Best in American Living Award
Home of the Year
BALA, the country’s foremost design competition for residential housing, judges entries not only on appearance, but also scrutinizes interior floor plans, how the project relates to its own local market, and the construction techniques and materials used to build it.


Is Your Entry A BALA Winner?
It takes an enormous amount of thought and preparation to put together a Best in American Living Awards entry. Skimp on either and your potential winner may never even make it past the initial phase of the judging process where each judge spends only several minutes assessing its merits. What are the judges looking for in this first pass through the entries?

  • Good photography. The judges use the photos that accompany your entry to evaluate the architectural elements of your project and are looking for good composition, balance, structure and massing.
  • Don't forget the details. Each project's floor plan is evaluated in terms of its livability, considering such elements as accessibility of the kitchen from the garage, the flow of the traffic pattern, the relationship of the formal to informal relationships, and how adult areas relate to those clearly for guests or children.
  • Identify your market. Judges consider the plan within the context of its identified market to make sure that it is regionally sensible and has market acceptance.
  • Keep it short. During the initial evaluation process, each judge has only minutes to spend looking over each project, so the more clear, concise and detailed your description is, the better chance your entry has to capture their attention and rate a high score.

Judges were carefully selected by NAHB and Professional Builder staff in order to achieve a representative cross-section of housing-related disciplines in a variety of geographical areas. Joining Professional Builder judges Roy Diez and Rob Fanjoy this year were: Peter Pfeifer, Barley & Pfeifer Architects; Steve Moore, Bloodgood Sharp & Buster; Erika Geiser, Christopher Homes; Luis Jauregui, Jauregui Architect; Georganne Derick, Merchandising East; Vernon Palmer, Palmer Homes; Gretchen Palmer, Palmer Homes; Marsha Elliott, Terrestris Development Co.; Sanford Steinberg, The Steinberg Collaborative; Architect Bill Warkentin, The Warkentin Partnership, Riverside, CA; Developer Ken Hackett, Water's Edge, Lake Granbury, TX; Builder/developer Steve Noble, Noble Custom Homes, St. Cloud, MN.

© 2009, Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Governing Sponsors
Professional Builder Magazine
National Association of Home Builders
Department of Housing and Urban Development
  
Corporate Sponsors
Andersen Windows Inc.
KitchenAid Home Appliances
Therma-Tru Doors
Whirlpool Corporation
  
Friends of BALA
  • Bloodgood Sharp Buster Architects & Planners
  • Crasi Company
  • Dominick Tringali Associates
  • EDI Architecture, Inc.
  • JP Limited
  • Kaufman Meeks & Partners
  • Kephart Architects Inc.
  • Marc Michaels Interior Design
  • McLarand Vasquez Emsiek & Partners
  • Palmer Homes
  • Southdown Homes
  • The Steinberg Collaborative AIA



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