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BUILDING
CODES ENSURE QUALITY
Manufactured homes are built to strict, national building
codes that regulate, design, construction, strength, durability,
transportability, fire resistance, energy efficiency and quality control.
Performance standards for beating, plumbing, air conditioning, thermal and
electrical systems are also set.
This code is the part of the National Manufactured Home
Construction and Safety Standards Act, otherwise known as the "HUD Code." The
familiar red seal attached to the exterior of the manufactured home is your
assurance the home has been built to high standards and passed as many as 200
inspections during its construction.
Congress passed this act for three interrelated reasons:
- to preserve access to affordable housing for all;
- to facilitate interstate shipment of homes from factories
all over America that would meet or exceed building codes no matter where
located; and
- states were not uniformly regulating home construction
An independent study by the University of Illinois
Architecture Building Research Council concluded that the HUD Code is comparable
to and in some areas exceeds commonly used local building codes. Where the
HUD Code differs results in important benefits to manufactured home buyers.
Local codes will tend to be "prescriptive." The HUD Code is
performance based. The difference can be summarized in this
manner:
- prescriptive codes tell the builder, "use this material,
no matter what;"
- performance-based codes tell the builder, "this is the
standard the materials you use must reach."
Unlike local building codes, the HUD
Code is specifically designed to be compatible with the factory
construction process. Prescriptive codes often lag years behind
materials and technology available to builders.
Performance-based standards allow builders to
take advantage of current technology, improved construction methods and
superior raw materials.
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And just like any other standard, a building code is only as
good as its enforcement. HUD Code enforcement is more uniform and consistent
because inspections take place in the factory under controlled conditions, and
fewer inspectors have more experience inspecting more homes.
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