Tag Archives: modular homes

Property Spotlight – Miller Ranch Porch House

Site Specific and Factory Sound: Lake | Flato joins the prefab party with an adaptable, modernist take on modular housing.

A couple of years ago, the team at Lake | Flato Architects got together to brainstorm ideas to help weather the recession. Even with a long list of design awards and a 2004 AIA Firm Award on their resume, the respected San Antonio-based practice was feeling the sting of the slowed-down economy. Associate partner Bill Aylor says the firm had long had a fascination with prefab, and living and working in Texas, where modular sheds and barns were common in the rural locations Lake | Flato often worked, it seemed a natural fit. “During our internal investigations we decided that if we did modular we wanted the designs to accomplish three things,” says Aylor. “We wanted to keep costs down, create a design that could have both prefab and site-specific elements combined without compromising design quality, and maintain a sustainable approach.”

Read more at: http://greensource.construction.com/green_building_projects/2012/1201-miller-ranch-porch-house.asp

When Prefab Becomes Fabulous: The Perks of a Well-made Kit Home

*Note this is an article from Australia so all dollar amounts are in Aussie dollars; check exchange rate.

It is architect-designed, environmentally friendly and cheap.

It may sound like an oxymoron, but a new range of well-designed, sustainable homes can be installed on site for as little as $65,000 for a one-bedroom house.

But there’s a catch: they are prefabricated.

Contact the appraisers at www.socalappraisalserv.com for your questions on value for a prefab/modular home.

For architect Bill McCorkell and builder David Martin who late last year launched Archiblox, that’s not a problem.

The stigma once associated with ”prefab” homes has largely disappeared as cost pressures, good design and sophisticated construction make building off-site more attractive.

Modular houses connect together like toy blocks. Each component is prefabricated, driven to the building site, lifted off the truck, placed on screw piles and joined together.

The process is relatively simple, efficient, stress-free and, compared with conventional building techniques, fast. A home can be on site in as little as 12 weeks.

Read more: http://smh.domain.com.au/real-estate-news/when-prefab-becomes-fabulous-the-perks-of-a-wellmade-kit-home-20120213-1t0em.html

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