The model home at Taylor Morrisonâs Ladera housing development in Bee Cave, Texas, looks like any other modern house when you approach it from the road. Thereâs a large front door, five windows and a few plants to bring the place to life. Itâs more of the same when you walk through the door either. Thereâs the landing to your left, a room immediately to your right.
In fact, itâs not until you take a few steps inside the house that you notice things are slightly different.
âThis, to your right, is the childrenâs nook,â Kristin France tells me as I turn inside the house. âItâs got a full-on kitchen.â
âEvery kid who comes through here, this is where they stop. Theyâll just hang out here while the parents look around the house. I have a two-year-old, and I can guarantee that sheâd be in hereâ"and Iâd have a hard time pulling her out. â
What Iâm looking at is a doorframe thatâs about three-quarters short of normal. Itâs nestled into a wall underneath the stairs, and around it is a painting thatâs meant to allude to cottages. This is the childrenâs nook, and on the wall someone has painted a sink and stove.
âThis was actually first designed to be here for a dog,â France says. âBut any kid would love it.â
Ladera is not your traditional housing development. Rather, itâs a revolutionary social communityâ"a series of what Taylor Morrison considers the interactive homes. For the first time in the history of homebuilding, a development company has decided to crowdsource the construction process. As France explains, every house on the Ladera lot will draw a certain semblance of inspiration from designs the company found on Pinterest.
If you havenât heard of Pinterest yet, itâs likely that you donât know any women. The site is the fastest growing social network on the Internet, a behemoth of beauty and inspiration thatâs grown to more than 16 million users. The site has become the unofficial wish list for dreamers and believers alikeâ"an online destination for one-stop window shopping. People pour through other usersâ pinboards to find the objects they like most. When they find something, they pin it. Thus, their own pinboards become a vessel for the things they like and want.
And while we donât have the cold, hard numbers to back it up, fromcircumstantial evidence, I feel safe in saying that a substantial amount of those users have filled at least one of their pinboards with a series of things they would like to see in their dream homes: lofty light structures, super modern kitchen constructions, cute little craft rooms and tiny nooks under the steps for their children.
France, a marketing manager at Taylor Morrison, is no different. Sheâs got a âMy Next Houseâ¦â pinboard with 77 different pins and says thatâs how she got the inspiration to build these homes.
âWe were doing our frame walk,â she remembers. âWe always pick out of floor plans and what weâre going to build before anything happens.
âWe were walking through this house and got to the steps, and I said, âWeâve got to make that a childrenâs nook under the stairs,â because I knew that we had to make it a functional space. I pulled the image up on my phone, and everybody agreed.â
The kitchen design and craft room upstairs played out much the same way. France looked at the framework of the house and then consulted her pinboard. With the kitchen, she found a design that played to a long island and walkway. Upstairs in the craft room, she reverted to an old favorite: a two-sided desk that looks made for creative collaboration.
âWeâre showing people that they can have these homes. I think thatâs what Pinterest does,â France says. âYour hopes and dreams of what you could have or could create: Weâre trying to make that a reality for people who canât visualize it.â
France says Taylor Morrison is planning to build 260 different houses on the lot, with each pulling different dream designs from Pinterest. And while she laments the fact that the company canât yet cater to personalized requests, the fact that she and her colleagues are able to show actual visualizations of room conceptions can be a legitimate boost for business.
âAfter years of hearing people say, âI wish you had done thisâ or âI wish you had done that,â this has helped create the solution,â France adds. âWeâve revamped a lot of our floor plans in the last two years basically to cater to all those requests.
âWe made those decisions based on whatâs popular and what these pinners are requesting. We could show that the room upstairs could be a study or craft room or babyâs room. These visuals help people move into them.â
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