What exactly is a manufactured home?
The Definition of a Manufactured Home From the
Manufactured Housing Institute
The answer may surprise you.
A manufactured home is a single-family house constructed entirely in a
controlled factory environment, built to the federal Manufactured Home
Construction and Safety Standards - better known as the HUD Code.
Factory-Built Homes
Many types of structures are built in the factory and designed for long-term
residential use. In the case of manufactured and modular homes, units are built
in a factory, transported to the site and installed. In panelized and pre-cut
homes, essentially flat subassemblies (factory-built panels or factory-cut
building materials) are transported to the site and assembled. The different
types of factory-built housing can be summarized as follows:
Manufactured Homes: These are homes built
entirely in the factory under a federal building code administered by the U.S.
Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). The HUD Code went into effect
June 15, 1976. Manufactured homes may be single- or multi-section and are
transported to the site and installed. The federal standards regulate
manufactured housing design and construction, strength and durability,
transportability, fire resistance, energy efficiency and quality. The HUD Code
also sets performance standards for the heating, plumbing, air conditioning,
thermal and electrical systems. It is the only federally-regulated national
building code. On-site additions, such as garages, decks and porches, often add
to the attractiveness of manufactured homes and must be built to local, state or
regional building codes.
Modular Homes: These factory-built homes are
built to the state, local or regional code where the home will be located.
Modules are transported to the site and installed.
Panelized Homes: These are factory-built
homes in which panels -a whole wall with windows, doors, wiring and outside
siding - are transported to the site and assembled. The homes must meet state or
local building codes where they are sited.
Pre-Cut Homes: This is the name for
factory-built housing in which building materials are factory-cut to design
specifications, transported to the site and assembled. Pre-cut homes include
kit, log and dome homes. These homes must meet local, state or regional building
codes.
Mobile Homes: This is the term used for
manufactured homes produced prior to June 15, 1976, when the HUD Code went into
effect. By 1970, these homes were built to voluntary industry standards that
were eventually enforced by 45 of the 48 contiguous states.