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Remodeling Data Still in Short Supply
Industry information continues to be difficult to come by, but Census plans to create an industry classification code may help
Rod Sutton, CGRA
February 24, 2000
Professional Remodeler
| Rod Sutton's Editorial Archives |
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| Nicolas Retsinas, director of Harvard's Joint Center for Housing Studies, introduces Susan Wachner of HUD. Kermit Baker, project director of the Remodeling Futures Program, is at right. |
Kermit Baker, project director of the Remodeling Futures Program at Harvard University's Joint Center for Housing Studies, agreed. "We have to develop an information infrastructure before we can unify the industry," Kermit Baker said in introducing the conference. He was joined by Liza Bowles, president of the NAHB Research Center, who noted that specific data on remodeling are nonexistant. "How do expenditures differ by type of household, region, etc.?" she said. "What are the average expenditures per household?"
With the need for accurate information on the industry serving as the call to action, government agencies and industry representatives debated how to collect information and present a unified information base. With government agencies decrying limited funding and lack of permit data collection, industry representatives called for larger sample sizes, quicker reporting cycles, and more detailed data.
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| Mark Richardson, CR, president of Case Design/Remodeling, tells attendees that the remodeling community needs to be built up before accurate data can be assembled. |
Remodeler Mark Richardson, CR, president of Case Design/Remodeling in Bethesda, Md., asked those attending the summit to consider the industry before trying to determine how to collect data. "If you take a lot of data from unhealthy sources, what does that do?" Richardson asked. "Only 4 percent [of remodelers] are in a national association such as NARI or the Remodelors Council. Before you worry about gathering information, do something about the health of the industry." Richardson said the first step in building up the remodeling community is through increasing membership in the associations and through the use of technology in businesses.
Rod Sutton is the Editor-in-Chief for Professional Remodler. Please email him with any comments or questions regarding his column.
© 2009, Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All Rights Reserved.









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