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10 States Where Mortgage Debt Runs Highest and What It Means for Home Builders

Understanding where mortgage debt runs highest across the United States gives home builders a valuable lens on regional market conditions, buyer financial capacity, and long-term housing demand. When home buyers carry larger mortgage balances, it reshapes everything from purchasing power to market entry points for first-time buyers. A recent report from Credit Karma, analyzed by

Amherst Energy Code Adoption Stricter Efficiency Standards for Residential Builders

Amherst Energy Code Adoption Signals a Shift in Local Building Standards When Amherst, Massachusetts, became the latest town in the state to adopt stricter energy efficiency requirements for new construction, it joined a growing movement of municipalities pushing beyond the baseline state building code. The new rules mandate that all new residential construction and certain

How Home Builders Can Identify Shovel-Ready Housing Markets Using Data-Driven Analysis

For home builders navigating today’s complex housing landscape, the difference between a profitable year and a costly mistake often comes down to market selection. Not every region offers the same potential, and the ability to identify shovel-ready markets before committing resources can make or break a building operation. Market analysis tools such as those used

ZigBee and ISO 50001: How Two Building Standards Are Driving Greener Construction

Two global initiatives the ZigBee Building Automation Standard and the ISO 50001 energy management certification program emerged as transformative forces in residential and commercial construction. These standards demonstrate how the industry continues to develop program standards of many different types that help builders and property owners translate high performance and sustainable building goals into practical

Complete Guide to Post-Tension Concrete Slabs in Residential Construction

When residential builders need a foundation system that handles expansive soils, heavy loads, or long-span floor plans without excessive thickness, post-tension concrete slabs offer an engineered solution that outperforms conventional reinforced concrete in several key respects. Unlike standard slabs that rely solely on passive steel reinforcement to resist cracking, post-tension slabs use high-strength steel tendons

How Home Builders Identify Shovel-Ready Markets for Smart Growth

For home builders, choosing the right market is just as important as building a quality home. The difference between a project that sells quickly and one that sits unsold often comes down to market timing and location intelligence. A shovel-ready market is one where demand is rising, supply is constrained, and conditions favor new construction.

ZigBee and ISO 50001: How Two Building Standards Are Driving Energy Efficiency in Modern Construction

As the construction industry moves toward higher performance and lower environmental impact, two important standards have emerged to help builders and developers translate sustainability goals into practical, measurable actions. The ZigBee Building Automation Standard and the ISO 50001 energy management certification program, both introduced to the market in recent years, offer complementary pathways for making

How the 2008 Credit Ratings Crisis Reshaped Home Building What Builders Can Learn

How the 2008 Credit Ratings Crisis Reshaped Home Building: What Builders Can Learn from the Illinois S&P Lawsuit In 2025, the Illinois Attorney General filed a lawsuit against Standard & Poor’s, accusing the ratings agency of issuing fraudulently high ratings to risky mortgage-backed securities in the years leading up to the 2008 housing market crash.

What the Obama Housing Plan Meant for Home Builders: Policy Lessons for Today’s Market

The 2008 housing crisis sent shockwaves through the residential construction industry. When the Obama administration stepped into office in 2009, builders faced a landscape defined by foreclosures, frozen credit markets, and the steepest decline in housing starts since the Great Depression. The administration’s housing plan, detailed in a briefing by HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan, aimed