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Week of February 14, 2005

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* Demand for Rental Housing Poised for Improvements in 2005
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* Senate Passes Class Action Bill, House Approval Expected This Week
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President's Message

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Housing Politics

* President Proposes Spartan Spending on Some Housing Programs
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* Survey Finds Contractors Often Underestimate Expenses
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Multifamily

* NAHB Statistical Model Helps Identify Apartment Features That Bring Higher Rents
* Apartment Builder Andrew Chaban Honored for Affordable Housing Advocacy

Small Builders and Remodelers

* A Cool Kitchen Checklist to Wow Your Clients
* Kitchens, ‘Hiving’ and Financing to Drive Remodeling Trends in 2005
* Will You Be the Next Remodelor™ of the Month?

Building Systems

* Covenants Prohibiting ‘Prefabricated’ Housing Can Unintentionally Exclude Systems-Built Homes

Seniors Housing

* Marketing, Customer Satisfaction, Design to Be Featured at Senior Housing Symposium

Education

* Take Advantage of National Designation Month — Before It Ends

Research

* Report Calls Smart Kitchens a ‘Technology to Watch’

State and Local

* Florida Builders Determined to Continue Fight Against ‘Outrageously High’ School Impact Fee
* New Hampshire Takes Up Regulation and Licensing to Curb Contractor Abuse

Workforce Housing

* Accommodative Zoning Helps Developer Build Affordable Homes in Newport News

Labor

* Proposed Budget Would Cut Job Corps Funding, Move Youthbuild to Labor Department
* Freddie Mac and NAHB Student Chapter Job Site Events Focus on Housing for Working Families

Building Products

* 30-Year Warranty Offered on EIFS Residential Systems

Builder's Engineer

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Building News Coast To Coast

Association News & Events

* HomeAid and ‘Extreme Makeover’ Build Transitional Shelter for Two Denver Families
* Get GM Discount Pricing on More Than 80 GM Vehicles
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* Calendar of Events

NBN Back Issues

 

Covenants Prohibiting ‘Prefabricated’ Housing Can Unintentionally Exclude Systems-Built Homes

As more builders and consumers are looking to factory-crafted homes and components for better efficiency and performance, the NAHB Building Systems Councils is working to clear up public confusion about the term “prefabricated.” When used too broadly or erroneously, the term can result in the exclusion of systems-built homes from residential communities.

Generically, “prefabricated” can be used to define any type of housing or component that is, in any way, constructed in a factory before it is shipped to the home site. This applies to roof trusses and floor panels, as well as to certain types of housing, including modular, panelized, log and concrete homes.

Confusion arises, however, when the term is also applied to manufactured housing, including trailer or “mobile” homes. “Prefabricated” is too general a term to accurately describe the advantages of code-compliant, factory-crafted housing.

While the construction of “systems-built” homes does begin in a factory, there is more involved in their production than prefabrication. While they are built with prefabricated components, they are also assembled in a precise system to meet local and state building codes. Structurally, they are at least as strong as homes built entirely on site and they show comparable appreciation in value.


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Building Systems Councils Advocacy Chairman John Colucci of Westchester Modular Homes says that confusing “prefabricated” and “systems-built” can often lead to unintended consequences. “Many times, in an effort to exclude manufactured homes — or mobile homes — from subdivisions, land developers and real estate lawyers will rely on boilerplate text that bans all ‘prefabricated’ homes. While these restrictive covenants will exclude mobile homes from a community, they also unintentionally bar modular, panelized, concrete and log homes.”

Systems-built construction applies to roughly 30% of all new housing being produced, and as it continues to gain in popularity across the country, using “prefabricated” and “systems-built” interchangeably can create problems for developers, builders and home buyers.

“Once covenants that prohibit a certain type of housing are drafted and accepted, they are very difficult to overturn,” noted Colucci.

The NAHB Building Systems Councils represents the builders, suppliers and producers of modular, panelized, log and concrete homes.

For more information about systems-built housing and how to draft covenants that include these types of homes, contact NAHB’s Building Systems Councils at 800-368-5242 x8576.
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