Builders in San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara

« Back to State View

Program Indicators in San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara

  • 4,992 ENERGY STAR certified homes built to date
  • 0 ENERGY STAR certified homes built 2017 to date
  • 272 ENERGY STAR certified homes built in 2016
  • 7 ENERGY STAR Builder Partners

Based on national averages, ENERGY STAR certified homes
built in 2016 are the equivalent of:

  • Reducing CO2 emissions by 460 metric tons
  • Growing 11,696 tree seedlings for 10 years
  • Avoiding the consumption of 1,070 barrels of oil
  • Removing 97 passenger vehicles from the road

Filter this list by the type of homes built:

Name Partner Since ASC ENERGY STAR Commitments Indoor airPLUS Commitments Homes Certified in San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara during Oct 2015 - Sep 2016* Homes Certified in San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara Total* Homes Certified Grand Total*
KB Home - SC Inland Empire
951-691-5300
2002 30 68 13,536
Karsten Homes (#991)
916-363-2681
2002 12 141 1,327
KB Home - Bay Area
916-576-5897
2004 105 1,316 6,667
Meritage Homes - Northern California
866-675-9383
Indoor airPLUS icon
2007 187 281 2,062
Skyline Homes (Woodland, CA)
530-666-0974
2007 55 140 636
Western Homes
951-734-6610
2008 2 9 31
One Sky Homes
408-335-7515
Indoor airPLUS icon
2013 0 0 1

* There is a reporting period for submitting ENERGY STAR certified homes data that occurs after the end of each calendar quarter. The "Homes Certified" columns are updated for all partners after home report information has been approved by EPA.

100% icon Denotes home builders or developers who have made a commitment to building 100% of their homes to ENERGY STAR performance guidelines.
Indoor airPLUS icon Denotes home builders or developers offering optional ENERGY STAR Indoor AirPLUS.
Indoor airPLUS 100% icon Denotes home builders or developers who have made a commitment to building 100% of their homes to Indoor airPLUS performance guidelines.

Affordable Housing Builders are defined as builders of income-eligible housing typically designated for lower income households whose construction is publicly subsidized by federal, state, or local housing agencies, usually via grants, loans, tax credits, and/or tax-exempt bonds.