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Faq's

What We Offer

New Modular Homes

Ranch, Cottage, 1 ½ Story, Tri-levels, Lofts, 2 Story, Duplex, Limited Commercial Buildings

New and Used Manufactured Homes

Single Sections both 14′ & 16′ wide and sectionals 26′ 8” wide to 48′ wide.

You can be your own general contractor or we can help coordinate basements, garages, electrical, plumbing, heating and cooling, and excavation.

 

Modular homes are technologically advanced, have superior strength, are energy efficient and environmentally sensitive. Built in a factory controlled environment, they are constructed in sections and put together by a builder on your building site. Builders can help you design your own home which is then engineered by professionals at the factory.

The building process begins at the design phase. State of the art computer aided design programs are used for customizing floor plans and producing drawings that can be approved by the customer. Once designed and approved, the building process begins. This process is similar to what you’ve seen during the construction of houses in your neighborhood; however, the work is performed on a production line. Quality materials are used and skilled craftsmanship is maintained while multiple departments construct the home. Modular homes are subject to the same building codes and standards as site-built homes. Modular homes today are models of efficiency and quality assurance.

Speed, convenience and consistent quality are some of the many advantages for choosing a modular home. On average, once a home consisting of two sections hits the production line in the factory it is completed within three to four weeks. Once the manufacturing process is complete, typically with interior finish right down to wall finish, the unit is transported to your home site and placed on the foundation. Final completion is handled by a local builder which includes: siding, shingles, trim & drywall where the sections join together.

Manufactured homes, sometimes referred to as mobile homes, are constructed to a different building code. This code, the Federal Construction Safety Standards Act (HUD/CODE), requires manufactured homes to be constructed on a non-removable steel chassis. These chassis are not required for conventional building code. Many communities have restrictions on where manufactured homes can be located. Modular homes are built to the same building code required by your state, county and specific locality as site-built homes. Therefore, building or zoning regulations do not restrict them. Your new modular home is inspected at the assembly plant during each phase of construction. Evidence of this inspection is normally shown by the application of a state or inspection agency label of approval.

Modular homes look like any other home. They are built using the same high quality material as a site-built home. Modular manufacturers build most any style of home from a simple ranch to a highly customized, contemporary two story home. Some modular manufacturers also produce commercial buildings such as banks, schools, office buildings, motels and hotels. Chances are you’ve been in many modular structures and probably never realized it.

Yes, you can design your own home. We allow the customer complete design flexibility. We can build almost any floor plan that you draw however plans in some circumstances may need changes to meet engineering capabilities and product specifications.

Since material and design doesn’t differentiate modular from site-built homes the answer is in the process of construction. Modular homes are built with the efficiency and quality control only found using factory assembly line techniques. Each home travels through departments run with specialized workers. Every building trade is represented. Work is never delayed by weather, subcontractor no-shows or missing material. Materials are also protected from the weather instead of being dropped off at an outside building site. Quality engineering and modular construction techniques also significantly increase the energy efficiency of your modular home. A quality control process provides assurance that your home has been inspected for code compliance and workmanship. In-plant inspectors as well as independent inspection agencies inspect the home on behalf of your state & local government.

When you add up all the labor, material and timesavings inherent in the modular building process, you will find that the price of a modular home is generally lower than a site-built home of comparable size. Buying materials in bulk and having a fixed cost instead of being subject to cost overruns are examples why the modular building costs can be lower. Plus you will keep saving money year after year, as your energy efficient home keeps your heating and cooling bills low.

There is no distinction between modular and site-built homes as far as appraisal or financing. Banks and lending institutions treat both types of construction the same. Likewise, there is no difference in insuring the modular property. Many banks prefer modular houses because of the fixed cost and clear description of what they are financing. A modular home manufacturer can also be better known because of the volume of homes they build. Banks are more comfortable with a regulated, consistent product and don’t have the headaches presented by some fly-by-night carpenters.

Modular homes are subject to the same building codes and standards as site-built homes. Therefore, a quality built modular home will appreciate the same way a quality built site-built home will appreciate.