Kelly & Laura

National trend is for smaller, greener homes.

At annual builders’ show, small is in

Among the trends highlighted at the International Builders€™ Show, more Americans are saying goodbye to McMansions and are buying ‘right-sized’ homes instead. There€™s also high interest in green elements, organization, fewer luxuries and practical appliances.

By MarketWatch

Amid housing gloom, new homes get smaller (© Influx Productions/Getty Images)

 

These days, a bigger home isn’t always a better one: Recent research suggests that homes being built today are getting smaller.

The average size of homes started in the third quarter of 2008 was 2,438 square feet, down from 2,629 square feet in the second quarter, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. Similarly, the median size of homes started in the third quarter was 2,090 square feet, down from 2,291. The statistics confirm what the housing industry has suspected for a while.

“We’ve been hearing for a long time ‘Why is the home size not declining?'” said Gopal Ahluwalia, vice president of economic research for the National Association of Home Builders. He spoke about the trend at the International Builders€™ Show in Las Vegas this week. Anecdotally, he had heard smaller homes were being built as housing prices tumbled and the economy began to weaken. Still, “we never had data to back it up,” he said.

Gayle Butler, editor-in-chief of Better Homes and Gardens, said that for many homeowners, it is not so much a matter of downsizing as “right-sizing,” giving up big homes with unused space and buying a home that better fits their needs.

According to the Better Homes and Gardens study, top priorities in a new home include an affordable price, natural light and comfortable family gathering places. The era of supersizing may be ending, Butler said, with buyers looking for a home that is “right-sized, organized and economized.”

Other consumer housing trends include:

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