Education, Training, Conferences, Awards

Review: 'Build It Right' Author Writes It Better - 2004-12-31

It's impossible for an educational book to match the content dynamics of a website.

Change occurs so quickly a book can contain content that is out of date the day it is published. Only subsequent printing, months or years down the road, might bring it back up to date.

A well-managed, content-based website can be a living learning laboratory updated within minutes of relevant new developments.

However, unless you own a properly equipped lightweight laptop and can pick up a WiFi signal just where you need it, when you need it, it often remains a lot easier to hold a book in your hands than it is to get your hands on digitized information.

A best-of-both-worlds scenario that limits the worst and brings out the best of both a book and a website is to get one learning tool to compliment the other.

That's the crowning achievement of Better Houses, Better Living: What To Look For When Buying, Building Or Remodeling (Home User Press, $24.95), a book that comes with a partner website, BetterHousesBetterLiving.com.

Both were created by Salem OR-based retired engineer and author, Myron E. Ferguson who has been around the block a few times -- enough to inspect nearly 3,000 homes.

It's a stellar dual effort 14 years in the making and an approach to delivering the goods used by far too few information providers.

The book is an expansive update of Build It Right (Home User Press, $18.95) and the new website takes over from UserFriendlyHome.com.

After an explanation of the rudiments of home buying and buying options, the book takes you on a detailed room-by-room, system-by-system, item-by-item home tour laden with photos and illustrations all to help the reader buy or build the best quality home or home improvement possible.

Ferguson provides the low-down on lots, electrical systems, plumbing, HVAC systems, fireplaces and stoves, doors, windows, security systems, materials, finishes, floors, ceilings, roofs, kitchen, bathroom, laundry room and garage components, living areas, floor plans and much more.

While the book takes note that too often homes are not built with the quality and function to best suit the needs of homeowners, it doesn't waste time slamming the building industry.

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6061 - While it might not be at the pace that economists would like, the economy is recovering. Federal Reserve Chairman, Ben Bernanke, reported last week to the Committee on Financial Services, that "the pace of the expansion so far this year has been modest." The housing market, however, continues to struggle. Concerns over potential policy changes, namely a required 20 percent down payment, has sidelined potential buyers. According to the National Association of Realtors' ninth housing pulse survey, 71 percent of Americans says this requirement would have a negative impact on the housing market. And 82 percent of Americans say having the money for closing costs and down payments is the largest obstacle to buying a home, making this purchase too expensive. This is troubling news, considering housing is at a more affordable rate now than it has been in decades. Federal Reserve Chairman, Ben Bernanke, reported to Congress' Committee on Financial Services, that residential construction activity is low. "The demand for homes has been depressed by many of the same factors that have held down consumer spending more generally, including the slowness of the recovery in jobs and income as well as poor consumer sentiment," he says. Read this Nemmar Real Estate Training article at Mortgage Loans, Finance, Economy, Appraisal

 

Instead, the book uses all its 337 pages to help buyers sharpen their critical eye in the buying or building process and thereby overcome the shortcomings of the building industry.

More than being akin to having a wizened home inspector along for the tour, the book gets behind the walls, under the roof and into the systems. Nitty-gritty information detail is as minute as kitchen drawer slides, the direction of the front door swing, and tread width in stairway design. If there's a nail, screw, connector or fastener the book doesn't cover, you probably won't find it in your home.

The book also contains the obligatory index and an extensive learning glossary of the many terms you'll encounter inspecting any home.

The partner site does a good job replacing appendixes typically found in the back of such books and includes eight supplements with topics that include energy considerations, 'green' building, building codes, deed restrictions, home builders, real estate agents and more.

The website also offers a test: "Find The Horrid Little House's Design Flaws," book excerpts, links to helpful consumer websites and an Internet Reference List that reveals Ferguson isn't afraid to send readers off-site for additional information.

The list of websites -- 140 of them -- is presented in groups aligned with chapters in the book. The list is printed in the book, but the hot linked list on the website eliminates the need for you to retype each URL into your browser.

The cost of the book will be more than returned to you when you learn how to find a home that works the way it's supposed to -- before you move in.

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