| Frequently Asked Questions & Answers…
What is a Building System?
A building system is a highly engineered
method of producing buildings or building components in an efficient
and cost effective manner. The use of building systems is common in
many different types of residential and commercial construction. A
modular home is the culmination of one type of building system. Modular
homes actually begin as components; designed, engineered and assembled
in the controlled environment of a modern factory sometimes hundreds
of miles away from their final destination. It is when these components
come together on your building site and the final finish is completed
by your builder, that the components become a home for you and your
family.
Tell me more about the Modular Home Building Process.
The building process begins at the design
phase. This process is similar to what you’ve seen during the construction
of houses in your neighborhood. The quality materials and care for
detail, and the same building codes and standards are observed. So
what’s different? Efficiency and quality control! Efficiency begins
with modern factory assembly line techniques. Your home travels to
workstations, with all the building trades represented. Work is never
delayed by weather, subcontractor no-shows or missing material. Quality
engineering and modular construction techniques significantly increase
the energy efficiency of your modular home. A quality control process
provides 100% assurance that your home has been inspected for code
compliance and In-plant inspectors as well as independent agencies
inspect eh home on behalf of your state and local government.
How long does it take to build a modular home?
Two of the many advantages for choosing
modular components for your new home are speed and consistent quality.
On the average, a home can be produced and delivered and placed on
the foundation within 6-8 weeks. Final completion depends on the level
of details in your home and can take from 4 to 10 weeks.
What is the difference between the terms "Manufactured Housing" and "System’s Built-Modular Homes"?
Manufactured homes, sometimes incorrectly
referred to as mobile homes, are another type of building system and
are constructed to a different building standard. This standard, the
Federal Construction Safety Standards Act (HUD/CODE), unlike conventional
building codes, requires manufactured communities have restrictions
on where manufactured homes can be located. Systems Built-Modular
and site-built homes on the other hand, are constructed to the same
building codes required by your state, county and specific locality
and therefore are not restricted by building or zoning regulations.
Your new system’s built-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.
What do System’s Built-Modular homes look like?
System’s Built-Modular homes look like
any other home. Today’s building technology has allowed manufacturer’s
to build most any style of home from a single rambler to a customized
contemporary. And, it doesn’t stop with houses. System’s Built-Modular
producers are busy building banks, schools, office buildings, motels
and hotels. Chances are you’ve been in many modular structures and
probably never realized it.
Is financing
any different between site-built homes and System’s Built-Modular
Homes?
No distinction is made between system’s
built-modular homes 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 System’s Built-Modular
home.
What is the cost?
When you add up all the labor, material
and time savings 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. In the Loudoun area, these savings can be
as much as $20 to $40 per square foot. You will keep saving money
year after year, as the energy efficiency of your home keeps your
heating and cooling bills low.
|