Congratulations Brunswick Forest Builder Team

Monday, May 14, 2012

A BIG congratulations to the Brunswick Forest Builder Team bringing home six awards during 26th Annual Wilmington, NC Parade of Homes.

The Brunswick Forest Builder Team is an essential part of what makes Brunswick Forest the fastest growing community in the Coastal South.  This team of eleven builders offers years of experience, many of the best floor plans throughout the Southeast and top-notch customer care.

So, congratulations again to this years winners!  We can't wait to see what next year has in store!

Gold Winner(s):

The Harmony II
1189 Leesburg Drive in Brunswick Forest
TRUSTT Builders, Inc.

Silver Winner(s):

The Elizabeth
2097 Shelmore Way in Brunswick Forest
Bill Clark Homes

Meadow Park II
823 Meadowsweet Lane in Brunswick Forest
Penton Development

The Merrimac
1287 Lillibridge Drive in Brunswick Forest
Plantation Building Corp.

Bronze Winner(s):

The Cape Fear II
1004 Leesburg Drive in Brunswick Forest
MDS Construction

The Palmetto
1177 Evangeline Drive in Brunswick Forest
JordanBuilt Homes

Honorable Mention:

The Sag Harbor II
1169 Leesburg Drive in Brunswick Forest
Hearthside Builders, Inc.

Edenhouse Villa
1312 Edenhouse Court in Brunswick Forest
TFT & Company, Inc.

The Lexington II
1038 Carberry Lane in Brunswick Forest
Fogelman Associates

The Montego
1281 Lillibridge Drive in Brunswick Forest
Bill Clark Homes

888.371.2434
www.brunswickforest.com

 

 

 


Elaine Colton, Brunswick Forest Resident Author

Thursday, March 15, 2012

 

It’s not every day you get to meet an author and even more exciting, it’s not every day you get to meet someone as special as Elaine Colton!  We here at Brunswick Forest can consider ourselves truly fortunate because we get both!

Elaine Colton, author of The Newport Girls, joined Brunswick Forest last May with her partner Rick Leeds and the two have been living it up ever since…socializing and mingling with new found friends and neighbors at Brunswick Forest.

The couple settled on Brunswick Forest after visiting with friends who lived in here.  They immediately loved what they saw and went on the hunt to find their perfect home.  They soon found it in the Belshaw neighborhood of Brunswick Forest.

“The race was on!” as Elaine puts it. 

They put their current home in Maryland on the market and it sold in three days! 

“We had no idea it would sell that quickly, so then we were faced with getting our Brunswick Forest home built in 60 days.  Sure enough, we did…with much help from Trusst Builders!”

It’s been almost a year since Elaine and Rick moved in and the neighborhood hasn’t been the same since.  Elaine bubbles with personality when telling her Brunswick Forest story as she does in her book, The Newport Girls.

Be sure to pick up a copy on Amazon!  Elaine is already working on her next book!

www.brunswickforest.com
888.317.2434


The Savvy Homebuyer: Understanding your Builder

Wednesday, November 09, 2011

Let's face it: Homebuilders don't always have the best reputations. The prospect of building a new home can cause a lot of anxiety, stemming from a combination of mystery, misperceptions, myths and illusions most people have about the homebuilding profession. 

While some builders earn that reputation, the professional builder successfully exposes any preconceived notions a prospective buyer might have about the building business and the construction process. They work hard to clarify their motivations and approach to construction. They seek to view the project from the client's perspective and meet their needs and desires.

Getting to know a builder can foster a greater respect and a higher level of confidence for a company's ability to deliver a high-quality new home.

First, it is important to understand that professional builders are business people. They build homes because it's their chosen profession. Of course, like any business person, they are interested in making money; a professional builder, however, makes money honestly, and seeks to earn a reasonable profit. 

As building and business professionals, we constantly refine our approach to business, adhere to predetermined building schedules, and establish reliable and lasting partnerships with building products suppliers, financial institutions, and specialty trade contractors. We live in the areas where we build and are active in our communities. We rely on a strong local reputation to continue to build our business. 

Some builders, though, lack the business and communication skills to be successful, resulting in dissatisfied customers and ruined reputations that often blanket the entire industry. This is not an industry-wide scheme to separate homebuyers from their money. Rather, it's just an unfortunate slice of society that both buyers and professional builders have to endure. 

Unlike almost any other industry, a builder's work is exposed to the public; while cars and washing machines are assembled in factories and seen only on the showroom floor, a house is on display from foundation to finish. This can lead to misinterpretations or misunderstandings between a builder and a homebuyer. Often, however, what looks to be incomplete or irregular during one stage of construction is quite different from the eventual finished product. 

Given those circumstances it is also important to understand that builders are engaged in the home building process every day and over many years. They gain experience and have a unique perspective. They have a vision of a home's progress that extends well beyond daily progress, one that few owners can truly share or comprehend. 

As a result of that perspective, a builder may occasionally appear to take a casual approach to what a nervous homebuyer perceives to be a problem on the job site. Simply, the builder has likely seen or heard about it many times during his career, knows implicitly how he'll deal with the situation and has significantly less emotion invested in a home than a client does. 

Successful builders listen closely to their buyers' concerns, respect an owner's questions and patiently communicate solutions. They understand that building a house is a considerable emotional investment, a potential source of anxiety and a financial risk. Understanding this, builders seek to ease those burdens. 

By the same token, an informed and understanding homebuyer recognizes that the construction process is second nature to a professional builder. When both a homeowner and a builder respect each other's roles and approaches to the business of homebuilding, it fosters better and more open communication, opens the opportunity to develop trust and maximizes the prospect of achieving a successful and satisfying project. 

Dan Kent
Kent Homes (A Brunswick Forest Preferred Builder)
www.kentselect.com