Tag Archives: real estate appraisal

Prefab Homes Promise Efficiency, Cost Savings

Most are still built on-site, as opposed to being prefabricated and trucked in. That doesn’t make sense, says Sheri Koones, author of four books on prefab housing, including the new “Prefabulous and Almost Off the Grid: Your Path to Building an Energy-Efficient Home” (Abrams).

“Would you want your car to be built in your driveway?” says Koones, of Greenwich, Conn. “Of course you wouldn’t. You want your car made in a climate-controlled factory by skilled professionals on an assembly line. Wouldn’t you want the same thing for your home?”

Have a question about a prefab homes; contact the green appraisers at www.scappraisals.com for your value questions.

Prefab housing, a concept that’s been around at least since Sears and other companies introduced mail-order kits in the early 1900s, generally refers to factory-built modular and panelized housing. They are built to the same code as traditionally built homes, with additional structural requirements to make sure they withstand being transported. Depending on the home’s size, multiple pieces (or modules) are delivered to a site and secured together onto the foundation in a matter of hours.

Prefab homes are typically 60 percent to 90 percent complete at the time of delivery but often require an additional two or three weeks for finishing touches.

By contrast, mobile homes, which carry much of the stigma against prefabricated housing, are built to a more lenient federal code, arrive on their own wheels, depreciate quickly and are not generally zoned for urban use.

Because modular prefab homes are indistinguishable from site-built homes, they have become increasingly popular, pushed by the growing interest in green building.

“Prefab homes are much more efficient and environmentally friendly. There is so much less waste in the manufacturing process. Any excess materials can be recycled into other homes or sent back to the manufacturer instead of ending up in a Dumpster,” Koones says. “Because the materials aren’t exposed to the elements, prefab houses avoid problems with mold, rot and bacteria… .”

She also cites worker health and safety as a benefit to building homes off-site. Still, some consumers remain unsure of what a green home built off-site would entail.

Greenfab, a Seattle company, recently used a newly built prefab home as a teaching tool. After producing the first platinum LEED-certified prefab home in Washington State, Greenfab opened the modern house to the public for three months. School groups, builders, buyers and nonprofit groups toured it.

“People in the neighborhood just saw a foundation in the morning, and came home to find a completed house,” says Johnny Hartsfield, founder and president of Greenfab. “Our main goal as a company is to educate the public on the benefits of green and prefab.”

He also lists cost as a reason to go prefab. Since the homes are pre-designed, he says, there are no architect fees, time delays or cost overruns.

“Site building is loud and stressful,” Hartsfield says. “We want to make building your home more exciting and fun — we don’t want you to hate it or get divorced over it.”

Prefab homes can be customized. Some companies offer environmental upgrades beyond standards such as low-VOC paint and efficient appliances.

“We can install the foundation for water collection and solar adaptability in our homes,” Hartsfield says. “Even if they don’t have the money to set up a full solar collection system, we can build their home with the infrastructure to do that down the line.”

Read more at: http://www.utsandiego.com/news/2012/oct/20/tp-prefab-homes-make-inroads-promise-efficiency/?print&page=all

Disclaimer: for information and entertainment purposes only

Take a Video Tour of an Earthship

Video: http://www.democracynow.org/2012/10/11/earthship_biotecture_renegade_new_mexico_architects

Earthship creator Michael Reynolds, interviewed by Democracy Now’s Amy Goodman. What’s amazing is how jungle-like it is indoors, with bananas growing, a pond for tilapia and much more. Reynolds shares his view that everyone lived in houses that supplied all their needs, there would be no reasons for war. He also said he’s working on Earthship townhouses to prove that the same techniques can work in an urban setting.

Have a unique property?  Contact the appraisers at http://www.scappraisals.com for your value questions.

Reynolds calls himself a “biotect,” as he lost his license as an architect for breaking rules — mainly involving the handling of sewage, he says. Here’s how he explains the sewage design in Earthships:

“We get the water from the sky — rain and snowfall — and we use it four times: We use the water for taking a shower; and then we use the water for running through the botanical cells growing plants; and then we collect it again at the end of the botanical cell and flush the toilet with that same water; and then that water gets treated in a septic or anaerobic system, and then it overflows into more botanical cells that are used for landscaping. So, in the end, no water ever leaves the premises that came from the sky.”
Disclaimer: for information and entertainment purposes only

The (Almost) All-American Home

Chocolate limestone from Lueders, TX

When Karen Lantz, a Houston architect, was in high school, the Armco steel plant where her father had worked for two decades shut down.

“He was 47,” she said. “It was tough.”

He found other jobs, but the financial loss stung, and the family’s options became more limited.

Lantz put herself through community college and then architecture school at the University of Houston. Now 37, Lantz is a working architect, but in 2009, when she started planning her dream house in the grip of a recession, her father’s experience weighed on her.

People all over the United States were out of work; if she bought American-made products for the house, she could do her part. But how far could she take it? Was it possible to build a house entirely of products made in America?

Will this add value to your home?  Contact the appraisers at http://www.scappraisal.com for your value questions.

Some things were easy. Lantz traveled to a quarry in Lueders, Tex., to find chocolate-brown limestone. The marble chips that made up her terrazzo came from Marble Falls. She found Heatlok Soy 200 foam insulation in Arlington and windows manufactured in Stafford. Other items required her to look further afield: Lantz bought shower drains from Iowa, a skylight made in South Carolina, hose valves made in Alabama, fences from California and baseboards from Georgia. She developed the skills of a private investigator.

Read more at: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/14/magazine/the-almost-all-american-home.html?_r=1&ref=realestate

Disclaimer: for information and entertainment purposes only