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Take a 360° Panoramic Tour of 1730 E. Topps Lane - Powered by Obeo™

Lot 6 - March 15, 2011 Completion Date

To be built - Lot 1 - Alvern Subdivision
1675 sq ft - Main
1715 sq ft - basement
Home design by Techni Graphic
Lot 3 and 4 Available for your custom home plan or one select one of ours.
Granite School District
Rosecrest Elementary
2420 Fisher Lane
Salt Lake City, UT 84109
Evergreen Jr.
3401 S 2000 E
Salt Lake City, UT 84109
Phone: 481-7215
Olympus high.
4055 S 2300 E
Salt Lake City, UT 84124
Phone: 273-2000
Lots
Seven building lots 7500 +/- sq feet approx and a small private neighborhood park
Style
- Homes Rambler style from 1600 sq ft to 2000 sqft.
- Main level finished with full unfinished basements
- 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, great rooms, Vaults
- Friendly main level laundry
- 3 car garages
Finishes
- Energy Star compliant homes 90% efficent furnaces 13 seer A/C.
- BIB mesh insulation
- Low E windows
- Direct vent fireplaces
- Hardwood, Tile and carpet flooring .
- Two tone paint with accent walls
- Upgraded Kitchen cabinetrs and granite countertops
- Stainless appliances with gas oven range
- Custom closet shelving
Landscaping
Full landscape included with every home Sod, auto sprinkling, 3, 8’ trees and 25, 5 gal shrubs.
ALVERN SUB P.U.D. HOME FEATURES
MOUNTAIN
RUSTIC EXTERIORS
- Real / Cultured Stone
- Hand Textured Stucco / James Hardie Plank
- Board & Baton
- Cedar Window Trims
- 30-Year Architectural Shingle
- Craftsman-Styled Corbals
- Craftsman-Styled Stone Pedestals
- Stained Concrete Walk / Porch Lamps
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BATHS
- Master Bath - Deep Garden Tub & Separate Shower
- Adult height Vanities
- Decorative Faucets
- White China Lavatory Sinks
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INTERIOR
FINISHES
- Smooth / Textured Walls
- Two-tone Paint
- Alder Doors*
- Plank-type Doors
- Craftsman-Style 6" Finish Base & 4" Case
- Direct Vent Gas Fireplace
- Custom Closet Shelving
- Lighting Allowances
- Reinforced Double Switched Ceiling Fans*
- Brushed Chrome, Rubbed Bronze Hardware
- Barrel Arched Hallways and Other Unique Touches*
- Decorative Rails and Iron Banisters
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PROFESSIONAL
KITCHEN
- Granite Countertops
- Custom Raised Knotty Alder
Cabinets with Knobs and Handles
- Large Kitchen Pantry
- Decorative Lever Faucet
- Stainless Appliances: Dishwasher, Disposal,
Oven/Range Microwave
- Ice Maker Water Line
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ENERGY
SAVING FEATURES
- One 50 Gallon Water Heater
- 90% Efficient Furnace
- 14 Seer Central Air
Units
- Bituthene Membrane Window Wraps
- Water Resistent Exterior House Wrap
- Bib Mess R-15 Wall Insulation
- Vinyl Windows with Low E Glass
- Upgraded R-38 blown in Attic Insulation
- Energy Star Rated Homes
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STRUCTURAL
AND TECHNICAL
- Silent Floor System
- Tongue & Groove Flooring,
Glued, Ring Shank Nails
- Fully Sheet Rocked and Taped Garage
- 6 Bag Mix Exterior Concrete
- Concrete-Cold Storage Room
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HIGH
SPEED WIRING (Structured Wiring)*
- Cat 5
- RG 6 coaxial
- Centralized Communication Panel
- Wired for Digital Satellite/Broadband
- High Speed Internet in each Bedroom
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FLOORING
- Easy-to-care-for Hardwood, Slate or Tile
- Entry, Kitchen, Kitchen Dining,
Baths, and Laundry
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HOME
BUYERS ASSISTANCE
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(* Select Locations)
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Green, Energy Star, and
Red Mountain Builders
Red Mountain Builders homes area designed to be Enery Star compliant which means your home is 15% more efficient than homes built to the current building standard.
Saving money is always the bottom line, but what
about enhanced comfort, protecting your furnishings,
and healthier indoor air.
Features include:
- High efficiency heating and cooling
- Low E windows
- Water conservation plumbing fixtures
Ask your representative to share with you all of the
energy saving and green aspects of our homes.
50 MUST-HAVE FEATURES FOR TODAY’S HOME BUYERS
Article by Felicia Oliver
Professional Builder, June 2006
Professional Builder surveyed six experts* — architects, home industry trend experts, and real-estate
brokers and designers — to get their take on the must-have features for today's home buyers.
BOOMERS OR BUST!
No stairs — Single-story homes, first-floor master suites and/or personal elevators. As baby boomers
age, they'd rather not do stairs."
Fireplaces. They've always wanted to have one. "It's a reward for their station in life," says real estate broker Mark Nash.
Low-maintenance surfaces such as granite, quartz and Corian.
Pedestrian friendly communities with walking trails and
amenities conducive to fitness and social interaction in the
neighborhood.
Emphasis on quality and detailing more than square footage. It's the McMansion theory in reverse. Baby boomers are willing to trade some space for [better] features, architect Cheryl O'Brien says.
Flexible floor plans. Rooms and spaces that can adapt to changing needs and circumstances, that
are multi-functional, perhaps with sliding doors and movable partitions. "Designing bedrooms so that
they can be easily con-verted into dens ... sitting rooms off the bedroom, etc.," says architect Thomas
Barton.
A keeping room. Living rooms are giving way to great rooms; a keeping room provides an intimate
space for families to gather near the kitchen area. "You can put a sofa and a couple of chairs in there
and a fireplace," says market expert Cecilia Davidson-Farkas.
Private outdoor space. This could be a deck or patio. "Somebody coined the phrase, 'Does it pass
the smooch test?'" says Davidson-Farkas.
Accessible storage. Cabinets and shelves placed at heights that can be reached without a
stepladder and that have pullouts, lazy Susans and shallow shelving to keep items within easy reach.
Ample wall space for a photo gallery of all the kids, grandkids, siblings, and parents who may
have passed away is helpful, architect Bill Kreager says.
Radiant floor heating. Baby boomers may have more health issues like asthma or emphysema.
"Forced air becomes problematic — you don't want dust blowing around," Kreager says.
GEN X-ERS AND ECHO BOOMERS
Smart home technology. Every room should be wired for phones, modems and DSL. "They want to
be able to call from their cell phone and turn the lights on and change the heat," O'Brien says."
Home entertainment centers. "Putting the plasma [TV] and the surround sound in your family room
— it's not that you have to have a separate destination for it," O'Brien says. Barton adds: "It's ... part of
the living space, a center of activity in the home."
Built-in wiring and conduits for flat screen TVs. A popular
location for plasmas screens today is over the fireplace. Good
design provides a place for all the components, and no unsightly
cords and wires.
A breakfast bar or nook as a secondary eating space. "Xers
and Yers tend not to eat formally. They tend to graze," Barton
says, "and on their way through the kitchen they pick up
something to eat."
Green/environmentally sensitive features. Says Nash:
"Generation Yers in particular will ask about it: 'Do you know of
any green developments or eco builders?' That influences their
buying decisions."
A mudroom. "A place for what I call 'dirty storage': the snow board, bicycle, kayak, and the other
outdoor equipment ... usually off the garage area," notes Barton.
Quality closet organizers. Vinyl coated wire shelving isn't acceptable anymore. Elfe and Ikea-styled
wood or plywood finishes are required at minimum. "If builders make them standard," Nash says,
"people would pay the extra money."
A soft loft look. A home with "loft-like" features, a look seen on TV shows like "Friends" and
"Seinfeld," as well as commercials aimed at the Gen X and echo boomer audiences. "Brick or stone
interior wall accents and veneer bricks as an accent or as a full wall" add to the feel, Davidson-Farkas
says.
"We have an optional space for a dog washing station off the garage. Gen Xers are [more likely to
own pets] than any other generation," Davidson-Farkas says. An alternative is a community dog park.
"It's a new way to meet people," Nash says. "An Xer will say, 'How close is the nearest Starbucks? Echo
boomers want to know about the dog parks."
Darker paints. "You need to get rid of the 'builder beige' walls. They like color. They like vibrancy,"
says Davidson-Farkas. For a lot of builders, "it's a paint upgrade to do these Pottery Barn burgundies and
the mustards," Nash says.
An upstairs computer loft or "net nook." "People want an open area dedicated to computers," Nash
finds. Adds Davidson-Farkas: "Parents need to be able to peek around the corner and see who their kids
are on the Internet with."
"The echo boomers are into natural light like I've never seen," Nash says. "They say, 'I won't buy a
condo that only faces north,' because they want sun."
SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE
Large, open kitchens with plenty of space to prepare food and entertain guests. "Kitchens are
coming out to be about the size of the grand room because it is the new living room," says Davidson-
Farkas. Adds O'Brien: "Open family rooms and kitchen entertainment areas "are here to stay."
Huge kitchen islands with space for guests to sit while the
homeowner is cooking, for boomers to keep an eye on the
grandkids, for additional room on the counter, and extra storage.
Quality kitchen cabinets. "With the kitchen/great room
the center of family living, buyers today are looking at furniturestyle
cabinets," notes Nash.
High-quality, high-performance appliances. O'Brien's
suggestion: High-end brands or high-end features available in
some affordable brands such as the GE Monogram line.
A separate tub and shower. "Gen [Xers and] echo boomers will take a shower over a tub/shower
combo," Nash says. "Boomers want a separate shower and a soaking tub."
Separate vanities in the master bathroom. "Usually the woman says, 'This is your [bowl], that
one is mine,'" says Nash.
Large master baths, especially for couples without kids. Boomers are looking for a "large shower
with a double showerheads and a bench. ...Gen Xers are looking for the big Jacuzzi tub for two. But
everybody wants the shower with the bench — ladies want to shave their legs," Davidson-Farkas
says."Boomers want a separate shower and a soaking tub."
... And more spa features. "Shower heads that are really big and come down like a waterfall out of
the middle of the top of the shower, not out of the wall," are popular, notes O'Brien. Davidson-Farkas'
group is "putting shower massage jets in all of our homes, even down in the low price points, to give
that resort-type feeling."
Linen Closets. "A lot of developers were taking out linen closets out of bathrooms; buyers miss
them and want them back. Even if one is not in the master bath, where they expect it, it's in every other
bathroom — not in the hallway," Nash says.
A home management/command center. "It used to be the
desk, but now it's become a little bit more elaborate. It's a space
near the family hub where you put the mail, the computer,"
O'Brien says. It's a niche or nook.
An upstairs laundry room conveniently situated near the
bedrooms so clothes don't need to be carried down-stairs.
"In homes with higher square footages, we're seeing a second,
stackable washer and dryer for the kitchen towels, the stuff you
drop," notes O'Brien. For baby boomers, the small stack space is
for the teenager — "the wash it yourself situation," says Davidson-
Farkas.
Multi-functional laundry rooms that double as a family
activity area, sewing room, gift-wrap station or tech area. "Each
adult needs space to call his or her own," Barton says. "Space in
the laundry room can accommodate that."
"Everybody needs more elaborate front doors ... on all price
points," says O'Brien. Those doors feature more glass and
ironwork details. "[I'm] seeing more 8 foot front doors, where 6
feet, 8 inches used to be the norm, even on affordable, entry-level
products," Davidson-Farkas adds.
More ornate garage doors sometimes resemble carriage
doors and are more "high-style," O'Brien says."
Oversized garages for extra storage. "Some people build the
smallest two-car garages: extra deep, [fit for a] car and a half,
because they [want] a lot of storage [for] grills, patio furniture,
bicycles and the grandkids' toys," Nash says.
A drop zone — a foyer with built-in shelves by the garage as a place to shed coats and drop book
bags. "You have outlets ... for dropping your cell phone, a place for all the junk that you come into the
house with," Davidson-Farkas says.
Exteriors with natural or natural-looking materials. "The building products industry is doing a better
job of offering synthetic versions of ... cultured stone on the outside of the house," O'Brien says. "Ten
years ago, it was bad. There was no detailing. ...The industry has come a long way."
Wider balconies and decks. "Home buyers want usable outdoor space big enough for a bistro table
and chairs and a couple of pots for container gardening," Nash says.
Courtyards "are seen as a feature for mild climates, but almost everything I'm doing has a courtyard;
[it's] really not climate specific," says O'Brien.
Outdoor fireplaces. For outdoor entertaining, particularly in warmer climates.
Low-voltage lighting can add ambience and interest to a room. It can be used to light a pathway to
an outdoor garden, or as a gentle highlight to a picture on a wall. "This plays back into that whole smarthouse
technology — lighting that you can have on at night ... along the wall to light the stairs," O'Brien
says.
"They all want good quality Low-E windows.... People seem very tuned in to windows and window
quality," says Nash
High-efficiency furnaces and water heaters. "It's a hotter and hotter issue [that] really spiked this
year with the cost of energy," says Nash.
Bamboo wood floors. "It could overtake maple as the favorite light-colored wood flooring," Nash
says.
Built-in water purification systems. "So you don't have to order the bottles of water," O'Brien adds.
Carbon monoxide detectors. Home inspectors flag homes that have only smoke detectors. Nash
says one should be installed on every floor of a home.
*The Experts: Professional Builder surveyed six experts — architects, home industry trend experts, and real-estate brokers and
designers — to get their take on the must-have features for today's home buyers:
• Thomas Barton III, AIA, principal, Barton
Partners Architects in Norristown, Pa. • Catherine Daly, president of Design East, a design and merchandising consulting firm to
the building industry, in Medford, N.J. • Cecilia Davidson-Farkas of Marketing Synergy, a home-trends market research expert
based in Atlanta. • Bill Kreager, principal of Mithun, an architectural design and planning firm in Seattle. • Mark Nash, a
Chicago-based real-estate broker and author of "1001 Tips for Buying and Selling a Home" and the article, "What's In, What's
Out with Homebuyers in 2006." • Cheryl O'Brien, AIA, Professional Builder contributing editor and president of C. O'Brien
Professional Builder - June 1, 2006
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