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Pre-fab-ulous? Yes!!!

Posted by fabgram on 5 April 2007

ONARCHITECTURE – Pre-fab-ulous? Builder does it the Swedish way
By DAVE MCNAIR
April 5, 2007

The architectural dream of churning out factory-built houses the way Henry Ford churned out Model-Ts is nothing new. In fact, the curator of Assembly Required: Contemporary Prefabricated Houses, a show in Richmond last year, described the “prefab” house as “modern architecture’s oldest new idea.”

Indeed, Sears, Roebuck & Co. started its Houses by Mail program in 1908, and in the 1920s Buckminster Fuller introduced the futuristic precursor to his geodesic dome. Unfortunately (or fortunately for some), factory-built house designs, at least in America, seem not to have escaped the architect’s studio, and when they did, it was to create what Americans have learned to associate with the term “prefabrication”– double-wides, or the cheap manufactured contraptions seen sailing down interstates behind “oversize load” signs.

In the last decade, so-called modular and panelized houses have gained wider acceptance. Indeed, we’ve chronicled their development in these pages, showcasing the UVA architecture department’s successful ecoMod project, the growing use of factory-built SIPS panels, and most recently a factory-built ThermaSteel house ["Man of steel: Scouten touts new technology," March 8].

However, despite the success of these technologies, the stigma associated with prefab houses persists.

For example, when architect Alan Scouten built his house in Ivy of ThermaSteel, a combination of steel and styrofoam that has proven strong enough to withstand hurricane winds and provides superior insulation, a neighbor attempted to sue him because he believed the house was going to lower property values.

According to Swedish builder Per Sjolinder, that prejudice against prefab houses is uniquely American. In countries like Sweden and Japan, he says, prefabrication is the rule, not the exception.

“In Sweden, we have been building prefab houses on a large scale for 75 years, and today over 90 percent of all homes in the country are put together in a factory,” Sjolinder says, adding that factory-built houses have become a way to increase energy efficiency in a cold climate and lower housing prices in a country of high labor costs.

Indeed, as far back as 1985, The New York Times was touting Swedish mastery of the prefab house. At a development in the Hamptons, 50 Swedish “kit” houses went up in as many days, 1/50 of the time needed to build comparable stick-built houses. The combination of craftsmanship and technology impressed even a US government technology expert.

“The Swedes have basically taken the building craftsman and given him a lot of high-technology equipment,” Henry C. Kelly, a senior associate in the Office of Technological Assessment, told the Times. ”Essentially, they are hand-building a house, but doing it with high technology in a factory so they can do it quickly. There’s no question about the quality.”

On a beautiful hillside in Ivy, Sjolinder and his company, EuroHomes USA, are building two model houses– one 2,300 square feet and the other a whopping 6,200 square feet– that he hopes will showcase the best of what Swedish (and American, he points out) innovation has to offer. In addition, the ambitious Swede wants to create America’s first prefab factory operation building Swedish “closed-wall” panel houses. Eventually, Sjolinder says, he hopes to produce 500 to 1,000 homes a year.

As Sjolinder explains, closed-wall systems are much different from the panelized or modular construction most Americans are familiar with. In addition to being completely customized, the walls of both houses arrive with everything in them: windows, doors, electric and plumbing hook-ups, switches, hardware, any electronics, and even the exterior wall covering. Sjolinder says that once the design and components of a wall are chosen, 35 to 40 of them can be built in his factory in several hours, enough to construct the shell of his 2,300-square-foot model, which took only a day to raise.

Touring the unfinished houses, it’s virtually impossible to tell their components were manufactured in a factory. In fact, on close inspection, the walls reveal innovative details and materials. For example, instead of the wood shims normally found around a door casing to make it square, a standard practice in stick-built construction, adjustable bolts hidden in the door casing secure it to the frame, making it easier to adjust if the door becomes unaligned. Window sills can never rot because they are polished stone, and the Swedish-made triple-pane windows open and flip around ingeniously.

And, of course, since the electric and plumbing are already installed (inspections for both take place before the wall panels are delivered), there’s minimal subcontracting work involved. Still, Sjolinder points out that craftsmen are important to the process of piecing the house together and adding various details.

We also took note of the wall construction, which at first looked like a standard stick-built wall. Apparently, after years of using SIPS panel and other similar technologies, which have only begun to gain acceptance in the US, the Swedish building industry realized that they actually cause health problems.

“The houses we made were sometimes so ‘tight’ that moisture couldn’t go anywhere,” says Sjolinder. “And so we had problems with mold. People were getting sick. In Sweden, they tried to use machines to suck the air in and out, but they were often very expensive and added an air pressure to the inside of the house that wasn’t natural.”

The solution, he says, was to create a four-layer “breathing wall” encased in a thick Gore-Tex panel. Functioning much like the popular Gore-Tex jackets athletes love because they’re light, warm, and breathable, the walls provide the same kind of superior insulation that SIPS panels do, without trapping air inside the house. In fact, Sjolinder claims it should cost only $125 to $150 a month to heat and cool the 6,200-square-foot house.

From room to room, unusual details continue to catch the eye: drawers that cleverly require a post-toddler’s strength to open, hidden latches on doors to keep them from slamming shut, radiant heat beneath the basement floor to control moisture, “whispering floor” panels to block the sound of stomping feet, European-style gas water heaters that heat water as it passes through the system, and a stairway and ceiling posts milled from poplar trees on the property.

At the end of April, Sjolinder says, he’ll hold the first of several open houses to showcase his prefab models.

So might these models finally change American attitudes about factory built houses? If the excitement Sjolinder displays as he shows the house is any indication, it may not matter to him.

“I’ve been thinking about and planning this for nine years,” he says. “And I still think it’s fun.”

Source

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Trendsetter To Build Gulf Region Condos

Posted by fabgram on 2 April 2007

Alabama-Based Developer Chooses Fleetwood’s Trendsetter Homes for New Gulf Region Condominium Development
PR-Inside Press Release
2007-04-02

RIVERSIDE, Calif., April 2 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ — The Fleetwood Homes division of Fleetwood Enterprises, Inc. , an industry leader in factory-built housing for more than five decades, announced today that its modular housing division, Trendsetter Homes, has been selected for a new 160-unit housing development on the Gulf Coast.

Consisting of a mix of single and two-story buildings with four different elevations, the Alabama condominium development will offer floor plans ranging in size from 1,140 square feet to 2,030 square feet. The units will be built in the new Trendsetter Homes modular facility in Douglas, Georgia. The developer will begin showing model units to potential buyers by late summer. The three Trendsetter projects Fleetwood has announced over the past two weeks — Ft. Bliss barracks, Alabama workforce housing, and these condominiums — are expected to result in total revenues of approximately $30 million.

“These homes will be constructed in a factory-controlled environment according to the same local building codes which govern site-built homes,” said John H. Riddle, Vice President of Trendsetter Homes. “We are working with an architectural firm with offices throughout the Gulf Region that has provided design assistance on our residential projects to ensure that they are compatible with local standards.”

Riddle said that Trendsetter’s relationships with local architects, builders, and developers represent an extraordinary advantage for its construction work in the Gulf Coast region. He added that Trendsetter was established with the objective of being flexible in its construction designs and working with firms that had expertise in complementary areas to create buildings that are uniquely suited to specific projects.

“In addition to the advantages modular homes provide in speed to completion, Trendsetter’s homes offer a high level of durability because they have been engineered to meet the high wind ratings required in the Gulf Region,” said Riddle. “They are also more environmentally friendly due to minimal construction site impact and recycling of waste. Accordingly, noise pollution and traffic caused by deliveries and subcontractors are greatly reduced.”

For more information about Trendsetter Homes, please visit http://www.trend-setterhomes.com/.

About Trendsetter Homes

Trendsetter Homes is the modular housing division of Fleetwood Homes, which operates 20 manufacturing facilities nationwide and is headquartered in Riverside, Calif. Trendsetter produces modular residential and commercial buildings in a factory-controlled environment for residential builders and the military. The Trendsetter Homes website can be accessed at http://www.trend-setterhomes.com/.

About Fleetwood

Fleetwood Homes is the housing brand of Fleetwood Enterprises, Inc. , a leading producer of recreational vehicles and manufactured homes through its subsidiaries. This Fortune 1000 company, headquartered in Riverside, Calif., is dedicated to providing quality, innovative products that offer exceptional value to its customers. Fleetwood operates facilities strategically located throughout the nation, including recreational vehicle, factory-built housing and supply subsidiary plants. For more information, visit the Company’s website at http://www.fleetwood.com/.

Contact: Kathy Munson, Director of Investor Relations, 951-351-3650

JoAnne Foist, Director of Marketing Services, 951-351-3367

Source: Fleetwood Enterprises, Inc.

Source

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Introducing Concrete Modular Homes

Posted by fabgram on 22 March 2007

First Concrete Modular Homes Earn Fortified ”for Safer LivingĀ®” Designation
03/21/2007

TAMPA, FL — Royal Concrete Concepts is the first manufacturer to provide single-family concrete modular homes that will earn the “Fortified … for safer livingĀ®” designation from the Institute for Business & Homes Safety (IBHS), a nonprofit association of insurers and reinsurers.

The “Fortified” program specifies construction and design guidelines to increase a home’s resistance to natural disasters such as hurricane winds, wildfires and flooding, with localized guidelines based primarily on the extreme events that may occur in the region where the home exists.

“All single-family homes offered by Royal Concrete Concepts will receive the Fortified for safer living designation when sited according to our qualifying criteria,” said Chuck Vance, Fortified program manager for IBHS. “By offering affordable homes up to 2,500 square feet, Royal Concrete Concepts is furthering the ‘Fortified’ program’s goal to make disaster-resistant housing an option for more people.”

In order to meet or exceed the High Velocity Wind Zone requirements of the Florida Building Code, Royal Concrete Concepts will utilize patented, steel- reinforced concrete modules designed to withstand Category 5 hurricane force winds. Integrated insulation provides high-energy efficiency while providing strong resistance to heat.

“Homes by Royal Concrete Concepts are designed to ensure quality as well as maximum performance in safety and energy efficiency at an attainable price,” said Wally Sanger, president of Royal Concrete Concepts. “The potential for reduced insurance premiums and improved energy efficiency contribute to the lower total cost of ownership of a Royal Concrete Concepts home.”

Royal Concrete Concepts is nationally recognized for manufacturing stronger, safer schools and classrooms that give school districts the ability to meet growth demands in less time and at lower costs than conventional construction methods. Their modular residential product line includes a wide variety of floor plans and options approved by the State of Florida’s Department of Community Affairs.

For more information, please visit: http://www.royalconcreteconcepts.com

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Homebuilder Brings Jobs

Posted by fabgram on 22 March 2007

Company Offers Low-Cost Solution To Gulf Housing Recovery
Bob Moser
Mar 21, 2007

The International Trade Center’s largest tenant showed off a new assembly-line style of home-building Tuesday, considered a possible low-cost solution to housing recovery in the Gulf Coast.

Louisiana System Built Homes occupies 300,000 of the 1 million square feet at the former Martin Mills Fruit of the Loom factory in St. Martinville, which closed in 2000. The process is streamlined to follow a factory-style model, proven to cut costs and turn out highly engineered modular homes that are at least 80 percent complete.

“We’re building quality houses that are so energy efficient, it’ll cost you $2 a day to live in that house,” said Aubrey Shoemake, LASBH president.

Energy savings will come from building panels made with Oriented Strand Board, an engineered wood, and six inches of insulation foam inside the walls. Electric tankless water heaters, about the size of a school textbook, will heat water at a fraction of the cost of traditional gas water heaters.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency confirmed LASBH’s modular homes withstood a hurricane better than site-built homes, and they are able to withstand 140 mph winds or higher, Shoemake said.

Homes are being sold only to builders, who’ll place the pre-made pieces on empty lots and apply finishing touches for the homebuyer.

After costs for the builder are added in, these homes have sold for $120,000 to $160,000, on average, in other states, said Katrina Collette, spokeswoman for LASBH.

The company expects to churn out an average of three homes per day eventually, with the assembly system running around the clock with three shifts of workers.

The first batch of 24 homes, which may be completed within the next two months, has been ordered by a builder for Lafourche Parish. More than 100,000 people have registered with the Road Home program to rebuild homes in Louisiana, potentially a key customer base for LASBH and other modular home builders.

More than 30 people are employed, many from the St. Martinville area that struggled after Martin Mills closed seven years ago. Two hundred employees likely will be hired by the end of the year, Shoemake said.

Tommy Theriot, a St. Martinville native, is one of the first locals to join the assembly line system. He had been doing part-time painting and maintenance jobs in Lafayette but said he is happy to have a steady job again much closer to home. Theriot will focus on installing plumbing, one of the last steps to building the modular homes.

Most materials for the homes also are being bought from about 10 area businesses.

Acadiana Building Compon-ents, which opened in the former Kaplan Rice Mill seven months ago, could see an incredible boost in its production of engineered roof and floor trusses by working with LASBH, said co-owner Rick Cloud.

“They’re avoiding the weather in this factory,” he said. “It’s a standardized, faster building process for everyone.”

The trusses, triangles used in the home’s framing, will be held at the hinges by metal connectors with dozens of little teeth, instead of traditional nails.

Homes with these trusses can withstand 150 to 200 mph winds, Cloud said, and have saved the roofs on homes in Florida under extreme weather conditions.

Source

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