10. YOUR BANK ACCOUNT NEEDS TLC
Manufactured housing is an affordable option for Americans to purchase their own homes. Manufactured homes cost 10 to 35 percent less per square foot to build than site-built homes.
The US loves manufactured homes. According to ManufacturedHousing.org, median annual income for those living in a manufactured home is $34,700. Twenty-four percent of all households, however, bring home $50,000 or more each year, which makes a modular or prefab home that much more affordable.
9. BE THE CAPTAIN OF YOUR SHIP (HOUSE)
Anyone who has ever built a home can tell horror stories of cost overruns, delayed construction and snarly contractors. Such problems are foreign to the manufactured home industry because the homes are built in factories under strict rules and tight federal regulations. The factories build the homes on assembly lines, which leaves little room for error. Additionally, the manufacturing process maximizes the efficiency of workers. Moreover, manufactured homes are built in a controlled environment that is not impacted by bad weather, vandalism, and the potential unreliability of contractors and subcontractors. Such control over the building process allows homeowners to reap the benefits of money saved during construction. In addition, factories can purchase massive amounts of materials, products and appliances at a better rates than a typical on-site home builder, and we pass the cost savings on to the homeowner.
8. THE SPEED OF THIS CONSTRUCTION
Home owners and our contractors are responsible for building a foundation, and for identifying utility locations before manufactured homes arrive onsite for final construction. Factories can build a typical double-wide or single-wide manufactured home in about one-third of the time it takes a contractor to construct a site-built home. When our factory built home gets to your property, it is nearly 90 percent complete, which allows you to move into your new home much faster! And, just because construction and set up moves at a rapid pace, doesn’t mean that the builders can ignore safety and building codes. In-house and third-party inspectors examine each structure in the factory during construction and after the home is on site.
7. DESIGN FLEXIBILITY WITH FLAVOR
If you haven’t figured it out yet, manufactured homes are not your granddad’s mobile homes. Some of the designs are often elaborate. Modular homes, for example, often have more than one story. They can have porches, garages and decks, and vaulted ceilings. Depending on the lots, homeowners can add beautiful landscaping and on-site construction. Builders can also customize houses to specific needs — want stainless steel appliances, hardwood floors and granite countertops? No problem. Some companies even specialize in upscale modular homes. “Irontown,” by Toby Long, for example, is our featured home image and can range in size from 2,000 square feet (185.8 square meters) to more than 5,000 square feet (464.5 square meters).
6. ENERGY SMARTY PANTS
The new generations of manufactured homes are energy efficient. Factories now outfit manufactured homes with ENERGY STAR appliances and take great care in making sure each home is tightly constructed with efficient heating, cooling systems, water heaters, and high-performance windows.
How much money can a manufactured home save a person? Let’s look at one example. A few years ago, North Carolina A&T University and the U.S. Department of Energy studied the energy efficiency of one type of manufactured home. The university built two houses on the Greensboro campus. Each three-bedroom, three-bath house was 1,528 square feet (142 square meters) [source: U.S. Department of Energy].
Although the homes were unoccupied, researchers rigged up the lights and appliances with timers to simulate normal energy use. One house was a “base” house that acted as a control. The other was an “energy” house, which was built with energy-efficient materials and appliances. Researchers expected the energy house to be 50 percent more energy efficient than the base house. After studying both houses for an entire winter heating season and summer cooling season, researchers found that the energy house actually exceeded expectations with an overall savings of 55 percent.
5. LUXURY THIS
Wall-to-wall carpet, hardwood floors, ENERGY STAR appliances, top-of-the line fixtures, 10-foot ceilings, ceramic tile. You would think you were in Derek Jeter’s McMansion in Tampa, Fla. Actually, all the amenities you can find in a site-built home can also be added to manufactured homes. Some manufactured homes have walk-in closets, jetted tubs and soaker bathtubs, and others come equipped with fireplaces, bay windows and gabled roofs. And it’s common for homes to have more than one bathroom outfitted with double sinks and luxury tubs.
4. MR & MRS SUPREMELY GREEN
Manufactured homes come in all shades of colors, but the most important is “green,” as in environmentally friendly. Builders of manufactured homes generally don’t waste a lot of building materials, and whatever scraps they do end up with are often recycled. Modular construction enjoys the most efficient use of material without compromising a building’s structure.
Even investor Warren Buffett has gone green when it comes to modular home building. In 2009, one of Buffett’s companies, Clayton Homes, a subsidiary of Berkshire Hathaway, unveiled its line of green modular homes known as the i-house. With a price tag of less than $75,000, the 750-square-foot (69.6 square-meter) i-house has low-flow faucets, high-efficiency heat pumps and roofs designed to collect rainwater. The i-house saves energy, water and reduces carbon emissions. The i-house is so eco-friendly that it achieved a Platinum rating — the highest mark possible — from the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) program run by the U.S. Green Building Council.
Despite the trailer park stereotype, many manufactured home communities are wonderful places to hang your hat. Homeowners can rent or own the land on which their houses sit. More than 75 percent of manufactured homes are located on private property, while the remaining 25 percent are located in communities where the homeowner leases the lot.
3. NICE COMMUNITIES MAKE NICE
One of the biggest benefits of living in manufactured home communities is that residents don’t have to worry about the expenses of street maintenance, trash removal, snow plowing, swimming pool maintenance, and other on-site repair work.
Some communities are gated and secure, while other communities — especially those for adults only — resemble tiny resorts. They offer organized social activities, walking trails, fitness centers, pools, tennis courts and even golf courses. Many communities have common areas and are beautifully landscaped.
2. APPRECIATE IN VALUE WHILE YOU LIVE
Many people believe that manufactured homes will never rise in value. In fact, some people say manufactured homes depreciate over time. A manufactured home is just like any other home. When it’s properly built and maintained, manufactured homes appreciate just like site-built homes.
Many people, including Warren Buffett, one of the richest men in the world, think manufactured homes are a good investment. In 2003, Buffet and his company, Berkshire Hathaway, plunked down $1.7 billion to buy Clayton Homes Inc., a manufactured-housing company based in Knoxville, Tenn. In his annual letter to investors in 2011, Buffett said his company should serve as a model for those in the government who want to reform the nation’s housing system.
1. WARRANTY FOR YOU & YOURS
When you bought your last home and something went wrong, how difficult was it to get the contractor to come and fix it? Chances are it was a hassle, and the work wasn’t done in time. Manufactured homes generally come with a one-year warranty for construction and separate warranties for windows, doors, siding, faucets, appliances — you name it. Our factory provides a 10 year structural warranty — the longest in our industry!