Thursday, December 31, 2009

Dan Ryan Builders Receives 2009 Best of Charles Town Award in the Building Contractors Category

Dan Ryan Builders has been selected for the 2009 Best of Charles Town Award in the Building Contractors category by the U.S. Commerce Association (USCA).

The USCA "Best of Local Business" Award Program recognizes outstanding local businesses throughout the country. Each year, the USCA identifies companies that they believe have achieved exceptional marketing success in their local community and business category. These are local companies that enhance the positive image of small business through service to their customers and community.

Various sources of information were gathered and analyzed to choose the winners in each category. The 2009 USCA Award Program focused on quality, not quantity. Winners are determined based on the information gathered both internally by the USCA and data provided by third parties.

Saturday, November 28, 2009

Dan Ryan Builders' Year End Red Tag Sale

ACT NOW to save thousands during Dan Ryan Builders Year End Red Tag Sale on homes specially priced for immediate move-in, Plus take advantage of the expanded and extended Federal Tax Credit!
Visit www.DanRyanRedTag.com for specially priced homes for immediate move-in.

Dan Ryan Builders lets you SAVE BIG just in time for the New Year!!


Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Dan Ryan Builders Received The 2009 Member of Distinction Award

Dan Ryan Builders received The 2009 Member of Distinction Award for their exceptional service to the Eastern Panhandle Home Builders Association and the building industry. Their commitment and efforts to support the association and its mission and goals are truly appreciated and serve as an example to others.

The 2009 Presidential Award was given to Rick Lefler a Dan Ryan Builders employee with the Washington Division for his exceptional service as an individual.

Friday, October 30, 2009

2009 Habitat for Humanity Blitz Build

Dan Ryan Builders is pleased to contribute to Habitat for Humanity of the Eastern Panhandle 2009 Blitz Build.

Martinsburg, WV - After almost two weeks of construction, members of Dan Ryan Builders, along with other businesses in the area will complete a new home for an area family in conjunction with Habitat for Humanity of the Eastern Panhandle. The home is being built at 303 Rothwell Avenue in Martinsburg, WV and the dedication will take place at Noon - 4pm on November 6th, 2009.

This year's home will be unique in that it will have many 'green' or environmentally friendly building features. Dan Ryan Builders, in keeping with their long history of giving back to the communities in which they do business, has elected to donate framing labor, house wrap, drywall installation and finishing, siding, fascia and aluminum wrap labor as well. Dan Ryan Builders employees also remained on site to assist with some decision making and to fill other small needs as they arose.

Although it has been said to be the worst housing slump since the Great Depression, Dan Ryan Builders made their largest contribution yet, to Habitat for Humanity of the Eastern Pan Handle because there is no bigger reward than to make an affordable home available to a very deserving family.

The selection process that Habitat for Humanity goes by to select a family was completed earlier this year. The homeowner will be Delilah Johnson and her two daughters, Stephanie and Olivia. Anyone can contact Habitat at 304.263.3154 if they are interested in applying to Habitat for Humanity for a home.

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Dan Ryan featured in Big Builder Magazine




Dan Ryan was featured on the cover of the May Edition of Big Builder Magazine. In the wake of early April's Pulte-Centex display of competitor elimination pyrotechnics, home building's longest-running debate only intensifies. Will public home building companies weather the ravages of the next 12 months better and jump out further ahead in market dominance when real estate shows its first signs of strength in the next year or so?


Or will more entrepreneurial, privately capitalized companies come out of housing's 100-year storm with the stuff to retake home building's landscape market by market?
It'd be a tough call to give private companies an edge in today's economy, reliant as they are on the nation's battered, besieged, and very, very stingy money center and community banks.
What's left of legions of once-proud local, regional, and multi-regional private powers is a smattering of Teflon wonders whose survival instincts raised financial conservatism, flint, and character building to a new level.


Not to be left out of the “what's next?” scenario are a few dozen pros who have played their noncompete clauses like violins during the market swan dive. And, finally, there are those who have and will financially reconstitute themselves like crabmeat you'd see in the frozen seafood section of the grocery store—call them NewCos. for lack of a better term.
In the following BIG BUILDER Private Builders '09 report, we've canvassed the nation, trying to take the pulse of the private home builder community to give you a sense of the spectrum of prognoses for survival.


As you well know, resilience and obstinacy are in no short supply, although credit where credit is due is nowhere in evidence. We've put together a mosaic of voices and stories—about survival, about cleverness, about wile, and about patience. “We're here to stay” is the mantra. We hope so.
Most veterans attribute an ultimate triumph among privates to residential real estate's first—but oft-forgotten—rule: All real estate is local.


Dan Ryan, founder and CEO of one of the Washington, D.C., metropolitan area's most powerful home builders, Dan Ryan Builders, puts the rule a slightly different way, and it's a way that offers insight into why never to count private builders out of the running. “Home building,” Ryan reminds us, “is a people business.” Land sellers, subcontractors, lenders, and yes, home buyers are each in and of themselves marketing and capital partners that make home building profoundly local. Local skin in the game, local intelligence, and local fulfillment of local promises give local home builders at least an opportunity to win, if not better odds.


The Pittsburgh-rooted Ryan family, one of home building's royalty, also offers an example of why never to underestimate the power of the private home builders, even though lenders have most of them groveling on their knees, begging for time.


Here's the Ryan story, and it's about almost getting beaten, but not.


Chances are Frederick, Md.-based Dan Ryan Builders will make it. If all goes as planned, even the current headwinds in the market will only haircut a little more than 30 percent of his single-family new-home volume from peak through this calendar year.


He can thank being in some decent locations in the D.C. metro market for some of that fortune.


But that's not all.


He knows adversity by heart. In the early 1990s, as another home building company we've all heard of—NVR—was hurdling into bankruptcy, the fact that the “R” in NVR stood for the company founder, Dan's uncle Ed Ryan, couldn't save young Dan his job.


When he tells the story, he says, “I left NVR and started my own company in another tough moment for housing, during the downturn of the early 1990s.” Then he catches himself. “They fired me,” he confesses. “That was a difficult moment.”


So difficult for Dan that he went over to the home of his father and mentor Jim Ryan—Ryland Homes founder in 1967—for solace and direction. They sat out on the patio of the father's home, and each of them looked out into the forest to the southwest. Dan tells his father what he's been told in a sensitively handled exit interview. He says, “Dad, they said they didn't want to let me go because they really like me; they just didn't think I was ready to run a profit center.”


“Dan, you know that in a downturn, a good company like NVR doesn't let go of their ‘A' players,” Jim Ryan tells his son. “They don't think you're an ‘A' player, Dan.”


That's what Dan Ryan got for comfort the day in 1990 when he got fired from his $65,000 a year job. He didn't talk to his father for a week or so from that moment, and his father got to thinking maybe he'd been a little too candid with his son. Jim recalls the moment in his own career in home building in the mid-1960s, when his own brother Ed gave him a pay cut of $5,000 a year—which prompted Jim to leave Ed's company and go start his own.


So, fast-forward to 2007, when Dan Ryan Builders nets a profit of $35 million, and both father and son know in their heart of hearts that brutal honesty was what the moment called for.
In fact, after his father told him that NVR hadn't regarded him an “A” player, Dan went for a public speaking course and a business leadership course à la Dale Carnegie and started the job of turning his shyness into the warm magnetism you'll see in him today.


“You've got to be strong to be good; it's something you'll hear my dad say often,” Dan says.
What doesn't kill private companies makes them stronger. Ultimately, private, locally financed companies will again dot the new-home landscape, where fewer not-too-big-to-fail publics will be around to compete with.

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Open House April 25th & 26th Greencastle, PA

April 23, 2009 — OPEN HOUSE April 25th & 26th 12pm - 5pm!!! SPECIAL PRICING!!!!
Come see The Vista - 4 Bedroom, 2.5 bath, 2 car garage and take advantage of our SPECIAL PRICING!!!! MOVE IN READY! Lot 112, Dallas Dr. Greencastle, Pennsylvania 17225

http://www.danryanbuilders.com/about-us/news-and-press-details.cfm?news_id=148

Check out our website at www.danryanbuilders.com for other great offers today!

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Don’t miss Extreme Makeover: Home Edition this Sunday!

January 16th, 2009
Finally! The day we’ve all been waiting for is this Sunday, January 18, when our episode of Extreme Makeover: Home Edition airs on ABC! Tune in at 8pm EST to watch the build, see the Drumm family’s reaction, and get a peek at their amazing new home!
If you were one of our volunteers, you’ll have the chance to relive the incredible 106 hours we spent building the Drumms’ new home — and if you weren’t able to come out for the build, you’ll get to see why it was such an incredible experience