ok, as a spinoff from another thread i'm starting this. discussion was whether or not modular homes contain the quality of other contruction methods. lets divide this into 3 catagories:1. traditional stick built (completely custom built. any pre fabbed panels built from stock on site.)2. use of some pre fabbed panels (walls/roof trusses assembled in a factory, majority of construction on site. partial use of stick construction.)3. modular (majority of assembly in a factory, transported to site in just a few pieces. virtually no stick construction.)ok... go. i have a feeling this is going to get out of hand/clouded with cost comparison, human error, etc... but we'll see.
10/4/2006 10:53:11 PM
http://www.re4a.com/modern-modular/http://www.fabprefab.com/fabfiles/fablisthome.htmhttp://www.floatinghomes.de/http://www.m-house.org/the last two are pretty direct. the second you can just scroll down and get the jist. the first needs some time to navigate. My point is that prefab housing has come a long way. Its no longer bland boring cheap homes. There is extensive design being put into these now to make well designed, quality housing. These links show a more design oriented modern version of prefab housing. There is still a lot of bland generic prefab housing, but they are are of high quality (well may be not finish materials, but structurally.)Traditionally built homes are becoming more adn more expensive to offer quality at affordable prices. Many have turned to cookie cutter subdivisions --you can see what that has done for cities. Prefab or modular or however you want to phrase it are primarily the same idea taken to different production levels. It is possible design from a kit of parts a quality house in terms of stucture, experience, and materials that can be affordable. This becomes more affordable due to the efficiency of factory construction with on site erection (to whatever degree.) This mode of construction has been used in bridges, towers and other large scale buildings. It is done to some degree in steel construction. What I fear and see is that portions of this industry (and traditional housing) that produce a small number of designs, mass produce them and erect them shittily (new word ).[Edited on October 4, 2006 at 11:14 PM. Reason : ]
10/4/2006 10:57:14 PM
Modular != MobileWaiting in a docs office there was an article on this. Some of the high end modular builders were more expensive then 1 or 2. The largest downside it pointed out was the max room size. In order to get the pieces down the road with enough integrity to make the trip you became limited with floorplans.1 and 2 depend a lot on the builder too. 7 or 8 years ago, builders randomly approached my sister when she was in high school to help build the houses in our neighborhood.
10/4/2006 11:09:39 PM
They all depend on the builder. 1 puts the responsiblity mostly on site. Things like cabinetry, doors, windows, fixtures, etc are already produced else where and depend on the contractor (or subs) to place. 2 more is done in a factory setting and 3 even more. The finish product still depends upon the contractor/erector/builder --but the percentage of construction on site changes.modular doesn't equal mobile or trailer. They differ in zoning and appraisal (sp?). Saying this is like saying, "prefabed prestressed concrete sections are trailers." It is more like "the sections arrived by trailer."[Edited on October 4, 2006 at 11:44 PM. Reason : modular are zoned the same as traditional built homes--also appraised the same]
10/4/2006 11:20:14 PM
^ that is correct. I have first hand knowledge of a big modular with 2x6 studs, 2x12 floor joists and high line windows. It all depends on what you spec out. it arrived in four parts and had light bulbs already in the fixtures. modular is more like stickbuilt and then put on a chassis than mobile where the chassis stays with the house.
10/4/2006 11:39:02 PM
My house is somewhere b/n 1&2. All of my walls are stick built but floor joists and roof trusses are all pre fabbed. Construction is pretty solid, my problem is I hate my 8' popcorn ceiling and my cheap carpet.As long as modular uses at least standard "2x4" for the wall studs and 3/8" gypsum for sheet rock and not the crap they use in mobile homes they're probably alright. There is a modular home a couple miles from my house. It was really wierd because literally one day it was an empty lot, and the next there was a ~2000 sqft 2 story house sitting there.
10/5/2006 5:57:55 AM
10/5/2006 7:17:51 AM
pretty much the shell of a modular is an off-site stick built home. the stuff inside is how you want it. if you want the house to look cheap, then it will. i've seen modulars that were down right impressive.
10/5/2006 9:09:38 AM
personally, i am going to build a post and beam house when i finally settle down somwhere, 30 ft ceilings and a lofted second floor with a wide open first floor, that shit is incredible
10/5/2006 12:19:35 PM
In terms of structural quality (the actual building, not the shit in it), getting a prefab is going to get you the best house for the money.They build to tighter tolerances and you don't risk the corner cutting that most developers will do (or at least try to do) on a stick build.Pretty much any stick built, unless you have it completely custom designed (which you are talking like 400-500k minimum), is going to use a lot of prefabbed panels these days. Once again, it's actually better for you the consumer, you get less variance in the pieces and overall better build quality.As for everything actually in the house, cabinets, closets et al, if you want good stuff it's going to cost good money. If you skimp it will show in the quality of materials and construction.
10/5/2006 1:12:46 PM
or you could just build it yourself
10/5/2006 1:15:38 PM
you can take the girl out of the trailer park but you can't take the trailer park out of the girl.
10/5/2006 1:17:11 PM
The posts in this thread are way more informed and intelligent than I expected.
10/5/2006 1:24:55 PM
except for this one^^
10/5/2006 1:35:13 PM
you can even buy modular units that are just the shell of the building and unfinished inside so you can finish it yourself if you so choose.
10/5/2006 1:56:12 PM
so many words... i dont want to read all of it..but, i work at a company that manufacturers wood roof/floor trusses and wall panels, and sells i-joists, lvl beams, and other engineered wood products.i can tell you that they had a competition ("framing the american dream") at a home builders expo where they built two identical houses (mirrored floor plans) next to each other, one with panels/trusses and one stick built.quality control in the factory is gonna be better than at the site, and the panels/trusses have less wasted lumber and are installed/erected a lot faster. sure they cost a little more up front, but saved labor & waste will costs less in the end.
10/5/2006 2:22:03 PM
10/5/2006 2:26:07 PM
10/5/2006 2:27:30 PM
another advantage of a modular is that its dryed in when it gets there, so you dont have to worry about losing time for weather or your subfloors warping from getting rained on. you are less likely to have stuff stolen since the doors and locks are already installed.
10/5/2006 4:32:09 PM
we dont install windows/doors here.. just the framing and osb sheathing...theft is lower, tho, b/c the pieces are custom and pretty much worthless for anything other than that building...[Edited on October 5, 2006 at 5:23 PM. Reason : ..]
10/5/2006 5:23:06 PM
10/5/2006 6:44:35 PM
10/6/2006 9:39:46 AM
yeah, ok.
10/6/2006 9:40:59 AM
^ so how long have you been a licensed hvac tech again? i forget
10/6/2006 12:16:42 PM
i'm going with option 1 right now with my house. damn i'm sure that really contributes to this thread... but basically from what I can tell so far, having a good friend as a contractor who's building a very similar house to the one I'm building right across the street from me is saving us both an assload of money because all the subs are charging less to do two.. hopefully i can have something like
10/6/2006 1:47:36 PM
^^actually, i have had my universal certification since '97.now what?
10/6/2006 5:14:51 PM
well then you sir are an idiot if you dont understand zone control and the kind of things you can do with it, they have affordable control boards now that can accept up to 12 temperature inputs and control up to 30 actuators, with programmable logic. the days of heat shooting straight up to a 30 ft ceiling are goneas a matter of fact i am installing a 3 zone system to split up one heat pump between some new additions that wont be used all the time and is a waste to heat/cool with the rest of the house next week, if you want to come take notes or anything [Edited on October 7, 2006 at 11:55 AM. Reason : asshat]
10/7/2006 11:53:20 AM
I haven't seen anything in this thread about completely off-grid 5000 square foot geodesic domes sitting on top of a mountain??? Cutting/fitting all those damn angled roof panels, whilest hanging off the roof structure with rappelling gear, standing on snow covered lumber, is a bit of a pain in the ass.
10/7/2006 12:16:11 PM
10/8/2006 10:59:13 AM
My parents live on the Albemarle sound in a 50+ year old home in a very rural area. A developer has contacted my family (grandma, parents and aunt combined own ~40 acres in this area) and wants to pay them nicely for the land and pretty much build a small city where they are and give them houses in the new community. Apparently the new houses will be almost completely built in a factory right down to the faucets and flooring. I was pretty apprehensive about these kind of homes, thinking that they were pretty much large trailers, but it sounds like this might not be a bad way to go. The plans that we've seen look really nice and the community is supposed to have houses from the 250s to 500s. Thanks, garage, for soothing my concerns.
10/9/2006 11:36:06 AM
^modulars in many cases are built more sturdily than stick built stuff.I don't know if I'd sell anything waterfront on the sound just yet. The market is cooling down.
10/9/2006 11:45:56 AM
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10/9/2006 8:51:05 PM