Not every member of society can afford a stick built home on a lovely concrete foundation. This is a good substitute available to be able to own. Mine is 80 feet long and 2300 square feet. I do wish it was supported by a concrete foundation, but this is why this kind of housing is so affordable. They have to take shortcuts, allowable by law, of course. (before people start ranting) But I have a lovely home that I'm proud of.
And your "home" has no equity and depreciates in value each year. After maybe 10 years, your bug-infested cardboard home will be fodder for a bulldozer as it will need to be replaced.
Ms. Cross look it up. A mobile home depreciates as quickly as an automobile. And you cannot deny the fact that very few stick built homes depreciate in value. Even in less than desireable areas, the land will eventually be valuable for gentrification, highways, etc. a mobile home is a piece of crap and and the sales people are not telling the whole truth. I bet these hucksters would not live in what they sale. And the way they go on about how gorgeous they are is hilarious. To me, my home is what I call gorgeous, open, airy with beautiful coastal views, top line appliances and real hardwoods. And the mobile homes or whatever they are calling them now on our coast were mostly twisted metal during last fall's hurricane. And the winds were 150 mph and under. These so called homes did not hold up to the wind speed the sales people and manufacturers say they do.
@@pce-sz1gi - To me, you sound what I call snooty, judgemental and just not a nice person. 😡 The mobile homes I'm looking at are definitely not depreciating and they're not made like they were years ago. So, quit being so judgemental and remember, that coastal view and your top of the line appliances can all be gone tomorrow. Then where will you be? 🤔
Where ever it was delivered to the foothills of somewhere, what a beautiful location. No way no how would I want anything to do with trying to maneuver a semi with the house attached to it! 😬
Those of you who commented that modular homes like this are "unsafe" and "fire traps" need to do your homework. Modular homes are NOT the same as manufactured homes. Modulars are, in fact, built to the same (and in some cases more stringent) codes and restrictions as stick built homes. They therefore are just as strong and safe as any stick built home, and can withstand high winds and even tornadoes up to EF-2 strength. Many regular homes can't even match those standards!) Therefore please do some research before posting such rude and disrespectful comments. As for the owners of this beautiful home, CONGRATULATIONS!
I prefer the term MANUFACTURED. It’s made in a factory to standards that are approved by all states. I rented several,of them and my renters were very satisfied. Like any kind of house, stick or brick, the first twenty years is basically problem free, after that, they all need some fix’in.
This is a manufactured home. Modular is placed on a foundation. This home was still left with it wheel frame so it is a mobile aka manufactured home not a modular home.
This is N0T modular home. It is a factory made, comely called mobile home. Much difference, as a modular comes on a truck In pieces, sides, floor, ect. Usually better made than a mobile home.
I'm not gonna hate on these people's home like so many have done but it's certainly not a modular home. I know this because I in fact do live in a modular home that was brought in by three semi tractor tailor trucks on huge flatbed trailers. Then they also brought in a huge crane that lifted all three separate modules on to a concrete based foundation. Then they built a 750 sqft garage as the finishing touch.
Yeah but if you take good care of it and keep up with it it can last even more. No matter what is still a house. Just like those built houses that people don't keep up with it of course it's going to rot right
You obviously haven’t looked at builds for them or site built homes. My husband is a plumber and the specs and materials are exact same as a site built home except for those homes that are built on a slab foundation.
please explain to your audience the difference between a modular home and a manufactured home. We live in Florida and everyone thinks that the modular home that we had previously prior to the move here is actually manufactured home. I tell them that, in fact, a manufactured home is a mobile home or double wide mobile home. it is my understanding that a modular home is an actual home but built in the factory not on site.
A modular home is a home that is brought in from a factory and placed on a permanent foundation. A modular home typically cost more because it has to come off the trailer is it moved with and because of that it has to be made with 2x8 instead of 2x6 construction. A manufactured home is made with 2x6s and stays on the trailer it is moved with usually some sort of decorative stone is put around the bottom to hide the trailer part.
Looks great to me (insert snarky smile here), have your "trailer" delivered to the neighborhood with a lot of other trailers. It seems to me there is a better do this. I personally would maybe do this if I had some acreage to set my trailer on. I would not want neighbors so close to me if I was to move. I have lived my entire life with neighbors just 25' from my house and sometimes it is not nice. I also did not like all of the water and mud around, it looks like it would be trouble with mold forming because the installation was not dry when it was assembled.
In all honesty, this home appears to be "manufactured", not "modular". Setup for modulars is much different and usually requires a large crane to lift the various pieces into place.
I have always wanted to see how this was done. My husband and I are considering downsizing to one. Question? What happens if the truck carrying the house wrecks and/or damages the house? Is that something you would be responsible for on your insurance or what?
Camper Hollow It's a specifically designed dolly made to clamp to the steel I beams. A real modular home arrives on site via a flatbed trailer. The modules are then lifted off by a crane and set into place. Manufactured, aka mobile, homes like this are towed to the site and either have their Axel's removed or, as in this example, a specifically designed dolly is used. These dollies are becoming more and more the norm. Rather than the exception. The reason for this is due to failulres resulting from cheap single use axels, hubs and tires that tend to fail during travel. The main primary cause of failue are a result of uneven weight, road conditions, extended travel, and poor quality.
Well, we had from the old house sewage and water on the same site. Of course, we had to hire a plumber to make all the connections and also an electrician to connect us to power.
I have a question. How would u find a place to set up your modular house?? Do you have to get a permission from your state or is is through the real estate property?
An looks like they put it in a trailer park so they don't own the land unless I am wrong an if you don't own the land to me that sucks I wouldn't want that I also would have sat it on a cement slab
Not true. Modular homes can be set on a dirt pad, concrete slab, raised foundation, or even a full foundation with basement. Mobile homes have a steel chassis. All others do not. That's the big difference.
What kind of place is this, which allows these "trailer" homes? We don't have these in my country, other than in special dedicated trailer parks. You cannot have them anywhere else - at least not legally. Very few people here want to live in them, anyway.
DP 63 Your statement saddens me! So many people can’t afford housing including vets and seniors, and manufactured homes may be all they can afford. Their is no rent control which is so out of control, where the rich get richer and live in grandiose homes and enjoy all those vacations, whereas the poor and low income can’t afford much at all. Have a heart
@ṖauḶee ḂlueṢtreet Nice to meet you, troll. Lol. Haven't seen the troll bridges as much on mobile home posts, but being bored must have rabbit trailed you here. :)
Manufactured Homes will not last more than 50 years. Very poor investment. Stick built homes last for hundreds and hundreds of years. Homes built in the 1600's in New England are still standing. A Manufactured Home will NEVER last that long.
My experience is different; my new stick built home has so many problems from poor quality construction compare to the previously owned 1988 Palm Harbor double wide. 2x6 and plywood throughout whereas the new home is mostly 2x4 and osb.
Well I built homes for 18 years and modular homes now days are built even stronger than stick frame homes now, the house you refer to from the 1800s we're built using true 2x4 solid oak studs and true oak siding, so that's why they have lasted, the new homes are all built out of yellow line which will not from the inside out
@roger I’m supposing you’re planning on living in a particular house for 200 years then? Have at it. Everything eventually goes away. It’s not good to shame people for doing what they can afford. Plus, some stick built houses are built incredibly cheap.
I hate these "cardboard homes." They are garbage! Just build a house if you want a house. These HUD-tagged cardboard houses depreciate in value and don't last any longer than the average trailer house. They also cannot be insured by 99% of insurance companies. They are insured by trailer/mobile home insurers which is junk coverage. They only use 1/8"-1/4" thick materials, the lack insulation, and modular homes do not have a strong skeletal structure like regular houses do. Instead of walls filled with studs, the walls are filled with simple 1/8" thick frame strips and only have a stud where necessary to hold wallboard. No sheet rock in these things. I owned one. They are garbage! Buy or build a regular house! Today modular cardboard houses cost about the same as many standard houses.
Had my Moduline delivered in spring of 2014... No regrets! Had it installed on steel pilings. If you go back a bit on my channel I have the full placement.
These guys are a AMAZE N!! theywork together so well , they know their job.. if it werent for them people wouldnt have nice homes delivered.. Thank U Guys...
Developers, Why don't we set a few sets of train rails in a big field for the project first. After the houses arrived, we can rail them onto the rails.
This is not a modular, a modular does not have the means to be carried by a truck in this manner, they will not go on axles, it's still a nice home. It also takes months to piece together a modular.
Not the same thing, built to different codes, Manufactured homes are built to HUD Code and Modular are built to area spefic codesI.E. Ohio Basic Building Code.
This does NOT appear to be a modular home. A modular home must have a foundation. What this looks like is a manufactured or mobile home since it's staying on it's wheels.
LAS CASAS RECiEN HECHAS,, NO TiENEN QUE ENViDiAR A OTRAS PORQIUE SON ESPECTACULARES LiNDAS. Y LE PONES UNA PiSCiNA Y VAMOS ESTO ES LiBERTAD THOSE HOUSES NEW NEW ARE AWSOME iN OWN LOTS AND PUTS A SWWiMMiNG POOL TOO LETS GO , THiS iS FREEDOM.
I am three years behind but I just want to say congrats and this is amazing. I will be going through this process really soon. Great video!!!
They make it look easy to set up. I drive a truck. I would never try this job, they have nerves of steel. My utmost respect to these crews.
As a fellow truck driver, I haul fuel and it's a PITA getting into some our stores. Salute to this crew 💪
Not every member of society can afford a stick built home on a lovely concrete foundation. This is a good substitute available to be able to own. Mine is 80 feet long and 2300 square feet. I do wish it was supported by a concrete foundation, but this is why this kind of housing is so affordable. They have to take shortcuts, allowable by law, of course. (before people start ranting) But I have a lovely home that I'm proud of.
And your "home" has no equity and depreciates in value each year. After maybe 10 years, your bug-infested cardboard home will be fodder for a bulldozer as it will need to be replaced.
nurse lori it is a trailer for god's sakes. Very dangerous during storms and are fire traps.
Any home can *depreciate* due to age, damage, and neighborhood. Stop the madness! Most often it's the acreage and area you're paying for anyway.
Ms. Cross look it up. A mobile home depreciates as quickly as an automobile. And you cannot deny the fact that very few stick built homes depreciate in value. Even in less than desireable areas, the land will eventually be valuable for gentrification, highways, etc. a mobile home is a piece of crap and and the sales people are not telling the whole truth. I bet these hucksters would not live in what they sale. And the way they go on about how gorgeous they are is hilarious. To me, my home is what I call gorgeous, open, airy with beautiful coastal views, top line appliances and real hardwoods. And the mobile homes or whatever they are calling them now on our coast were mostly twisted metal during last fall's hurricane. And the winds were 150 mph and under. These so called homes did not hold up to the wind speed the sales people and manufacturers say they do.
@@pce-sz1gi - To me, you sound what I call snooty, judgemental and just not a nice person. 😡 The mobile homes I'm looking at are definitely not depreciating and they're not made like they were years ago. So, quit being so judgemental and remember, that coastal view and your top of the line appliances can all be gone tomorrow. Then where will you be? 🤔
Where ever it was delivered to the foothills of somewhere, what a beautiful location. No way no how would I want anything to do with trying to maneuver a semi with the house attached to it! 😬
Those of you who commented that modular homes like this are "unsafe" and "fire traps" need to do your homework. Modular homes are NOT the same as manufactured homes. Modulars are, in fact, built to the same (and in some cases more stringent) codes and restrictions as stick built homes. They therefore are just as strong and safe as any stick built home, and can withstand high winds and even tornadoes up to EF-2 strength. Many regular homes can't even match those standards!) Therefore please do some research before posting such rude and disrespectful comments. As for the owners of this beautiful home, CONGRATULATIONS!
I prefer the term MANUFACTURED. It’s made in a factory to standards that are approved by all states. I rented several,of them and my renters were very satisfied. Like any kind of house, stick or brick, the first twenty years is basically problem free, after that, they all need some fix’in.
This is a manufactured home. Modular is placed on a foundation. This home was still left with it wheel frame so it is a mobile aka manufactured home not a modular home.
Can u please do an update on how this house looks from the outside and in... thank u
I live in one of the manufactured and could not be more pleased with it. What really pisses me off is the US PO insists on calling it a trailer .
This is N0T modular home. It is a factory made, comely called mobile home. Much difference, as a modular comes on a truck In pieces, sides, floor, ect. Usually better made than a mobile home.
Props to that truck driver. I’m a truck driver and I want no parts of that!!
I don't know how much those drivers get paid but it's not enough.
I too moved a house in American truck simulator
GOOD JOB THiS iS FREEDOM iN OWN LOT 🌈😇👍
Nice house! 👀👍
Amazing affordable sweet homes.😁😇
I'd be a nervous dam wreck . Doing this for a living . Just watch makes me nervous
Haha I thought the same thing. I have a lot of respect for people who do this job.
I'm not gonna hate on these people's home like so many have done but it's certainly not a modular home. I know this because I in fact do live in a modular home that was brought in by three semi tractor tailor trucks on huge flatbed trailers. Then they also brought in a huge crane that lifted all three separate modules on to a concrete based foundation. Then they built a 750 sqft garage as the finishing touch.
Was the crane service very expensive?
It’s all about location anyway, they last 30-40 yrs, that’s all you need.
Yeah but if you take good care of it and keep up with it it can last even more. No matter what is still a house. Just like those built houses that people don't keep up with it of course it's going to rot right
You obviously haven’t looked at builds for them or site built homes. My husband is a plumber and the specs and materials are exact same as a site built home except for those homes that are built on a slab foundation.
Is there a follow up to the finished product?
A home is a home
People that do modular delivery and setup are awesome!
please explain to your audience the difference between a modular home and a manufactured home. We live in Florida and everyone thinks that the modular home that we had previously prior to the move here is actually manufactured home. I tell them that, in fact, a manufactured home is a mobile home or double wide mobile home. it is my understanding that a modular home is an actual home but built in the factory not on site.
A modular home is a home that is brought in from a factory and placed on a permanent foundation. A modular home typically cost more because it has to come off the trailer is it moved with and because of that it has to be made with 2x8 instead of 2x6 construction. A manufactured home is made with 2x6s and stays on the trailer it is moved with usually some sort of decorative stone is put around the bottom to hide the trailer part.
Amazing!
1st thing is that that home is not a modular. It is a HUD code manufactured home. Modulars don't have steel frames & are not set up on blocked piers.
FoghornLeghornism. You are correct.
Nailed it! I was gonna state the same but seen it's already been done.
F
You are 💯 percent correct!!!! I hate how some dealers/builders try to say they are something that they are not.
Basically what I explained above. You did bettet.
Son unos artista tremendo trabj todos muy profesionales 👏👏👍
Nice
Amazing
Looks great to me (insert snarky smile here), have your "trailer" delivered to the neighborhood with a lot of other trailers. It seems to me there is a better do this. I personally would maybe do this if I had some acreage to set my trailer on. I would not want neighbors so close to me if I was to move. I have lived my entire life with neighbors just 25' from my house and sometimes it is not nice. I also did not like all of the water and mud around, it looks like it would be trouble with mold forming because the installation was not dry when it was assembled.
Xe gì to khổng lồ vậy bạn 👍 👍 😍 😍 máy móc thiết bị hiện đại
Awsome friend
That's a mobile, aka manufactured, home. Modular homes arrive on flatbed trailers. Mobile homes are towed to the site.
In all honesty, this home appears to be "manufactured", not "modular". Setup for modulars is much different and usually requires a large crane to lift the various pieces into place.
I have always wanted to see how this was done. My husband and I are considering downsizing to one. Question? What happens if the truck carrying the house wrecks and/or damages the house? Is that something you would be responsible for on your insurance or what?
My guess is that it is the responsibility of the trucking company. They would have the insurance to deal with the damage.
I need someone to do the installation of my mobile home. you can do it ??
COOL!!!!
Interesting stuff. I wondered how they moved a home that didn't have wheels attached to it.
Camper Hollow It's a specifically designed dolly made to clamp to the steel I beams. A real modular home arrives on site via a flatbed trailer. The modules are then lifted off by a crane and set into place. Manufactured, aka mobile, homes like this are towed to the site and either have their Axel's removed or, as in this example, a specifically designed dolly is used. These dollies are becoming more and more the norm. Rather than the exception. The reason for this is due to failulres resulting from cheap single use axels, hubs and tires that tend to fail during travel. The main primary cause of failue are a result of uneven weight, road conditions, extended travel, and poor quality.
So do the two pieces just fit together like a puzzle? It just locks together?
So this is where the haters go when there not talking politics
So funny, yet sad because it's true.
wow,ist das schön,das ist ja SUPER.Meine Glückwünsche !!!!!
Endlich kann ich Danke sagen, Jeannette.
it looks like a double wide with no wheels
never seen a modular home with a steel frame... I think it is a manufactured home... my house is a modular, no steel anywhere in the frame
On and on what YOU DOONT SEE!
bones007able Hi, please share the manufacturer and if you are happy with your home?
What's wrong with a big yard ???? Not so close so you can hear your neighbors fart or cough
Beautiful HOUSE
no slab or foundation needed?
I wonder how all the plumbing and all that stuff is built underneath.
Well, we had from the old house sewage and water on the same site. Of course, we had to hire a plumber to make all the connections and also an electrician to connect us to power.
EricaYE6 🙋just wanna say..."yu are beautiful Erica😍
We are getting ready to have our manufactured home built. Any one know the cost?
I have a question. How would u find a place to set up your modular house?? Do you have to get a permission from your state or is is through the real estate property?
Modular home
How much do the homes cost?
This is a mobile home not modular home. Modular homes have concrete slabs.
Modular home us not the same as mobile home
Modulars are better and does not deppreciate as a mobile home
I want a modular
Hallo Peter,
wie viel hast du für das Haus bezahlt und von wem hast du es bauen lassen? Und vor allem wo?
Seting up this house on pallets???😬🤔
Yes!
Yrene Cedeno it’s just temporary till they level it with blocks.
Odd...I would only buy one on a concrete foundation
Also my house is 2500 sq. feet .
Price for this homes?
I'm finding it weird? buying such a nice home and no cement pad, those blocks will adventuely sink?? and the hose will need to be adjusted again🤣
An looks like they put it in a trailer park so they don't own the land unless I am wrong an if you don't own the land to me that sucks I wouldn't want that I also would have sat it on a cement slab
With the plumbing and electric already set up kinda...how long is the process of setting this home up? 1 month?
5 days
🏠👏👏👏👍👍
Cuanto cuestan de un cuarto de dormil
Is this in Oregon or Washington?
cool video, but how much does it cost to have one set up after you buy it? like $20,000?
The setup as shown on the video is included in the price of the home. Electrical, sewage, water hookup are additional costs.
Chris Craft dude im in the middle of moving my double wide in right now and the total price im paying is $126,000
the cost of just the home is just about 149500.00
Watch NEVER BUY A CLAYTON MANUFACTURD HOME on You Tube
This is a mobile home not a modular home it's on concrete blocks a modular home sets on concrete slap
Not true. Modular homes can be set on a dirt pad, concrete slab, raised foundation, or even a full foundation with basement. Mobile homes have a steel chassis. All others do not. That's the big difference.
There are mobile homes, manufactured homes and modular homes. This is a manufactured not a modular.
otherwise known as a double wide (mobile home)
Pros
People can build thier own homes with a home owners permit much better than this option
Is this actually affordable?
Sometimes more affordable than an overpriced home just because the real estate is high.. Alot of these modular homes are very well constructed.
What kind of place is this, which allows these "trailer" homes? We don't have these in my country, other than in special dedicated trailer parks. You cannot have them anywhere else - at least not legally. Very few people here want to live in them, anyway.
DP 63 Your statement saddens me! So many people can’t afford housing including vets and seniors, and manufactured homes may be all they can afford. Their is no rent control which is so out of control, where the rich get richer and live in grandiose homes and enjoy all those vacations, whereas the poor and low income can’t afford much at all. Have a heart
como cuando le quieres quitar la casa a alguien😄😄😄😄😄😄😄
like
$?
Cuanto Cuesta por mober una traiila como media Miya
Me urjesaber pamoberla pronto
O de dos cuarto
Wrong machine
This looks like Bigfoot territory
that did not look level
A Manufactured Home IS NOT the American Dream
@ṖauḶee ḂlueṢtreet Nice to meet you, troll. Lol. Haven't seen the troll bridges as much on mobile home posts, but being bored must have rabbit trailed you here. :)
Manufactured Homes will not last more than 50 years. Very poor investment. Stick built homes last for hundreds and hundreds of years. Homes built in the 1600's in New England are still standing. A Manufactured Home will NEVER last that long.
My experience is different; my new stick built home has so many problems from poor quality construction compare to the previously owned 1988 Palm Harbor double wide. 2x6 and plywood throughout whereas the new home is mostly 2x4 and osb.
Well I built homes for 18 years and modular homes now days are built even stronger than stick frame homes now, the house you refer to from the 1800s we're built using true 2x4 solid oak studs and true oak siding, so that's why they have lasted, the new homes are all built out of yellow line which will not from the inside out
@Roger Evans do you think a couple in their 50's or 60's that are retiring could give a rats ass if their house lasts 50-years, or several hundred?
@roger I’m supposing you’re planning on living in a particular house for 200 years then? Have at it. Everything eventually goes away. It’s not good to shame people for doing what they can afford. Plus, some stick built houses are built incredibly cheap.
I hate these "cardboard homes." They are garbage! Just build a house if you want a house. These HUD-tagged cardboard houses depreciate in value and don't last any longer than the average trailer house. They also cannot be insured by 99% of insurance companies. They are insured by trailer/mobile home insurers which is junk coverage. They only use 1/8"-1/4" thick materials, the lack insulation, and modular homes do not have a strong skeletal structure like regular houses do. Instead of walls filled with studs, the walls are filled with simple 1/8" thick frame strips and only have a stud where necessary to hold wallboard. No sheet rock in these things. I owned one. They are garbage! Buy or build a regular house! Today modular cardboard houses cost about the same as many standard houses.
yay they are delivering and setting up my new retirement home !!!
moo cow Good for you Brother.
I am so happy for you what a beautiful place and home enjoy enjoy this part of your life your retirement this is your time to enjoy I'm happy for you
It looks really nice😍
Had my Moduline delivered in spring of 2014... No regrets! Had it installed on steel pilings. If you go back a bit on my channel I have the full placement.
These guys are a AMAZE N!! theywork together so well , they know their job.. if it werent for them people wouldnt have nice homes delivered.. Thank U Guys...
What company is this
Mobile h ome light switch
Great job guys! Especially the truck drivers like Wow
The entire Crew...Awesome...but hats off to the truck driver...because.my hubby is a T.Driver...thanks for vid I've always wondered about this process
How did you not have a heart attack watching it all be delivered??? Im watching and not only amazed but terrified the trucks could slip etc. 😱😱😱😱
Developers,
Why don't we set a few sets of train rails in a big field for the project first.
After the houses arrived, we can rail them onto the rails.
This is not a modular, a modular does not have the means to be carried by a truck in this manner, they will not go on axles, it's still a nice home. It also takes months to piece together a modular.
Where is the foundation ?
95% of these homes don't have one. You yourself can hire someone to put one down.
Kad imaš SVOJ KROV NAD GLAVOM NITKO TE NE MOŽE ISTJERAT. NI KOMANDIRAT. 👁️👁️🏠👍👍👍👍🥰🥰🥰🥰❤️❤️❤️🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹
This is a manufactured home not modular
Not the same thing, built to different codes, Manufactured homes are built to HUD Code and Modular are built to area spefic codesI.E. Ohio Basic Building Code.
This is beautiful country where is this located please😊. I want this house too😁
Add another one askewed and you have modular....ha ha ha
Mobey Catirac then y is it not on a slab?
Old Gringo Local code doesn't require mobile homes to have a permanent foundation.
This does NOT appear to be a modular home. A modular home must have a foundation. What this looks like is a manufactured or mobile home since it's staying on it's wheels.
This is a manufactured home. Modular homes are delivered and set up on permanent foundations. Not tied down.
Fascinating! Great work
LAS CASAS RECiEN HECHAS,, NO TiENEN QUE ENViDiAR A OTRAS PORQIUE SON ESPECTACULARES LiNDAS. Y LE PONES UNA PiSCiNA Y VAMOS ESTO ES LiBERTAD THOSE HOUSES NEW NEW ARE AWSOME iN OWN LOTS AND PUTS A SWWiMMiNG POOL TOO LETS GO , THiS iS FREEDOM.
That's a manufactured home aka mobile home, not a modular home.
not amodulsr, that's a manufactured home. it was mostly built off-site
How much does it cost to deliver from say Minnesota to California
All I have seen was the delivery not a bit of "set up" a propos where is the foundation on which the modular houses will be set upon
I want a home did you guys delivery in Hamilton NJ
Hopes this is not green terra homes because you will find a lot of issues as soon as they delivered your house
We build Prefab homes too!