Comment by bluGill
2 days ago
The modern construcion site is a factory. They move the entire factor to the job, but that doesn't mean it isn't a factory.
2 days ago
The modern construcion site is a factory. They move the entire factor to the job, but that doesn't mean it isn't a factory.
It's sort of a blend. For many houses, the walls and roof trusses are delivered pre-built. Possibly even pre-wired, insulated, and drywalled. They are then stood up on site, and a moderate amount of connecting framing and finish work done by hand.
Labor and materials isn't the problem with housing costs. It's onerous permitting and zoning and code requirements.
Even the traditional style most of the studs are pre-cut to length. And much of a modern factory happens on the job side - they just move the tools the site each time. Of course houses are not built identical and so there are differences - but the variations are things that are not hard for the factory to deal with.
Can you give me an example of a code requirement on a modern home that you think is wrong or onerous?
Anything that requires a hearing as opposed to a clerk approving it as routine.
The nice thing about a factory built house compared to an independent contractor is you don't have to wait weeks between job types, your plumbers are on hand as soon as it's ready for them to get started.
With that said, the advantage disappears compared to national builders- the guys who buy up big farm fields and build entire subdivisions all in one go before they even have buyers. They can keep crews rotated between jobs in a fairly predictable schedule, so the only thing holding anyone back compared to the factory is bad weather preventing digging out room for foundations.
Even you little homebuilder can do that. the planning is standard and predictable so they line it up as needed.
you as a one off can't because the plumber isn't going to give you the priority needed.