This is not a blockchain fantasy cooked up in a shady Discord chat. I’m a licensed builder with a real lot in Birmingham, Alabama, with the deed in hand. The lot already has a concrete driveway, front sidewalk, and detached garage. I have the completed building plans from my architect for a 1,200-square-foot home.
I’m calling it the Model T of homes: high-performance, storm-resistant, low-maintenance, and affordable to own. Built with structural insulated panels, deep floor trusses, and waterproofing throughout.
Buyers holding AHOME tokens can reserve a home first through the dApp at ahometoken.com using a MetaMask wallet. No vague idea, no slick animation, no promises about someday- blah blah blah, nope… I own the land, and I have the plans. I run a licensed and insured company that operates in the real world. The only thing left is the hard part: building the house.
AHOME is an ERC-20 utility token on Ethereum. It gives the token holder the right to reserve a newly built home at a locked-in token price before construction finishes. Not hype. Not “ecosystem value.” It’s a reservation mechanism that connects to a physical home building pipeline.
When people use AHOME tokens in a completed home transaction, the platform burns those tokens. Thus, the live supply reduces at that moment. But this is not a one-way deflation model. The contract allows minting within a hard cap of 1,000,000 tokens. Live supply moves up or down within that ceiling over time.
Stronger than most crypto projects can honestly claim. QuillAudits fully audited our smart contracts, AHT.sol and ReservationEscrow.sol, awarding a 98% security score with zero critical, high, or medium findings. Etherscan has verified both contracts for anyone to inspect. (Link provided below)
Admin control sits behind a Gnosis Safe 2-of-2 multisig. Every key transaction needs two signatures to approve, one of which must come from a hardware wallet. In a space filled with anonymous teams and sloppy deployments, our structure stands out.
Buying a home traditionally means banks, delays, middlemen, layered markups, and escrow structures that benefit everyone except the buyer. AHOME shrinks that mess.
Token buyers provide operating capital, which will ensure my pipeline is filled with homes in the works. Besides, when a home buyer locks tokens in the smart contract, I know just how much demand actually exists before I break ground.
Once the home is finished, the reservation settles on-chain, and the buyer gets: keys, title, and deed. I realize profit and keep adding new construction to the pipeline.
My company, Affordable Home US, handles: land acquisition, design, permitting, construction, and property management under one roof. Fewer hands in the deal, fewer fees, fewer places for money to disappear.
This is where it sounds less like crypto and more like construction. A 1,200-square-foot, 3-bedroom, two-bath single-family residence built with EcoPanels SIPs: rigid, compressed, foam sandwiched between oriented strand board sheathing. This construction offers: strong energy performance, lower thermal bridging, and better wind resistance than conventional stick framing.
The floor system uses 26-inch-deep open-web trusses at 16 inches on center, spanning 30 feet with no center beam. Plumbing and HVAC run through the trusses without hacking up structural members. A stiffer floor means less bounce. Anyone who has lived in a cheaply built house knows floors matter- a lot.
Construction cost runs around $125,000 to $130,000, with a target sale of $220,000. The margin funds the next lot and the next home. Completed builds expand the pipeline.
Through a Gnosis EasyAuction, a fair launch where all successful bidders pay the same clearing price. There is no insider presale. No discounted VC round. No backroom allocations that leave the public holding the bag. Minimum bid is $1.00 per token. The auction hasn’t been scheduled yet. I’m waiting until the waitlist reaches the right demand level.
AHOME is not a security, not fractional ownership, and it carries no rental income, nor equity, nor passive-return promises. It is, however, a utility token tied to reservation rights. Buying AHOME means buying the ability to reserve a future home, not a share of one.
The lot is real. I’m real. The license, the audit, and my companies’ operating histories are real. Now, we are in a market overflowing with whitepapers and projects that never leave the concept stage. So, our authenticity counts for something significant.
Most blockchain real estate ideas start backward: token mechanics first, then they try forcing real-world utility into the model. AHOME starts with: dirt, permits, materials, and construction; the token comes second.
Whether it scales remains to be seen. But the premise is simple: use blockchain where it actually helps, tie it to a real deliverable, and build something physical that people want to live in.
The fair-launch auction opens once demand is verified. Join the waitlist at https://ahometoken.com/auction-waitlist?ref=e6zgf4, follow @ahome_token on X, or join the Telegram community for lot updates, construction progress, and auction announcements.
For once, a blockchain real estate project isn’t asking you to imagine the future. It’s asking you to watch it get built. Verify the smart contract etherscan links at this page: https://ahometoken.com/auction
The post The First Home Built On-Chain? This Birmingham Builder is Actually Doing It appeared first on The Coin Republic.


