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1986-1995: How Home Builders Navigated Economic Turmoil and Changed the Industry

The Savings and Loan Collapse and Its Fallout for Builders The period from 1986 to 1995 stands as one of the most turbulent decades in American home building, a stretch when economic forces beyond any builder’s control rewrote the rules of the industry. The previous era had already seen significant change, with structural shifts that

How the 1966-1975 Revolution Reshaped Home Building

Introduction The decade from 1966 to 1975 was one of the most transformative periods in American home building history. Coming after the Depression and war years and the explosive postwar housing boom, this era brought sweeping social, regulatory, and design changes that permanently altered how homes were built and sold. From the cultural revolution of

How 1976-1985 Transformed Home Building

The decade from 1976 to 1985 stands as one of the most turbulent and transformative periods in American home building. An energy crisis, double-digit inflation, and interest rates soaring to 21 percent pushed the housing industry to the edge of collapse. Yet from that pressure emerged some of the most significant innovations in energy-efficient construction,

Driving Toward Profit: Lessons from the Post-WWII Housing Boom (1946–1955)

The period immediately following World War II transformed the American home building industry in ways that still echo today. Between 1946 and 1955, pent-up demand, favorable government policy, and bold entrepreneurial vision combined to create the greatest housing boom in American history. Builders who understood the moment and adapted their methods found themselves driving toward

How the Baby Boom Reshaped Home Building: Lessons from 1956 to 1965

The period from 1956 to 1965 marked one of the most transformative decades in American home building history. As soldiers returned from World War II and the Baby Boom accelerated, the nation faced an unprecedented housing shortage. Builders responded with innovation, efficiency, and a new understanding of what home buyers wanted. This article explores how

How the Great Depression and World War II Reshaped the Home Building Industry

When Professional Builder magazine (originally Practical Builder) was founded in 1936, the American home building industry was in crisis. The housing market had dropped 90 percent from its 1929 peak, nearly a third of Depression-era unemployed workers came from the building trades, and builders across the country struggled to find work. Understanding how the industry

How Modern Building Technologies Are Transforming Home Construction

Modern home building has undergone a remarkable transformation over the past two decades, driven by advances in building technologies that improve speed, quality, and performance. Builders who have embraced factory-built systems, advanced framing techniques, and high-performance building envelopes are discovering new ways to deliver better homes while controlling costs and reducing labor dependencies. This article

Valuable Lessons from a Custom Builder’s Personal Home Project

When a professional home builder decides to build his own residence, the project takes on a different dimension entirely. Stephen Gillis, owner of Gillis Homes, had passed a piece of land in Georgetown, Massachusetts hundreds of times before a For Sale sign finally appeared. With 30 inches of snow on the ground and only photographs