Real Estate News

New homes coming to Folsom built with unique Japanese wood framing technology. Take a look

A new housing development set to open in Folsom in March is being built with a unique framing technology and design by Japanese homebuilder Sekisui House.

Called Shawood at Folsom, located at 4641 Dehone Circle, just north of East Bidwell Street, the homes offer spacious floor plans spanning up to 4,350 square feet and five bedrooms with oversized kitchens and indoor-outdoor living spaces. There are 41 lots available.

The company showed off its framing system Monday during a walk-through of the development. Unlike most conventional homes, where lumber is cut on site and nailed together, Shawood makes a fully laminated, precisely pre-cut product that is bolted together on site. Sekisui uses sustainable imported wood from Finland in its construction.

Visitors tour one of the homes built by Japanese homebuilder Sekisui House at the Shawood development in Folsom on Monday. The home is built with laminated wood and proprietary metal joints that create a stronger building, according to the company.
Visitors tour one of the homes built by Japanese homebuilder Sekisui House at the Shawood development in Folsom on Monday. The home is built with laminated wood and proprietary metal joints that create a stronger building, according to the company. Hector Amezcua hamezcua@sacbee.com
Troy Wood, manager for engineering for homebuilder Sekisui House, explains on Monday the proprietary metal joints that are used to connect the laminated beams and posts in the Shawood homes.
Troy Wood, manager for engineering for homebuilder Sekisui House, explains on Monday the proprietary metal joints that are used to connect the laminated beams and posts in the Shawood homes. Hector Amezcua hamezcua@sacbee.com

“What we’ve been doing in the U.S. for decades is conventional two-by-four construction using conventional studs and headers and it’s been done essentially the same since the ’50s, or maybe even longer,” Troy Wood, manager of value engineering for Sekisui House, said. “The post and beam construction is different from the sense that all of our material is imported from Japan, and all of our material is laminated from sustainable wood that’s coming from Finland.

“And because we are an environmentally conscious company, every time we take a tree, we plant two new trees.”

The pre-fabricated lamination method makes the product “very accurate and it’s very strong,” he said.

“The wood is taken to our factory in Japan, where it’s laminated, and then we use precision cutting methods in a factory, where we cut all of our post or beams and all of our studs in a factory so that everything comes out pre-cut for the job,” Wood added.

Proprietary metal fittings connect laminated beams to the posts in on Monday in a home under construction in the Sharwood development in Folsom. The sustainable wood is imported from Finland and precision cut before it arrives on site.
Proprietary metal fittings connect laminated beams to the posts in on Monday in a home under construction in the Sharwood development in Folsom. The sustainable wood is imported from Finland and precision cut before it arrives on site. Hector Amezcua hamezcua@sacbee.com
The precision-cut laminated beams and posts, connected with proprietary metal fittings, of the Shawood framing system contrast with roof trusses that employ more traditional American construction techniques in a Folsom model home.
The precision-cut laminated beams and posts, connected with proprietary metal fittings, of the Shawood framing system contrast with roof trusses that employ more traditional American construction techniques in a Folsom model home. Hector Amezcua hamezcua@sacbee.com
Laminated beams form a wall in a model homes in Folsom’s Shawood development. The homes are being built with Sekisui House’s proprietary system of 120mm glued wood strips. which the company says “eliminates the cracks and imperfections in the source wood” to improve the strength of the structure.
Laminated beams form a wall in a model homes in Folsom’s Shawood development. The homes are being built with Sekisui House’s proprietary system of 120mm glued wood strips. which the company says “eliminates the cracks and imperfections in the source wood” to improve the strength of the structure. Hector Amezcua hamezcua@sacbee.com

Wood pointed to a magnitude 9.0 earthquake in Japan in the 1990s to illustrate how strong Sekisui buildings are built.

“We had roughly 177,000 homes that had been built at that point,” he said. “Sekisui House, as a company, went out and looked at all the homes that had been built over the last 30 or 40 years prior to that to confirm that they had no structural damages—every home that we had built, not only did they survive, but they survived with no structural damage.”

The company says the production of pre-fabricated, accurately cut framing allows for flexibility in customizing layouts and reduces waste. The method maximizes energy efficiency to lower utility costs, too. The framing is also more durable and resistant to weather-related wear and tear, as well as to pests, the company said.

He acknowledged the Sekisui method of construction comes at higher cost, “because it’s a higher-quality product, but that’s part of what we’re creating with our Shawood brand.”

Folsom is the second master-planned community in California to be launched by Shawood. Last year, the brand debuted in the Sommers Bend community in Temecula. Sommers Bend homes start at $1.68 million.

Features of the homes in Folsom include:

Zero-energy upgrade options that include solar paneling to provide ample coverage against an outage.

Prep kitchen.

Pet wash station.

Dedicated fitness room.

Flexible spaces to accommodate a family’s evolving needs include a pocket office, raised loft and media room.

Four home plans named after mostly deciduous trees are available:

Aspen: A three-bedroom, four-bathroom home spanning 2,960 square feet.

Birch: A four-bedroom, five-bathroom home spanning 3,685 square feet.

Cedar: A five-bedroom, five-bathroom home, with two powder rooms, spanning 3,953 square feet.

Hazel: A five-bedroom, six-bathroom home spanning 4,346 square feet.

Pricing for the Folsom development is not yet available on the Shawood website, but the homes in the company’s Temecula development start at $1,674,500.

The Bee’s Hector Amezcua contributed.
An atrium is framed in center of a model homes in the Shawood development in Folsom.
An atrium is framed in center of a model homes in the Shawood development in Folsom. Hector Amezcua hamezcua@sacbee.com

This story was originally published November 19, 2024 at 5:00 AM.

Follow More of Our Reporting on Inside Look

David Caraccio
The Sacramento Bee
David Caraccio is a video producer for The Sacramento Bee who was born and raised in Sacramento. He is a graduate of San Diego State University and a longtime journalist who has worked for newspapers as a reporter, editor, page designer and digital content producer.
Get one year of unlimited digital access for $159.99
#ReadLocal

Only 44¢ per day

SUBSCRIBE NOW