AmeriCraft Homes, a new for-sale builder backed by veteran developer Art Falcone, has launched a multi-state platform to deliver “attainable luxury” communities in Florida and the Carolinas, with a hospitality-style customer experience.
The Boca Raton-based company, announced June 24, positions itself at the overlap of semi-custom and production building. The model leans into curated design packages, service-heavy buyer journeys and resort-inspired community programming rather than full custom construction.
For builders, the launch is another data point in a growing shift: higher-income buyers are less focused on square footage and more focused on design, walkable amenities and frictionless service — and are increasingly willing to pay for those attributes even in production neighborhoods.
Platform details: multi-state, semi-custom, service-heavy
AmeriCraft will initially focus on Florida, North Carolina and South Carolina, according to the company announcement, with “communities in active development” across the Southeast. Sites have not yet been publicly detailed, but the emphasis is on master-planned or master-planned-adjacent locations where the builder can control more of the customer experience.
The product is targeted squarely at the luxury segment, but the company is framing it as “attainable luxury” – design-forward homes that remain within reach of upper-middle-income buyers rather than the ultra-luxury custom market. That balancing act has become more important as higher mortgage rates and construction inflation squeeze even affluent buyers.
Homes are planned with:
- Light-filled, multi-generational layouts to appeal to move-up, extended family and work-from-home buyers
- Designer-curated finish packages rather than fully bespoke selections, to keep cycle times and costs in check
- AI-enabled smart-home systems baked into base specifications, not just as add-ons
On the community side, the concept leans heavily on hospitality cues: walkable neighborhoods, wellness- and social-focused gathering spaces, and lifestyle programming meant to create more “experiential” communities. The stated intent is to build neighborhoods that feel more like resort environments than conventional subdivisions.
Leadership bench: Falcone resumes and big-builder DNA
AmeriCraft is led by founder and principal Art Falcone, who has more than 40 years in residential and master-planned community development in the Southeast. Falcone previously built Transeastern Properties into one of the region’s largest homebuilders before selling that platform.

Falcone said AmeriCraft was created on the premise that residential communities should be “designed and managed with the same care, emotion and intention as the world’s finest resort destinations,” and that the company intends to apply decades of master-planned community experience to for-sale neighborhoods.
President Mark Bines oversees overall strategy, operations and execution of the platform. Bines comes out of Kolter Homes, where he most recently served as division president, bringing big-builder process and controls to the new operation. His remit covers land acquisition, community design, construction operations and customer care.
Vice President of Sales and Marketing Jeremy Needelman, previously with PulteGroup, will lead brand positioning, consumer acquisition and the end-to-end buyer journey. His brief is to align every buyer touchpoint with the hospitality-driven model the company is promoting.
Additional leadership comes from the next generation of the Falcone family – Nicholas, Daniel and Matthew Falcone – who bring hotel and resort experience to the company’s branded hospitality and amenity programming.
Why this matters for builders
The AmeriCraft launch reflects several trends reshaping the high end of the for-sale market:
- Hospitality as a design brief. AmeriCraft is another example of hospitality concepts crossing into housing: concierge-style service, curated amenities, flexible indoor-outdoor spaces and intentional social programming. Builders competing in move-up and luxury segments are increasingly being measured not just on product and price, but on the “stay” experience of living in their communities.
- Experience over pure customization. Rather than promising full custom design, AmeriCraft is packaging a semi-custom, designer-led experience inside a more disciplined production framework. That approach aims to protect margin and cycle times while still differentiating from standard production builders.
- Multi-generational and wellness demand. The emphasis on multi-gen plans, wellness spaces and walkable layouts aligns with post-pandemic demand profiles. Builders competing in the Southeast — particularly in Florida and the Carolinas — are seeing continued inflows of older, affluent buyers and multi-generational households that prioritize flexibility and amenity-rich environments.
- Tech as a baseline expectation. AI-enabled smart-home systems are described as standard, not an upgrade. For other builders, the question is less whether to offer smart-home technology and more how to integrate it seamlessly into the construction, sales and warranty process without ballooning complexity.
For operators in the same markets, AmeriCraft’s promise of a “hospitality-driven” buyer journey — from initial inquiry through post-closing care — raises the service bar. The company is explicitly marketing transparency and personal attention as differentiators at a time when online reviews and social media can amplify any gap between expectations and experience.
What to watch
Several execution questions will determine whether AmeriCraft’s model scales:
- Land and lot strategy in a tight market. With Florida and the Carolinas among the most competitive land markets in the country, AmeriCraft’s ability to control premium locations without overpaying will be critical to keeping “attainable luxury” truly attainable.
- Maintaining hospitality-level service at volume. High-touch service is straightforward at low volumes and early phases of a community, but it becomes more difficult as closings ramp up. Builders watching this launch will want to see how AmeriCraft operationalizes its service promises in scheduling, communication, design studio operations and warranty response times.
- Cost structure of curated design. Designer-curated finishes can simplify buyer choices and reduce change orders, but they require tight coordination with trades and suppliers to avoid cost creep. The company’s ability to standardize behind the scenes while presenting a “bespoke” front of house will be a key margin lever.
AmeriCraft is entering the market at a time when many builders are recalibrating their own value propositions around lifestyle, amenities and customer journey. The company’s success or struggle with its hospitality playbook will offer useful lessons for peers weighing similar moves in the luxury and move-up segments.
About AmeriCraft Homes
AmeriCraft Homes is a Boca Raton-based homebuilder focused on design-forward, luxury homes in premier locations in the Southeastern United States. Its principals have more than 40 years of experience and prior platforms that scaled into some of the region’s largest homebuilding operations. The company’s current land holdings are in Florida, North Carolina and South Carolina.