predict we will see the average size of new homes begin to grow as it historically has.

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