Monday, September 21, 2009

COAST DAY PA -- Huge Success






Thanks to Mick, John, Jacki and Jim for a highly successful Coast Day at Penn's Landing yesterday. The weather was beautiful and everyone that was there was anxious to learn about our native critters, rain gardens and rain barrels.



One lucky family took a rain barrel home in our contest.





We will also be at Coast Day in Lewes, Delaware on October 4th, make sure to visit us there too!

Friday, September 18, 2009

JCM Presents Green Building to Eastern Shore (MD) BIA

Wednesday night Jim McCulley, Joe Gordon and I were assisted by Bob Thornton (Silverstock Builders) in a presentation to the Eastern Shore Building Industry Association at their dinner meeting. We were their guest speakers to introduce green and the NAHB green building program to their members (NAHB had given them our name as a speaker). And what an introduction to green it turned out to be!

The 40 or so members at the meeting were all very passionate about their feelings and questions and this provided for lively discussion and interaction. Heretofore they mostly had not heard any of this firsthand. (In effect we were first responders, much like the meeting was in a restaurant previously a firehouse for first responders.) We first explained what green is and is not, then Bob Thornton described his positive experiences with the benefits he has seen by building green and having built the first NAHB Gold Certified home in the Nation since the program began. Then we provided a surface explanation about how a builder builds green and gets their homes certified by the NAHB Research Center. Finally we concluded the presentation with details as to how their Association can become affiliated with NAHB Green, and the benefits of forming a Green Building Council.

A great deal of the comments and questions were related to identifying how a builder figures out the cost to build green, and how to translate the benefits of green building to prospective new buyers. The session will help us refine future presentations to more clearly address these questions. While we hope we will soon hear from some of the attendees as they consider implementing green building, we are equally excited they may use our help to initiate the NAHB Affiliation and Green Building Council route, same as we did 18 months ago in Delaware.

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Meridian Crossing Unmatched in Variety and Value


By Carol Kipp

Meridian Crossing has already established itself as a unique community in Delaware. And not just in the clichéd use of the word, which is just an exaggerated way of saying unusual. This is the only community offering geothermal heating and cooling and solar electric as optional features, the only community that has taken Energy-Star certification to a whole new level.

The advantage to buyers is enormous, and not just because their heating and cooling bills will be 60 to 70 percent lower than those of people still relying on traditional systems. As the sustainable-energy movement grows, along with public concern for the environment, homes in Meridian Crossing will be part of the future instead of the past. Yet the builder/developer, The Reybold Group, has not compromised the quality and value of the homes by substituting state-of-the-art energy systems for other important standard features. At Meridian Crossing, buyers will find a community where the value runs deep and homes are defined by affordable luxury.

The uniqueness of this exceptionally well-designed community is more fully defined by the combination of features found there. Visitors discover that the first and most obvious asset is a very attractive site plan with winding streets, stacked stone walls, and a heavy investment in landscaping. The second is an architecturally impressive, $2 million clubhouse, now complete and ready for its Grand Opening debut in October. Expect a state-of-the-art facility with style, sophistication and considerable elegance, a clubhouse designed to anticipate every resident need. The two gathering rooms, one with a big-screen TV and the other with a gourmet kitchen and bar, have the architectural detail and ambience of an exclusive resort. The fitness center, theater room and Internet-ready business center, along with the conference room and men’s and women’s changing rooms, are appointed on a similar scale. Outside, walking trails have been installed, and tot lots, tennis courts, baseball and soccer fields are ready to go.

The third advantage Meridian Crossing offers is a broad variety of housing choices, beginning with the four townhome models first introduced, all featuring stately, historic-inspired facades and more than 2,300-square feet of finished living space on three levels. Open-floor-plan designs reflect a very modern sensibility. Three of the models have rear-access, oversized garages; all of them have flexible floor plans — two bedrooms instead of three; a kitchen in the front or the rear. All include a maintenance-free rear deck on the main level and 2.2 baths. Standard features also include a kitchen island with breakfast bar, a family room and half-bath on the lower level, 2-by-6 exterior framing to satisfy Energy-Star insulation standards (R-19 in the walls; R-38 in ceilings), a security system, and a concrete rear patio on homes with a front-entry garage. Prices start in the high-$200s.

Reybold is about to introduce other choices within the community, starting with two-story Carriage Homes that offer four different elevations and six floor-plan options. Two will offer one-floor living (first-floor owner suite); four will offer two-level living. Just 30 of these homes will be built, all with 3,300 square feet of living space that includes 3 bedrooms (or 2 owner suites), 2.2 baths, and a 2-car garage. Geothermal and solar-electric systems will be optional here as well.

The Carriage Home, semi-detached design incorporates a courtyard entry in the center flanked by the garage for each home, a pleasing alternative to the more common side-by-side garage design. The result is improved curb appeal and a more gracious introduction to interiors that feature a large, elegant foyer and dramatic volume space. Prices range from the mid- to upper-$300s.

The third housing option in this community will be condominiums. The first building, one of 10 that will each incorporate 22 units, is now in the framing stage. The eight, one-level floor-plan choices offer one, two or three bedrooms in living space that ranges from 770 sq. ft. ($179,900) to 1,400 sq. ft. ($259,900). The buildings are designed with enclosed entries and corridors, and garages underneath.

The final consideration, of course, is location. Again, Meridian Crossing excels. Located just off Rt. 40 in Bear, the community is part of a semi-rural environment that offers a landscape of natural beauty within minutes of shopping centers and an access ramp to Del. 1. Count on easy commutes north to urban workplaces and south to Delaware’s resort towns.

Directions from Wilm: I-95 S to Del 1 S to Rt. 40 W (exit 160). Follow Rt. 40 for 1.7 miles to left onto Church Road. Community is ½ mi. ahead on right. Sales Center open daily, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. For more information: 302.834.1740. www.meridiancrossing.com

Friday, September 11, 2009

BRAC to be a windfall for this entire region, and Cecil County Chamber

Yeserday I went to the Cecil County Chamber lunch meeting in Rising Sun.
The speaker Clark Turner of Clark Turner Signature Homes did an
excellent presentation about BRAC and the impact to Cecil County.
HUGE impact!

This lunch was a great event and the Chamber is a tremendous resource which begs to be tapped! There were about 100 people there and they were all friendly and want to do business. Went around the room before lunch, each person stood up and introduced themselves and had 30 seconds to plug their business. Engineers, bankers, consultants, educators, you name it. A good mix of businesses.

Clark Turner relayed some staggering BRAC statistics. Aberdeen
Proving Ground will see 27,000 new jobs of which 23,000 are coming
between now and 2012!. All these jobs are high tech, the AVERAGE
salary at the APG will be around $86,000! There is or will be 3 or
4 million square feet of offices, which is second only to the
Pentagon! Of all the 55,000 BRAC people which will be moving to the
area, 85% will be home buyers (to relate the 55,000, there's about
80,000 that live within the city limits of Wilmington). He thinks 75%
of these people will want to live in Cecil County – why? Because
they will be closer in the middle to family and friends back in Fort
Monmouth – that same logic will help bring buyers to Delaware.
Clark indicated a demand of 12,000 lots are needed to
satisfy all these BRAC buyers. In Harford and Cecil County there are
only 3,000 approved lots in inventory so the 9,000 lot shortfall will
have to be absorbed in surrounding areas and new projects to enter
the pipeline – including Delaware and Pennsylvania! He mentioned that APG has spent a huge amount of money to upgrade their infrastructure and roads on the
base. However the State of Maryland has not kept up! So not only will there be initial congestion, but the opportunity will be there for municipal and state public works projects for roads, sewer, etc. He further mentioned that Cecil County is flat in the middle of a technology corridor – Delaware is chemical capital of the
world, New Jersey is pharmaceutical capital, APG and Fort Mead and
some other is the military capital, northern Virginia is the communications capital…

Now Clark's information was well researched and documented. But even if you discounted half of these numbers, theres still tremendous business and economic opportunities. Talk about the catbird seat!

Thursday, September 10, 2009

IS LEED FLAWED?

Here is an interesting article about LEED.

See article here.

JCM prefers to use the NAHB Green Building Program for residential construction.

Contact Howard for more information.

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

Mercury Found in All Fish Tested from 300 Streams in U.S.


Disturbing article that points out that the things we did many years ago will have a lasting effect. This is why the Brownfield Program and Public/Private Partnerships on cleaning up sites is so important.


See article here.


For more information of the Brownfields Program and the incentives available for cleaning up contaminated sites, contact Doug Seavey at JCM Environmental.

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

New Castle County Planning Board

Jim McCulley will be speaking tonight at the New Castle County Planning Board Hearing with respect to the proposed UDC Revision that would make a Jurisdictional Determination (JD) a potential requirement for land development plans.

Jim has prepared written testimony that he will submit to the Board which he will summarize at the meeting tonight. For a copy of this testimony, please contact Jim at jim@jcmenv.com.