Posted on 10/20/2009 9:36:08 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
It's hard to not be spellbound by the sight of half of a new house slowly swinging across the street and gently coming to rest on a precast concrete foundation.
Raise the roof line, join the two sections, add a decorative facade, tidy up the entrance and it's almost ready for occupancy, right down to the sparkling bathroom mirrors and kitchen appliances.
But would you want to live in a house that arrives on two flatbed trucks? Or would you feel your home sweet home is one front step away from living in a trailer?
A California businessman with Chicago roots is eager to take on the stigma of factory-built homes and change consumers' mindset, one or two houses at a time. The best way to do so, said Richard Lupa, is to show people what he's talking about, despite the fact that spec homebuilding is largely kaput.
Hence the reason for the 200-ton crane that stood taller than the tree line in Maywood as a crew recently installed raised ranches on two lots in the western suburb. A few hours after the process began, two mostly completed homes sat on what had been vacant land for decades, and Lupa started readying them for sale.
"People think this is a mobile home, and we can't break the stigma until we start to build," said Lupa, a real estate agent and owner of Modern Factory Homes LLC. He acts as a developer and broker; the homes are built by other companies.
On site, a modular home isn't built so much as it is installed. At a Maywood lot, a crew fastens three large straps around one half of the house and connects them to a crane.(continued)
(Excerpt) Read more at chicagotribune.com ...
My wife’s aunt lives in one and to be honest, it is very nice.
Nothing wrong with that being a home option among other choices IMO.
Only the latest wave.
There have been similar waves in the 60s, 70s and 80s.
Some of them were quite good, but price difference was almost insignificant.
Government permit snd fees today is where the expense is. That and the NIMBY factor. Together, this invisible cost amounts to twice the total cost of a 3-bedroom home in 1960.
As a contractor with 31 years in the business I say no. But thats my biased opinion. I would think no one would want an inferior quality home, but to each his own.
My husband's great grandparents house was a SEARS house...it arrived by truck I believe...and is still standing, and one of the best looking homes in that little town....
LOL--good point.
But one difference is, I believe, that those Sears houses were shipped in pieces of lumber labled and cut to size, which had to be stick built on the spot, whereas todays modular houses are delivered in a few already assembled parts that you just join together.
The quality of either one will reflect the quality of its construction, whether that happened on the site or at a factory. I’d expect that certain things are difficult or impossible to prefabricate, such as brick walls.
That would be more like a house kit.
Also, any Realtor will tell you that a modular home just doesn't have the same appeal to home buyers as one that is site built. People still see them as being too much like a mobile home. They may be novel, and they may be built well. But they still lack that special feel and finish of a site built home; and that means a great deal to most home buyers.
Not just that, but ask an appraiser. Mods don't appeal to them, either.
There are some really nice manufactured homes out there, it is the future IMHO
You took the words right outta my mouth.
I was going to bring up that in effect those great Sears houses of decades ago, arrived in the same way,(by truck)
but in pieces, methodically arranged so that the “kit” could be built in an orderly fashion. I worked, as a contractor, on one dating from the 40s in Ft Lee NJ: all concrete shell, very unusual.
ping
There are other approaches to prefabrication besides large scale modular. I lived as a small child in 1950s built Gunnison homes, which were built on slabs at the site out of marine grade plywood panels that had been heat-fused at the factory and which already contained doors and windows as needed. The weight of the structures was borne by the panels. Siding could be added or the panels painted and used as is. U.S. Steel carried the line on until about 1974.
"The ability to mass-produce the materials used in Sears homes lessened manufacturing costs, which lowered purchase costs for customers. Not only did precut and fitted materials shrink construction time up to 40% but Searss use of "balloon style" framing, drywall, and asphalt shingles greatly eased construction for homebuyers.
These framing systems did not require a team of skilled carpenters, as previous methods did. Balloon frames were built faster and generally only required one carpenter
Sears built some 447 different designs and sold over 70,000 - The depression and things like the Union in Chicago, was pretty much the end of a great system that gave quality homes and lower prices. These homes were much sturdier than most homes built today - and many are still standing today...
http://www.searsarchives.com/homes/1927-1932.htm
No reason they need to be inferior. They are a good alternative in areas where long winters limit building seasons. They can be built indoors in the winter, and put up in the summer. That means a smaller crew can be kept busy all year round instead of hiring a bunch of people for a few months then laying them off.
Another thing is they may be better built than conventional houses. Being transported on a flatbed is like a day long earthquake. They have to be built well or they will fall apart in transit.
Any one familiar with these large blocks from Germany used in cinstruction? I recall a house probably worth about $4 million where the house was built using then. Very impressive home. They are supposedly very strong.
“Probably the wave of the future in homebuilding.”
Probably the wave of the future in homebuilding.
If we regain a strong enough economy to absorb the numbers of homes from the phony demand based on liar loans, builders will be open to cost saving methods of construction.
We have national, state, county and city building codes.
If a volune modular factory fabricator could depend of his modules being approved widely, some nice homes could result.
The exterior of many homes is regionally style specific; makes sense to site build the front facade.
A great feature would be to sell a nice starter two bedroom home to young people, with a pre-planned system to add space. Say to add two more bedrooms, another bath and family room at the back.
With my 3+ decades experience in the building industry I can say unequivocally, I would never buy a modular home. That choice, however, belongs to the individual.
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