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Remodel for Comfort, Not for ShowEconomic recessions come and go. The current one—purportedly over since 2009—is the fourth in the 34-year career of Duo Dickinson, an architect in Madison, Conn. But this time around, he notices a different attitude among homeowners toward remodeling their homes. Before, the top concern was how a remodeling project would affect a home's resale value, Dickinson points out. But today, people aren't thinking first about resale value. Their prime motive in remodeling is to make the home more livable. "We're back to the way people thought about their homes before the aftermath of World War II, when they began to see their homes as profit engines, rather than places to commit to," says Dickinson, author of " In today's market, many people can't sell their existing homes or afford to buy new ones. A recent poll by the National Association of the Remodeling Industry (NARI), Des Plaines, Ill., found that 26% of homeowners plan to stay an additional 16 years to 20 years in their homes because of decreased property values, while 23% say they'll stay an additional six years to 10 years. "People are realizing that, for good or ill, they're stuck," Dickinson says, "and they want to be stuck in a better place. There are things they can do to make their home better." Practicality rules the dayHome remodeling is experiencing an uptick, with 2012 predicted to be the strongest year since 2006, according to the remodeling futures program at Harvard University's Joint Center for Housing Studies, Cambridge, Mass. Predictions are that 2012 will be the strongest year for remodeling since 2006.
Many homeowners are getting around to spending dollars on basic maintenance they've put off during the past couple of years, according to George "Geep" Moore, chair of the NAHB Remodelers of the National Association of Home Builders, Washington, D.C., and president of Moore-Built Construction & Restoration in Elm Grove, La. "We're also seeing more spruce-up and clean-up types of projects," Moore says. Gone for the most part are the luxury and keeping-up-with-the-Joneses types of remodels that were prevalent during the housing gold rush. "People are being much more practical today. They're stretching their dollars as far as they can," says Shawnda Horn, immediate past president of the Oregon Remodelers Association, a NARI chapter, and co-owner of Double J Construction, Oregon City, Ore. Horn is seeing bathroom remodels outnumber kitchen makeovers in her area. "Kitchens were more popular during the high economic times," she says, "but bathroom remodels are more affordable." This shift in remodeling priority is playing out nationwide, according to NAHB's Remodeling Market Index (RMI). The RMI survey of remodeling contractors for the first quarter of 2012 found that 78% of respondents said bathroom remodeling was one of the most common jobs they did, compared with 69% for kitchens. Kitchens used to occupy the top spot, but bathroom remodels began to outstrip kitchens after 2009. Resource BoxAfter bathrooms and kitchens, the next four most common remodeling jobs reported in the RMI survey for first quarter 2012 were: Gone are the luxury and keeping-up-with-the-Joneses types of remodels that were prevalent during the housing gold rush.
Other remodeling trends
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