Clare Homes - February Builder of the Month

The First Zero Energy Ready Plus FORTIFIED Roof Home For Sale in Louisiana

Clare Homes - February Builder of the Month

Clare Homes Leads the Way in High Performance Building in Lafayette, Louisiana

Clare Homes has made a significant stride in sustainable home building in Lafayette, Louisiana by completing the first Zero Energy Ready Plus FORTIFIED Roof home for sale in the state. This home is a manifestation of the goal they set out to achieve when they first started the business.

The project, recently finished in January 2025, aims to demonstrate that achieving these rigorous certifications is not only possible but also cost competitive to a code built home. Through close collaboration with EEBA and their builder benchmark group, Clare Homes has steadily integrated high performance building standards into their projects.

Starting with two FORTIFIED Roof homes in 2022, they expanded their efforts in 2023 by constructing two homes that met both the ENERGY STAR and FORTIFIED Roof standards. This gradual implementation allowed them to refine their processes and gain valuable experience in each certification program.

The successful completion of the Zero Energy Ready Plus FORTIFIED Roof home signifies a major milestone for Clare Homes. This achievement showcases their commitment to building homes that are not only energy efficient but also exceptionally resilient to the storms that occur so frequently along the Gulf Coast.

.

Clare Homes expresses deep gratitude to the EEBA community and the Builder Benchmark Group for their invaluable support and guidance throughout this journey. This collaboration has been instrumental in enabling Clare Homes to lead the way in high-performance homebuilding in Louisiana and contribute to a more sustainable future for their community and beyond.

Visit Clare Homes

View Project on Zillow

Meet the Builders: Kendall Gilmore & Isaac Scott

Comments

Tris
View User Profile for Tris
Wednesday, February 5, 2025 3:17:27 PM

It is good to see energy efficiency. However for your next model project choice, I would suggest you try to avoid the appearance of a house attached to a poorly trimmed garage,, vs,, looking like a nicely detailed trim garage attached to a nicely trimmed house. Kudos on your energy work as it is the future, and I hope better aesthetics follow along with it because good design is more sustainable given that future owners don't have to wastefully rebuild into better aesthetics. There are so many ugly buildings in the USA given air fast growth with low public awareness of architecture so that they will eventually be renovated into better looking environments after more design-aware owners proliferate as the future becomes more beautiful which also will help improve mental health. Environments shape that which is within them in all things from physics to metaphysics.