Unfinished homes in Oklahoma City spring parade a sign of sizzling housing market
1st Oklahoma Homes built this home at 2501 Summit Crossing Parkway, in Norman, and has it entered in the Parade of Homes this Friday-Sunday and again April 29-May 1.
1st Oklahoma Homes built this home at 2501 Summit Crossing Parkway, in Norman, and has it entered in the Parade of Homes this Friday-Sunday and again April 29-May 1.

So, you're watching a parade, enjoying the floats — but some aren't quite finished, just partly decorated, with their usually hidden frames and other infrastructure showing.

What would you think? Homebuilders hope you'll think kindly, because it's their upcoming 2022 Spring Parade of Homes that has some unfinished entries.

Supply chain issues and materials shortages, a problem throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, have hit the parade, which is this weekend and next.

The parade, organized by the Central Oklahoma Home Builders Association, will feature 56 new homes by 26 builders, open free to the public from noon to 6 p.m. this Friday to Sunday and again from April 29 to May 1. Parade guide books are available for free at OnCue Express.

An incomplete home might be just what some home shoppers are looking for, the builders group says online, turning supply lemons into home-site lemonade.

"Jump on one of the not-yet-completed homes and pick your own finishes — like flooring, paint color, plumbing and light fixtures, and more — to make your new home purchase truly your dream home!" the builders suggest.

At least one incomplete parade home is already under contract to sell and was removed from the lineup, said Elisa McAlister, executive officer of the Central Oklahoma Home Builders Association.

It's another sign of the sizzling housing market.

Tatum Homes built this home at 2449 SW 127 and has it entered in the Parade of Homes this Friday-Sunday and April 29-May 1.
Tatum Homes built this home at 2449 SW 127 and has it entered in the Parade of Homes this Friday-Sunday and April 29-May 1.

Supercharged demand, low supply, leaves Spring Home Parade in OKC with Fewer homes than usual

Ideal Homes & Neighborhoods, for example, "had the largest quarter of sales in company history during the first quarter," said Erin Yarbrough, director of marketing. "Demand is still greatly outpacing supply in the housing market."

That's why the home parade, sponsored by Oklahoma Natural Gas and Wilshire Cabinet + Co., again has fewer entries than usual, said Michelle Kirby, of Adams-Kirby Homes, who is chairman of the parade.

"The market continues to be hot with homes selling faster than we can build them," she said in the guidebook.

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That's despite rising costs to builders, which contribute to higher home prices, along with the shortage of homes relative to demand, and rising mortgage interest rates, which also make it more expensive to buy.

Building material prices have gone up nearly 30% since January, 2020, said Dusty Hutchison, owner of Alder Fine Homes and president of the the Central Oklahoma Home Builders Association.

Builders have dealt with increased costs for lumber, paint, steel products and concrete, Hutchison said.