Long Island New York - Montauk Lighthouse - Long Island NY Long Island New York - LongIsland.com features local information, business directory, news, press releases, classifieds, towns, schools, events calendar, forums, blog, restaurant guide, entertainment, nightlife, weddings, hotels, maps, weather, experts, articles, advertising, free eNewsletter and more on Long Island NY. Covering Nassau County to Suffolk County all the way out to Montauk and everything in between - Long Island's Most Popular Web Site is LongIsland.com - Long Island NY
Long Island weather - Islip, New York weather forecast
More weather 
Long Island's Most Popular Web Site for Long Island New York - LongIsland.com
Search Long Island New York Web Sites
Click here to go to the Nassau Coliseum - live entertainment, sports, concerts, music and more on Long Island New York
Long Island Cars - Long Island NYLong Island Classifieds - Long Island NYLong Island Business - Long Island NYLong Island Entertainment - Long Island NYLong Island Health and Fitness - Long Island NYLong Island Shopping - Long Island NYLong Island Tourism and Travel - Long Island NYLong Island Real Estate - Long Island NYLong Island Sports - Long Island NYLong Island Weddings - Long Island NY
It's Fri May 16, 2008  



Featured Business:
Shirlet.com Psychic Advisor
605 3rd Street
Nescopeck, PA 18635
570-759-0092
Find a Business
Get Your Business Listed



Advertising
Amusement Parks
Animal Shelters
Ask Mr. Long Island
Beaches & Parks
Boating & Fishing
Bulletin Board - Forums
Business Directory
Cars & Automotive
Charity & Volunteer Jobs
Chat - Long Island Blog
Classifieds
Coupons
Events Calendar
Experts & Articles
Golf
Health & Fitness
Help Wanted Jobs
Horoscopes
Hotels
I Love LI Store
Local News
Long Island Railroad
Maps & Directions
Map Store
Members Area
Movie Theaters
Museums
News Podcasts
Nightlife Directory
Personal Homepages
Personals
Pizza Contest
Polls
Press & News Releases
Radio - Listen Live!
Real Estate
Recipes
Restaurants
Schools
Shopping
Sports
Tourism
Towns
Weather
Weddings
Vineyards

Best Pizza Contest
Best Pizza Contest
Long Island Polls
Rising Gas Prices
How has the price of gas effected you?
 
Eating me alive
Frequent pain
Mild discomfort
No symptons
View Results
Previous Polls
LICares
Island Harvest
Long Island Podcasts
Long Island Rough Riders Soccer
Long Island Economy
Long Island business networking association for sales and marketing professionals - Execuleaders.org

 

 

Long Island Web Site of the Week Awards

 

Long Island Experts' Articles

Home Improvement






 






MODULAR HOMES: WORTHY OF CONSIDERATION

If you are planning an addition or planning to build a new home, you would be wise to consider modular construction. Forget preconceived notions about cheaply-constructed, pre-fabricated cookie-cutter boxes – that is not what modular construction is about. This article will introduce you to modular building and its advantages.

What Is A Modular Home?

Modular homes are distinguished from traditional site-built or “stick-built” homes in that they are built in a factory and assembled on site. They should not be confused with other types of partially factory built homes, such as precut, panelized or manufactured homes.

For precut homes, elements, and in particular, the wood pieces are factory cut and shipped, and assembled at the home site. Precut homes have been built in the U.S. since the late 1800’s. Sears sold mail order homes in the early 1900’s. Many of these are still inhabited in our area, especially in NY and NJ. Panelized homes consist of individual panels 8’ by up to 40’ that are factory-built and shipped, assembled at site. Manufactured homes are typically built in great part within factories and shipped to the home site, but are built to federal standards which may or may not be as strict as local standards. Placement of manufactured homes is limited to sites and conditions that can.

Unlike these homes built using these other methods, modular homes are built as boxes, or “modules”, which are constructed in a factory to exact specifications, transported to the home site and assembled on site. The types of materials used to create the modules are exactly the same as those found in conventional site-built homes.

Why Consider Modular Building?

Modular homes have several advantages over site-built homes, including superior quality, faster construction time, and lower prices.

Superior Quality

Many home builders are converting to modular home building. A shortage of skilled construction workers in several parts of the country has driven up costs and lowered craftsmanship. These conditions result in poor construction, delays and ultimately, unhappy customers. To combat this, and to gain more control in the building process, many concerned site-builders are turning to modular construction.

The factory environment greatly helps to organize the construction process. Labor in a factory is more closely supervised than site labor, and factory laborers are more stable and reliable. They also have greater opportunity to master their individual crafts, resulting in higher quality finished work.

The use of automated assembly equipment and assembly-line technique produces greater consistency of product quality and greater efficiency. Only framing materials of very good quality will work well with precision factory equipment. For example, wood that is warped, green or heavily flawed can slow down the assembly jigs, and these less-than-perfect materials are therefore rejected at the factory receiving door. Modular manufacturers purchase massive amounts of building material and can command significant attention from their suppliers. Materials are also stored in climate-controlled conditions and not left exposed to the elements. Reducing moisture content during the building process reduces the likelihood of mold later in the home.

Because modular homes are built to withstand highway transportation to the home site, and crane-lifting onto the foundation, they are built more sturdily than site-built homes. In addition to nails, special adhesive is used to fasten major components, such as walls. Double and triple headers are used where modules will be joined together. Unlike some site-built homes, modular homes are usually perfectly square since they are built on perfectly square jigs to ensure perfect joins at the home site.

Lastly, standard techniques employed in modular construction reduce air leakage significantly versus site-built practices. Testing on behalf of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s Energy Star Program has demonstrated that a correctly finished modular home outperforms a typical site-built home on air filtration. A tighter home means lower energy bills.

Faster Construction Time

A simple site-built house constructed by a competent custom builder will likely take at least one month longer to complete than a comparable modular home. For more complex houses, a custom builder may take at least two months longer than a modular builder. Modular methods avoid weather-related delays during the bulk of construction process, and the labor that takes place in the factory environment creates great efficiencies that speed the building process.

Lower Prices

The modular home manufacturing process creates cost advantages over site-built homes through lower labor costs and assembly-line efficiencies. Additional cost advantages are generated by lowered material costs due to negotiated volume purchasing, elimination of material losses due to weather damage, theft or vandalism, and reduction of waste.

According to estimates, in an area with average construction labor costs, one can expect to save about five percent versus site-built costs, for the portion of building done by the manufacturer and the GC. These savings may increase in areas where local construction labor costs are high. Obviously, no savings would apply for the costs to clear the land, install utility access, build the foundation and add landscaping or hardscaping.

The Modular Home-Building Process

There are three basic stages to building a modular home. A modular home dealer, possibly working with your own architect, designs your plan, determines building specifications and determines the price of the home. A modular manufacturer builds the home as it was designed and ships it to your building site. A general contractor (GC) puts the home together on site. The dealer, manufacturer and GC may represent one, two or three different companies. In most cases, however, manufacturers sell to dealers who sell to you, the homebuyer. It is recommended that you purchase from a dealer who is either an experienced GC or works hand in hand with an experienced GC.

----------
Tom Mirabella and Bob Roddini are homeowners. Like you, at times they needed help with repairs and remodeling, and have had difficulty in the past finding qualified and reliable contractors. Their goal was to connect homeowners who need remodeling and repair work with prescreened professionals ready to work. They created LIHome411.com as a one stop resource for Long Island home improvement projects big or small. You can find a directory of contractors and easy access to useful information about home improvement and repair, to inspire and encourage you to get it done, whether "it" is adding a master suite or fixing a leaky faucet.

[2008-05-04]

 Print this Page    Send to a Friend

View archived articles

 
LINKS


Long Island Home Improvements

About the Expert: Long Island Home Improvement is an advice area with resources provided on how-to projects, home improvements, repairs, design tips and creative ideas. The articles are written by individuals with varying degrees of expertise. Information may be used as general guide, but we recommend that you use your best judgement in regards to the scope of your project. Always consult with a contractor, architect or design specialist especially with major home improvement and repair. Check the Long Island Home Improvement Directory for additional resources and information.

If you are an expert in this field and would like to provide information for our readers to be featured on this page, please do so by submitting your information via our Expert Contact Form. Articles must be original content and will be reviewed. If accepted for online publication, your article may be featured here with credit to you as the author, a brief bio and picture if available.

Google
 
Web www.longisland.com
business.longisland.com events.longisland.com

Long Island Experts Main

For Experts:
Add / Modify / Delete Your Article

About LI · Add a URL · Advertising · Ask Mr. Long Island · Business · Contact Us · Free Newsletter · Link to Us · News · Site Help · Report a Bug · Privacy Policy · Terms of Service

© Copyrighted, LongIsland.com - Long Island, New York all rights reserved.

Long Island's Most Popular Web Site is LongIsland.com
Long Island's Most Popular Web SiteSM