As someone who has sold manufactured homes for a few years, I agree. Many of the bigger doublewides and triplewides are MUCH nicer than "brick" homes in the $65-110,000 range. Many have stainless steel appliances, stone fireplaces, sunken tubs, home offices, gourmet kitchens w/pantries, media rooms, etc. These are features you usually don't see on site-built homes under $200,000+. There are now TWO STORY manufactured homes, and another factory-built product called a modular home is virtually indistinguishable from a conventional house and usually a better value.
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
Imagine that.
Next they can count lakes and mountains and snails
2 posted on
09/26/2009 4:18:53 PM PDT by
GeronL
To: 2ndDivisionVet
but... but... they’re not covered with high quality vinyl siding and they’re not in a home owner’s association! And how can you call yourself civilized if you’re not sharing at least two firewalls with some headbangers you hardly know? Oh, to think that someone would give up living next to a Starbucks and a major highway just to save a piddly $60,000!
3 posted on
09/26/2009 4:19:43 PM PDT by
dr_who
To: 2ndDivisionVet
You don't have to go far outside of a city like Charlotte to find trailer parks You don't have to leave the city limits at all, although you're smart if you do, because their city council is composed of brain-dead dinglebobs. Go past the county line if you can, too: County Commissioners are just as bad.
4 posted on
09/26/2009 4:22:01 PM PDT by
Tax-chick
(Steam goes up, water goes down, and you shouldn't hit catz.)
To: 2ndDivisionVet
There are tax advantages to mobile homes in Texas since they aren’t considered permanent structures.
5 posted on
09/26/2009 4:22:05 PM PDT by
SeeSharp
To: 2ndDivisionVet
Duh!
They’re always put near UFO landing zones and tornado routes.
6 posted on
09/26/2009 4:22:22 PM PDT by
ryan71
(Smells like a revolution)
To: 2ndDivisionVet
And the sky is blue, mostly. What’s the point of the article, to disparage the South?
The article fails to define terms. What is the “South?” What is a “mobile home?” What are the logical reasons (climate, topography, income?) Are these reasonable factors?
7 posted on
09/26/2009 4:23:59 PM PDT by
fwdude
(It is not the liberals who will destroy this country, but the "moderates.")
To: 2ndDivisionVet
And Elvis and Michael Jackson share one.
8 posted on
09/26/2009 4:25:09 PM PDT by
Dumpster Baby
(Truth is called hate by those who hate the truth.)
To: 2ndDivisionVet
Mine's real nice.
on the inside
To: 2ndDivisionVet
So, how is a tornado like a Tennessee divorce?
Someone's afixin' to lose a trailer!
11 posted on
09/26/2009 4:26:26 PM PDT by
SmithL
(The Golden State demands all of your gold)
To: 2ndDivisionVet
In related news most 30 degree below temperatures that take a better sealed dwelling to be comfortable in are not in the south. What odd people those Americans are, they adopt the type of structure that is best suited for the area they live.
12 posted on
09/26/2009 4:30:49 PM PDT by
JLS
To: 2ndDivisionVet
Alex, I’ll take The Bleedin’ Obvious for $600
To: 2ndDivisionVet
A couple of points here. One, I currently live in Alabama, and I can attest to the fact that you can't spit down here without hitting the side of a single-wide. Both of my brothers-in-law live in double-wides (and one of them owns the trailer park they're parked on). Ain't for me - I'm a log home or stone castle kind of guy. But, I agree that the industry has come a long way in the last 15 or 20 years. I've seen some top-end manufactured and modular homes at prices you couldn't touch if it was a stick-built home. In fact, my buddy up in NoVA bought a modular home - built on a basement foundation - and 1.5 wooded acres with a stream, for $125K about 20 years ago. It's now worth triple that. And when he told me it was a modular unit a few years ago, I almost crapped myself. There is
no way of telling it wasn't put up one stick at a time. The woman he bought it from had invested almost the initial value of the house in upgrades, and sold it after she and her husband finally divorced. The wife and I have been planning, designing, and scheming to build a log home for several years now, and I'm honestly considering going the modular route. You dig the foundation, build out the stone walls, drop the pre-built main structure in place, and have the finishing crew come in. Let 'em do the heavy lifting at the construction yard.
To: 2ndDivisionVet
To: 2ndDivisionVet
What a surprise.
I wonder if we spent enough money for the research we could establish that pole-and-dagga houses are mainly found in the southern African veldt.
17 posted on
09/26/2009 4:38:12 PM PDT by
Clive
To: 2ndDivisionVet
..and weather for tonight...dark
18 posted on
09/26/2009 4:38:46 PM PDT by
Doogle
(USAF.68-73..8th TFW Ubon Thailand..never store a threat you should have eliminated))
To: 2ndDivisionVet
Do we actually have to pay to discover these AMAZING census facts?
Bulletin! Snow mostly falls in Winter!
To: 2ndDivisionVet
I’ve seen some real nice “mobile homes” So what’s the big deal? A mobile home is not an indicator of poverty. I’ll bet most of these folks actually WORK for a living and pay TAXES. I wonder what percentage of “mobile home” dwellers voted for the current president whose name and racial preference escape my mind. Bottom line...people gotta live somewhere. How about they live where they want, in what they want, in the manner they want. Is this not a free land?
To: 2ndDivisionVet
They do better in the South’s weather, too, because they are not always insulated so well.
To: 2ndDivisionVet
My family lived in one as a kid while my parents built a house next to it...to be honest, i missed the coziness of it once we moved into the new house...not a great thing to live in when a hurricane is coming though ;)
35 posted on
09/26/2009 5:06:37 PM PDT by
chasio649
( Palin 2012...'nuff said!)
To: 2ndDivisionVet
“In any area where housing is expensive, mobile homes can represent one of the few cheap options.”“Mobile homes will make up a significant part of the housing market in any place you can find significant rural poverty,” —Jacob Vigdor, public policy and economics professor at Duke University.
~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~
Quick, somebody needs to nominate Professor Vigdor for the Nobel prize for the Bleeding Obvious.
39 posted on
09/26/2009 5:13:27 PM PDT by
Sparko
("Barack Hussein Obama He said Red, Yellow, Black or White All are equal in His sight. Mmm, mmm, mmm")
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