KB Home's Mid-Atlantic Division Receives International Habitat Conservation Award
21 Dezember 2005 - 3:00PM
PR Newswire (US)
BALTIMORE, Md., Dec. 21 /PRNewswire/ -- KB Home's Mid-Atlantic
division received international recognition for their contributions
to wildlife habitat conservation in the upcoming Martin's Chase
community at the Wildlife Habitat Council's (WHC) 17th Annual
Symposium, Shades of Green. KB Home demonstrates its commitment to
environmental stewardship and increasing native biodiversity by
achieving habitat certification at its Martin's Chase community.
"The union of conservation and industry, already well established
at the Wildlife Habitat Council, serves as a model for protecting
natural resources while emphasizing collaboration and community
involvement. This multidisciplinary view draws on knowledge and
skills from a range of disciplines working together for a better
environment. Congratulations to KB Home for their commendable
efforts towards the restoration and enhancement of wildlife
habitat. Together, we are committed to being good stewards of the
earth," said Bill Howard, WHC President. KB Home's Martin's Chase
community - a planned residential development that will include 147
single-family homes in Loudoun County, Virginia - will be the
builder's first community in the Washington, D.C.-area since
announcing its Mid-Atlantic division in September. KB Home will
begin sales in Martin's Chase in early 2006. A shift in the
county's landscape from rural to suburban over the last decade
prompted the need to better integrate natural resource management
into land planning processes, and the Martin's Chase property is
doing just that. The site is being developed with a long term
management plan for wildlife that incorporates community outreach
and resident environmental stewardship. This management plan was
developed through a partnership with the Virginia Polytechnic
Institute and State University and the site's previous title
holder, Centex Homes. The plan's primary objective is to maximize
the quality of habitat available at Martin's Chase for a diverse
array of species endemic to the piedmont region of Virginia.
Recommendations in the management plan incorporate community
outreach activities and habitat enhancement projects designed for a
148 acre lot donated to Loudoun County Parks and Recreation
Department. Specific recommendations call for the management of
large "conservancy lots" and their buffer areas that exist in
undeveloped areas of the site. The Martin's Chase management plan
also includes recommendations for the design of small-scale habitat
enhancements in the more developed areas of the site. Enhancements
such as native warm season grasses and wildflower areas, native
tree and shrub planting, the creation of snags for cavity nesting
species, Canada geese management and the use of bat houses can all
be performed in developed areas of the site. Perhaps the most
important part of the plan is that it calls for clustered
development in areas of the site where infrastructure already
exists and where there is less vegetation such as woodlots or
native grasses. Houses will be placed on small parcels of land to
allow for large open natural areas over the rest of the property.
The Martin's Chase management plan relies on the participation of
community members to become environmental stewards of their own
backyards and natural space. It also includes a wildlife management
based covenant for the development's Home Owners Association.
Martin's Chase was one of 143 sites recognized at the 2005
Symposium for creating a habitat program. Since 1990, WHC has
certified 374 programs worldwide. The certification program
recognizes outstanding wildlife habitat management and
environmental education efforts at corporate sites, and offers
third-party validation of the benefits of such programs.
Certification requirements are strict and require that sites apply
for periodic renewal. The Wildlife Habitat Council is a nonprofit,
non-lobbying organization dedicated to increasing the quality and
amount of wildlife habitat on corporate, private and public lands.
WHC devotes its resources to building partnerships with
corporations and conservation groups to create solutions that
balance the demands of economic growth with the requirements of a
healthy, biodiverse and sustainable environment. More than 2
million acres in 48 states, Puerto Rico and 16 other countries are
managed for wildlife through WHC-assisted projects. For more
information, visit WHC online at http://www.wildlifehc.org/.
Building homes for nearly half a century, KB Home is one of
America's premier homebuilders with domestic operating divisions in
some of the fastest-growing regions and states: West
Coast-California; Southwest-Arizona, Nevada and New Mexico;
Central-Colorado, Illinois, Indiana, Louisiana and Texas; and
Southeast-Florida, Georgia, Maryland, North Carolina, South
Carolina and Virginia. Kaufman & Broad S.A., the Company's
publicly-traded French subsidiary, is one of the largest
homebuilders in France. In fiscal 2005, the Company delivered homes
to 37,140 families in the United States and France. KB Home also
offers complete mortgage services through Countrywide KB Home
Loans, a joint venture with Countrywide Financial Corporation.
Founded in 1957, and winner of the 2004 American Business Award for
Best Overall Company, KB Home is a Fortune 500 company listed on
the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker symbol "KBH." For more
information about any of KB Home's new home communities, call
888-KB-HOMES or visit http://www.kbhome.com/. Contacts: Vanessa
Kauffman, Wildlife Habitat Council, 301-588-8994, Daniel Weidman,
KB Home, 310-231-4031, DATASOURCE: KB Home CONTACT: Vanessa
Kauffman of Wildlife Habitat Council, +1-301-588-8994, ; or Daniel
Weidman of KB Home, +1-310-231-4031, Web site:
http://www.wildlifehc.org/ Web site: http://www.kbhome.com/
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