Ultimate Open House


The Mobile App is Back

April 9, 2013

The Ultimate Open House New Home Tour is coming to a smart phone near you. The mobile app is back for 2013. This year, our goal is to make your mobile experience even more simple and quick than before. Our app will include photos, square footage, floor plans, price and mapping directions to homes on the tour. You’ll be able to search the app using a variety of descriptors. Bookmark your favorite homes, group them by location, and create a driving map from one to the other.

You’ll be able to email the builders or their realtors directly from the app, and, if you love a home, share it with your friends on social media.

Download the app before opening day for a sneak peak at the tour homes. On April 17, go to ultimateopenhouse.mobi on your iPhone or Android smart phone, and it will automatically take you to either the App Store or Android Market so you can download the app and check out the high efficiency natural gas homes.

So join the fun, and check back in soon on this blog for an invitation to our free BBQ events during the tour weekends of April 27-28 and May 4 -5, catered by NW Natural, at the Idea Homes.

Bike to the Ultimate Open House

May 1, 2011

The Home Builders Association supports green living and a healthy lifesyle. Anyone who rides their bike to visit a UOH home may enter themselves into a drawing to recieve a 1975 era Fuji Dynamic 10 Road bike complete with Fujita leather saddle, Suntour components and downtube shifters or a Timbuktu Messenger bag courtesy of Clean It Up Mark.

Enter by riding to any home on the Tour, looking for the red enter to win bag and droping your name into the bag or take a picture of you and your bike in front of a Tour Home, then e mail to mark@cleanitupmark.com.

Learn more at www.uoh2011cycling.com.

Study Shows Americans Favor Walkable Neighborhoods

April 7, 2011

Americans favor walkable, mixed-use neighborhoods, with 56% of respondents preferring smart growth neighborhoods over neighborhoods that require more driving between home, work and recreation. That’s according to a recent study, the Community Preference Survey, by the National Association of REALTORS®.

“REALTORS® care about improving communities through smart growth initiatives,” said NAR President Ron Phipps, broker-president of Phipps Realty in Warwick, R.I. “Our members don’t just sell homes, they sell neighborhoods. REALTORS® understand that different home buyers are looking for all kinds of neighborhood settings and that many home buyers want walkable, transit-accessible communities.”

Walkable communities are defined as those where shops, restaurants and local businesses are within walking distance from homes.

According to the survey, when considering a home purchase, 77% of respondents said they would look for neighborhoods with abundant sidewalks and other pedestrian-friendly features, and 50% would like to see improvements to existing public transportation rather than initiatives to build new roads and developments.

The survey also revealed that while space is important to home buyers, many are willing to sacrifice square footage for less driving. Eighty percent of those surveyed would prefer to live in a single-family, detached home as long as it didn’t require a longer commute, but nearly three out of five of those surveyed—59%—would choose a smaller home if it meant a commute time of 20 minutes or less.

The survey also found that community characteristics are very important to most people. When considering a home purchase, 88% of respondents placed more value on the quality of the neighborhood than the size of the home, and 77% of those surveyed want communities with high-quality schools.

Portland #1 Most Pet Friendly City

April 4, 2011

Pet lovers will spend an estimated $47 billion on their pets in 2010 according to the American Pets Products Association (APPA). That’s an awful lot of doggie bones for Fido and scratching posts for Fluffy. Pets have become more like family members, so it’s no wonder that more people are factoring in their pets when contemplating a move.

At this link you’ll find information on some of the most pet friendly cities in the U.S. These cities have pet friendly parks and trails, quality veterinary care, active animal welfare groups, as well as an abundance of pet boutiques and retail shops. To make the list, these cities had to be more than pet friendly. They also had to offer an exceptionally high quality of life for the owners who love those pets. From quality healthcare and higher education to diverse job opportunities and active artistic and cultural scenes, these cities are some of the best places to work, live and play in America.

Portland is named as a pet lovers paradise. We boast an impressive array of dog amenities. Few major cities can claim over 32 leashless dog parks and hundreds of pet day cares, dog-sitters, veterinarians, trainers, bakeries, photographers, groomers, boutiques, boarders, pet-friendly restaurants and other common pet services. Impressed? It gets better. Portland’s pet-friendly climate has created a happening pet-business scene. There are nutritionists, holistic medicine practitioners, pooper scoopers, funeral homes, lawyers, massage therapists, acupuncturists and not one, not two, but six listed pet psychics, one of whom is kept on retainer at the Hotel Monaco. The only city with more designated off-leash areas in its metropolitan area is New York (52 to Portland’s 50). That’s not including de facto dog areas on the riverfront or dog-friendly places like The National Sanctuary of Our Sorrowful Mother, a catholic shrine and 62-acre botanical garden. The Grotto, as its commonly known, holds its Blessing of the Animals on the third Sunday of each June.

Best Place to Ditch Your Car

February 25, 2011

Portland was (aptly) named “Best Place to Ditch Your Car” in the West by Sunset Magazine.  Read what they had to say below.

About four months ago, the New Seasons natural-foods chain made a quintessentially Portland move: It dedicated more parking to bikes than cars at its newest store. “There’s this subculture of people in their 20s and 30s who don’t even think about owning cars,” says Michael Andersen, who last year parted with his ’99 Toyota and used the proceeds to fund a startup newsmagazine, Portland Afoot, that covers “low-car living” in the City of Roses.

Bikes aside, Portland excels at alternative options. The TriMet buses link seamlessly with 52 miles of light rail and the nation’s first new streetcar line in a half-century. But Portland’s commitment to cycling is mind boggling, with upward of 300 miles of bike lanes, bike paths, and specially marked “bike boulevards,” where car volume is kept low. There are countless bike shops, bike clubs, bike races, bike blogs, and bike nonprofits, not to mention bike-thru coffee shops and bike-polo matches. One local credit union even offers bicycle loans.

In Sustainable Home Building, Less Is More

November 12, 2010

From Daily Journal of Commerce

Using recycled carpeting or a highly insulated building envelope for a home may lead to reduced greenhouse gas emissions, but a greater impact can be made by simply constructing a smaller home, according to a study released last week by Oregon’s Department of Environmental Quality.

While there is some demand for smaller homes from empty nesters, couples and single people, Jim Chapman, vice president of Legend Homes, said others will need to be convinced of the advantages to living in houses smaller than 1,200 square feet.

The largest barrier to popularizing small homes is cost, Chapman said. Homes are priced per square foot, and the most expensive rooms in a house are the bathroom and kitchen. Even if a home has less square footage, the land it sits on isn’t cheaper and the kitchen and bathroom expenses drive up the cost per square foot, Chapman said.

“I’m hoping all of us downsize over time,” Chapman said. “But right now it’s hard to find people even in a position to buy a home. And people in a position to buy a home don’t tend to look at energy efficiency as much as they should. Some people will spend more for a smaller house, but the smaller it is, the more it costs.”

The results of the DEQ study are being presented to state agencies, cities and counties to help inform future policy makers about greenhouse gases, Palmeri said.

Read full article here…

Tax credit boosts April home sales

May 17, 2010

From Portland Business Journal, by Wendy Culverwell

Portland home sales soared in April as buyers rushed to take advantage of an expiring federal tax credit, according to new data from the Regional Multiple Listing Service.

The credit was worth up to $8,000 for homes under contract by April 30. The deadline helped propel Portland metro sales to a 49.1 percent increase over the same month in 2009. Pending sales rose 60.8 percent and new listings rose 23.8 percent as sellers sought to take advantage of time-sensitive buyers.

There were 1,941 closed sales, 2,991 pending sales and 4,713 new listings in April. In a sign that first-time home buyers dominated the market, the average sale price in April decreased 3.1 percent from a year ago, to $282,100. The median sale price fell 4 percent to $240,000.

Year to date, closed sales rose 41.4 percent to 5,900, pending sales rose 46.3 percent to 8,476 pending sales and new listings rose 15.4 percent to 17,918.

At April’s pace, the current inventory of for-sale homes would last for about 7.3 months, giving buyers a slight advantage. However, because the tax credit, worth up to $8,000 for first-time buyers and $6,500 for returning buyers, is no longer available, sales will likely drop in coming months.

Looking ahead, May closings will likely be up thanks to contracts written by the April 30 federal deadline to qualify for the tax credit. However, pending sales will begin to drop to normal market levels starting this month but could be offset by a seasonal uptick in residential sales activity.

Hoyt neighborhood scores LEED platinum

May 7, 2010

From The Portland Business Journal

Pearl District developer Hoyt Properties announced Wednesday that the Hoyt Yards neighborhood received the platinum LEED for Neighborhood Development award from the U.S. Green Building Council.

It’s the highest possible rating under the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design pilot program, launched in 2007, to designate entire green neighborhoods in addition to individual buildings.

Hoyt Yards is just the seventh development in North America to receive the platinum award, including the Olympic Village in Vancouver, B.C., and the first in Portland.

The LEED Neighborhood Development program launches formally Thursday.

Hoyt Yards was among seven Portland-area projects in the pilot program. Of the others in the pilot program, Eliot Tower received a silver award, Helensview and Ladd Tower received gold awards.

Hoyt Yards is on 34 acres of former brownfields formerly occupied by the Burlington Northern rail yards and abandoned warehouses. The neighborhood now boasts 14 mixed-use and condominium buildings, restaurants, coffee shops, boutiques, art galleries, offices, and two public parks. The third park, a 3.2-acre area currently called the Fields, is scheduled to break ground in early 2011.

The LEED neighborhood development award focuses on smart uses of transportation, energy and land use in addition to green building practices. It was co-developed by the U.S. Green Building Council, Congress for the New Urbanism, and the Natural Resources Defense Council.

In order to achieve the LEED ND Platinum rating, Hoyt and the City of Portland used innovative energy, water and transit solutions in the Hoyt Yards plan. Examples include the Portland Street Car’s service to the neighborhood and planning for a North Pearl power plant that will provide clean power and heating to neighborhood buildings.

“Our vision for Hoyt Yards all along has been to create a vibrant, urban and green neighborhood that supports sustainability and an earth-friendly lifestyle,” said Tiffany Sweitzer, Hoyt president and partner, in a press release. “Receiving the highest rating for our plan is truly the crown jewel of our completed and future efforts here in the Pearl.”

Start Your Tour at the UOH Host Sites

April 12, 2010

Bike to the Ultimate Open House

April 9, 2010

The Home Builders Association supports green living and a healthy lifesyle. Anyone who rides their bike to visit a UOH home may enter themselves into a drawing to recieve a Timbuktu Messenger Bag, Oregon Cyclewear Merino wool jersey or a dozen cookies delivered by bike courtesy of Clean It Up Mark.

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