The Sonoma panelized kit home design features a welcoming Living/Dining area with vaulted ceilings and a spacious bathroom with two sinks and a walk-in shower. Other popular features include an expansive laundry room with wash tub, ample storage, and a utility closet. The Sonoma Plan provides extra living space on your existing property for family housing, home office, backyard retreat, or rental income.
FAQs:
Prefab homes provide you with the benefits of improved quality control, better energy efficiency, faster build times, cost-effectiveness, and customization.
The durability of a prefab home depends on the materials used, the contractor who put it together, and whether maintenance is regularly done after the fact. If all of these are well done, a prefab home's durability can easily outlast a standard-built house.
The average cost of medium-large, one-story prefabricated home materials is $150,000-$200,000. Additional building costs may vary depending on your local labor costs, land price, and other fees like licensing and permits.
A manufactured home is almost fully constructed off-site and then transported to the building site, while a modular home is fully prefabricated but with little to no customization to better mass production capabilities.
Prefab homes typically last for decades, about 30 to 100 years, and longer with premium materials and excellent maintenance. Lifespan depends on materials, installation quality, climate, and routine upkeep.
Although the exact times can vary due to conditions like team size and weather, we estimate projects to take between 2 and 5 weeks on average.
The average cost of a small to medium one-story prefabricated home is ranging between $50,000 and $100,000.
If there are certain features of a pre-engineered design you don’t like, there are a range of modifications available, or even a custom plan, to meet all your requirements.