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Omega Homes’ legacy rests on two key pillars: Efficiency and Value.
For more than 20 years, relentless refining, redesigning, re-creating, and re-thinking have established a “building culture” at Omega Homes. This culture recognizes that the highest value materials, systems, and features only make sense when part of a highly efficient building design and construction process.
Omega Homes’ history has two key chapters: Affordability and Maturity.
For more than 20 years, community after community, from Madison Park in 1996 to Penn’s Grant in 1999, and Penn’s Meadow in 2007, has matured in exactly the way neighborhoods should: tree-lines streets, families and children, homes that withstand the passage of time and maintain their attractiveness and integrity. And, regardless of their original selling price, their consistent growth in value and demand from buyers stand as testimony to these principles. Even in a time of rising land values, Omega Homes offers homes and communities that rival far more expensive products in many segments from economical first homes to value packed “empty nests.”
Omega Homes’ future is being built on two foundations: Quality and Customer focus.
For much more than the next 20 years, Omega Homes’ will design and build communities that help people start a new life, bring new life into the world, and appreciate a long and storied one. Every employee understands the weight of that responsibility and every employee has a stake in making sure we live up to it. Every home Omega builds is a process in learning how people live, and in finding ways to make that life more comfortable, more enjoyable, and more affordable.
Omega Homes’ legacy, history, and future are in the hands of families who live here, go to school here, shop here, and raise their children here. Both Omega’s founder, Alex Hornstein, and its next generation of leadership, Avi Hornstein, are passionate about these principles, insistent on their application, and are only pleased when an Omega homeowner smiles.
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