Show homes provide a hands-on display for new building techiques and ideas.
At this month’s Southern Building Show in Atlanta and the Pacific Coast Builder’s Conference in San Francisco, attendees will have the opportunity to view two fabulous show homes — each with its own unique style and design. Carl Seville, along with Jimmy Carrion and Michelle Brinkman of SawHorse, Inc. in Atlanta, presents the Earthcraft Remodeling Showcase Project, a completely remodeled 1918 Tudor home in the Druid Hills Historic District of Atlanta.
On the opposite coast, Sarah Susanka’s “Settling in the City” follows her design principles set forth in her book, Home by Design. The completely remodeled 1930s Oliver Rousseau house in Pacific Heights incorporates healthy home products and technologies which offers a safe, energy-efficient and comfortable living environment.
For all spectators, both homes serve as a hands-on display for ideas that they can incorporate into their own remodeling businesses. These two show homes
are great examples of the many options in design
and construction.
Historic renovation for the new ages
Making its debut at the Southern Building Show, the Earthcraft Remodeling Showcase Project features a 4,700-sq.-ft home that packs an environmental punch by meeting all qualifications for the EarthCraft House Certification. EarthCraft is the first green renovation program in the country that provides remodeling contractors with a comprehensive methodology to turn existing homes into efficient, healthy and durable structures ? meeting the highest standards of sustaninable, energy-efficient construction. With 100 percent performance testing of every project by qualified, independent inspectors, both the contractor and home owner are given hard evidence that their house meets the strict criteria of the EarthCraft House Certification Standards. “Initially the EarthCraft House program was designed exclusively for single-family, new construction homes,” says Dianne Butler, EarthCraft House Development Director. “The success of the program and the satisfaction of the consumer created a new demand for expanding the criteria to include a broader range of housing options including remodeling.”
This success has paved a path for an Earthcraft Showhouse. This home educates remodelers about the advantages for both the homeowner and the contractor in building with energy efficiency and sustainable products in mind. This home, estimated at $1.4 million dollars, features five bedrooms and four and a half baths with an unfinished full bath.