The demand for new housing continues at record-breaking levels throughout the fast-growing state of Arizona. In addressing this demand, Phoenix-based construction technology company Mosaic, and its building partner Mandalay Homes, have hit a new milestone, with the construction of more than 315 homes for Arizona families, but this is just the start.
Over the last 12 months, Mosaic has quadrupled in size to a team of 130, fueled largely by a $14.5 million Series A investment round led by venture capital firm, Andreessen Horowitz.
“We are holding true to the traditional way of homebuilding,” says Salman Ahmad, CEO and co-founder of Mosaic. “But if we can achieve even a fraction of the gains seen in software updates, we can create more unique places that are operationally viable and financially attainable.”
So far the company estimates that it has increased throughput in the construction process for its partners by as much as 30 percent, made possible by a focus on working with homebuilding industry veterans to improve and standardize construction processes, not the product.
Even better, focusing on perfecting processes ultimately unlocks greater customization, giving homebuyers more architectural and design options at a competitive price. Given that the state is experiencing increased demand for housing from both current residents and those moving from other states, the roll-out of Mosaic’s technology is timely, especially in recognition of the month of June as National Homeownership Month.
Quickly becoming known as the “Silicon Desert,” Arizona continues to build on its reputation as a growing tech hub buoyed by companies like Medtronic, Infosys, NXP, Carvana, SmartRent, Microchip, and Intel, which is investing $20 billion to build a new facility – it’s fifth in the Phoenix area — to supply next-generation semiconductors.
Further, the state is now also squarely on the international stage, with the recent announcement by Taiwan-based TSMC to build its second semiconductor manufacturing facility in the United States, resulting in an economic impact of $35 billion at build-out. Firms such as TSMC and Intel are attracted to Arizona due to a combination of available land and infrastructure, a skilled talent base, favorable tax incentives and little to no natural disasters.
In attracting more of a high-tech workforce, the Phoenix area is increasingly more attractive to remote workers, achieving a “Work from Home” score of 0.9 from a recent study done by the National Association of Realtors. Any score over zero indicates a ranking in the top half of the 3,142 counties studied, and a score of 0.9 is shared by other popular cities including Denver and Seattle.
In addition, searches on Redfin during the first quarter of 2021 show Phoenix consistently showing up in migration patterns for users based in Denver, Seattle, Chicago and Los Angeles. Moreover, an analysis by Zillow of out-of-state relocations in 2020 by mover North American Van Lines showed the Phoenix area as the top landing spot of all zip codes studied.
Thus far in Arizona, Mosaic has partnered with award-winning Mandalay Homes on up to 300+ homes at Jasper in Prescott Valley, as well as 35 homes at Adora at Timber Sky in Flagstaff, with future communities planned throughout the state.
“Prior to partnering with Mosaic, Mandalay had been approaching the limits of what traditional product innovation and existing building materials can do,” says Dave Everson, owner and founder of Mandalay Homes. “By improving our control over the construction process and speeding up the framing time, we can add more of this much-needed housing supply without sacrificing quality.”
From January through March this year, an analysis of building permits by the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) showed that while permits rose 24 percent from the same period of 2020 nationally, in Arizona they rose by just 12 percent. At the same time, they rose by just 8 percent in the Phoenix area as homebuilders grapple with systemic inefficiencies and shortages related to labor, suitable land, and building supplies, especially lumber.
In order to continue scaling up to meet the ever-growing demand for housing, Mosaic recruits interns from a diverse group of universities including ASU, MIT, Harvard and Yale, several of whom have developed into full-time employees. At the local level, Mosaic is working with students at ASU’s Luminosity Lab to meet today’s real-world challenges, where a team recently created house plans in 3D and used the underlying data to provide rich dashboards for analysis. It is in the convergence of academia and actual solutions for the building site in which Mosaic excels.
“Mosaic truly represents a convergence of my academic pursuits and upbringing in Arizona,” explains Salman. “In a thousand years, when people look back to the great traditional buildings of this millennium, we want them to be beautiful and resilient. We recognize it is an ambitious vision, but we are inspired by and committed to delivering on it every day.”
Mosaic is a construction technology company building software to make homebuilding more scalable. The company operates as a general contractor to provide construction and related services to homebuilders, permitting homebuilders to offload their construction management needs to Mosaic’s integrated platform. Mosaic’s platform standardizes the homebuilding process, and not the homes, allowing them to deliver places people love and create better communities.
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