In 1969, the federal government announced that it would hand out millions of dollars in subsidies to companies willing to try something new: build houses in factories.
Then as now, America was in the throes of a housing crisis. There werent enough places to live. Mass production provided Americans with abundant and cheap food, clothing, cars and other staples of material life. But houses were still hammered together by hand, on site. The federal initiative, Operation Breakthrough, aimed to drive up the production of housing and to drive down the cost by dragging the building industry into the 20th century.
It didnt work. Big companies, including Alcoa and General Electric, designed new kinds of houses, and roughly 25,000 rolled out of factories over the following decade. But none of the new home builders long survived the end of federal subsidies in the mid-1970s.
Last year, only 2 percent of new single-family homes in the United States were built in factories. Two decades into the 21st century, nearly all U.S. homes are still built the old-fashioned way: one at a time, by hand. Completing a house took an average of 8.3 months in 2022, a month longer than it took to build a house of the same size back in 1971.
Federal housing policy in the decades since the failure of Operation Breakthrough has focused myopically on providing financial aid to renters and homeowners. The government needs to return its attention to the supply side. Opening land for development, for example by easing zoning restrictions, is part of the answer, but reducing building costs could be even more constructive. Land accounts for roughly 20 percent of the price of a new house; building costs account for 60 percent. (The price of land is a larger factor in coastal cities like New York, but a vast majority of new housing in the United States is built on cheap land outside cities.)
The tantalizing potential of factory-built housing, also known as modular housing, continues to attract investors and entrepreneurs, including a start-up called Fading West that opened a factory in 2021 in the Colorado mountain town of Buena Vista. But Fading West, and similar start-ups in other parts of the country, need government help to drive a significant shift from handmade housing to factories. This time, there is reason to think it could work.
On a windy morning last month, I watched as wooden platforms the size of train cars moved down the Fading West assembly line, advancing to a new station every few hours as workers added walls and windows, wiring and insulation, dishwashers and cabinets. The finished boxes are trucked to building sites and swung into place by cranes. Houses consist of two to four boxes. Once theyre knitted together, the result looks like a traditional home.
Charlie Chupp, the chief executive, previously ran a company that built and shipped all the pieces of new stores for Starbucks, Einstein Bros. Bagels and other restaurant chains. Fading West is seeking to apply a similar model to building homes and apartments. We see ourselves as being in manufacturing, not construction, says Eric Schaefer, a former pastor who is now the companys chief evangelist, bending the ear of politicians, reporters and developers about the potential benefits of mass production and the changes necessary to support it.
Final assembly happens so quickly that it almost seems like a magic trick. In Poncha Springs, a town 30 minutes south of Buena Vista, I watched as a crane swung a 19,894-pound box over a concrete foundation. A worker on each corner checked the fit while two more waited in the basement to connect it to the foundation. As it was secured, a truck arrived with the next box.
The team of eight workers has sometimes assembled four houses in a single day.
Joanna Schwartz, the chief executive of Quartz Properties, which is using Fading Wests boxes to build the homes, said buyers sometimes come to see the show. They didnt have a house in the morning and then in the afternoon they can walk through it, she said.
Fading West says houses from its factory can be completed in as little as half the time and at as little as 80 percent of the cost of equivalent handmade homes, in part because the site can be prepared while the structure is built in the factory. A 2017 analysis by the Terner Center for Housing Innovation at the University of California, Berkeley, found similar savings for the construction of three- to five-story apartment buildings using modular components.
Factory building has other advantages, too. It can reduce waste, maintain higher standards of consistency and produce homes that are more energy efficient. It is not subject to rain delays.
It also offers a solution to the home-building industrys growing problems finding enough qualified workers, especially in high-cost areas. Manufacturers like Fading West can build where labor is cheaper and then ship homes to the places where people want to live.
But there are good reasons modular housing has remained the next big thing for a long time.
One basic problem is that houses are large objects, and unlike cars or airplanes, they are not designed to move. The result is that the savings from factory production are partly offset by the cost of transportation. (Some companies reduce transportation costs by shipping homes in smaller pieces, an approach pioneered by Sears and other retailers of build your own home kits in the early 20th century, but that just shifts the cost from transportation to assembly.)
The volatility of the housing market is also a problem. Traditional home builders rely on contract workers who are easily dismissed during downturns. Factory builders, which have high fixed costs, tend to go bankrupt. Housing downturns have ended a long line of ambitious and well-funded efforts to create the Model T of the housing industry. In 2006, on the cusp of the most recent housing crash, factory builders produced more than 70,000 homes. Since the crisis and the resulting wipeout, annual production has not exceeded 30,000 houses.
Neither volatility nor transportation costs might matter if factory home builders could match the efficiency gains found in other kinds of mass production. Brian Potter, a senior infrastructure fellow at the Institute for Progress, a nonpartisan think tank focused on technological innovation, gives the example of the Ford Taurus. Experimental models of the 1996 Taurus were built by hand, which cost almost half a million dollars per car. The car eventually retailed for less than $20,000.
Factory home builders have struggled to streamline construction. Mr. Potter spent several years looking for ways to make housing construction more efficient, an effort he narrated on a fascinating blog, before concluding that significant progress wasnt likely. Almost any idea that you can think of for a way to build a single-family home cheaper has basically been tried, and there was probably a company that went bankrupt trying to do it, Mr. Potter told me.
I think the history of the auto industry provides reason for more optimism. One lesson is that progress requires production at scale. There are a handful of car companies that each make millions of cars, and hundreds of home builders building a few hundred homes a year. Fading West, which aims to produce as many as 1,000 homes a year, says that isnt enough to justify investments in automation.
Efficiency gains also come from doing the same thing over and over again, but the idiosyncrasies of local building codes make that impossible. In Colorado alone, by Mr. Schaefers count, there are more than 300 distinct building codes, requiring adjustments for each new batch of homes. Fading West found that it had to use different roof designs for homes headed to the city of Fairplay and to a development just outside the city, because the county has stricter snow load regulations.
A sequel to Operation Breakthrough could help the industry overcome those challenges. The Canadian governments Rapid Housing Initiative is providing support for large-scale modular manufacturing by setting tight construction deadlines for affordable housing projects that obtain government funding, an approach the United States could emulate on an even larger scale.
The government also can push for the standardization of building materials and building regulations. Herbert Hoover, the great champion of industrial standardization, who during his years as commerce secretary in the 1920s worked successfully to establish uniform rules for products such as paving bricks, milk bottles and blackboards, argued that establishing consistent standards was the nearest thing to a free lunch. It would increase productivity, benefiting companies, workers and customers. Florida and California will always have somewhat different building codes, because hurricanes and earthquakes pose different challenges. But there is no reason for Colorado to have 300 different codes.
If it seems far-fetched that the government could revolutionize the home-building business, take a look at what sits on top of a growing number of American homes. The government has driven the spread and driven down the cost of solar panels through decades of investment and subsidies.
Its time to pay similar attention to the buildings underneath.
The Times is committed to publishing a diversity of letters to the editor. Wed like to hear what you think about this or any of our articles. Here are some tips. And heres our email: letters@nytimes.com.
Follow the New York Times Opinion section on Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, X and Threads.
Follow this link:
Opinion | Why Do We Build Houses in the Same Way That We Did 125 Years Ago? - The New York Times
- 'First Nail' celebration of new modular home builder - Roswell Daily Record - June 13th, 2024 [June 13th, 2024]
- How an American Dream of Housing Became a Reality in Sweden - The New York Times - June 13th, 2024 [June 13th, 2024]
- The Potential of Advanced Modular Housing Design for Post-Disaster Housing | HUD USER - HUD User - January 13th, 2024 [January 13th, 2024]
- Fort Myers Beach family rebuilds with quick and affordable modular home after Hurricane Ian - ABC7 News - January 13th, 2024 [January 13th, 2024]
- A prefab building revolution can help resolve both the climate and housing crises - The Conversation Indonesia - January 13th, 2024 [January 13th, 2024]
- Vertically Integrated Modular Housing Project Opens in Auburn, Washington | HUD USER - HUD User - December 20th, 2023 [December 20th, 2023]
- First ever modular home in Ingham County placed on the eastside of Lansing - FOX 47 News Lansing - Jackson - December 20th, 2023 [December 20th, 2023]
- View Floor Plans, See 3D Tours & Get Prices - Modular Homes - December 22nd, 2022 [December 22nd, 2022]
- Modscape Modular Homes - Innovative Prefab Homes Australia | Modscape ... - August 20th, 2022 [August 20th, 2022]
- New Climate Bill to Accelerate Phius-Certified Passive Home Adoption Driven by Need for Extreme Weather Resilience - PR Web - August 20th, 2022 [August 20th, 2022]
- ZHA's showcase in Seoul presents new directions of the metaverse - STIRworld - August 20th, 2022 [August 20th, 2022]
- Wiltshire planning applications: Plans to convert an old church | The Wiltshire Gazette and Herald - Gazette & Herald - August 20th, 2022 [August 20th, 2022]
- Dozens of cities embrace tiny homes for the homeless; officials in Southern Nevada bulldoze them - KTNV 13 Action News Las Vegas - August 20th, 2022 [August 20th, 2022]
- 'Where else do they want us to go?' Downtown Eastside residents face uncertain future in wake of tent removals - CBC.ca - August 20th, 2022 [August 20th, 2022]
- 13 Things You Need When Moving From an Apartment to a House - Bob Vila - August 20th, 2022 [August 20th, 2022]
- Hallmark Modular Homes - February 20th, 2021 [February 20th, 2021]
- Modular Homes Market Growing Popularity and Emerging Trends in the Market KSU | The Sentinel Newspaper - KSU | The Sentinel Newspaper - February 20th, 2021 [February 20th, 2021]
- koto design envisions the future of hospitality with 'hytte' modular cabins - Designboom - February 20th, 2021 [February 20th, 2021]
- Tignish working to amend bylaws to allow modular homes in town - peicanada.com - February 20th, 2021 [February 20th, 2021]
- It is small towns that suffer: Rural communities prepare for Ulster Bank pullout - The Irish Times - February 20th, 2021 [February 20th, 2021]
- Global Modular Homes Market 2021 Classification, Future Plans and Industry Growth with 2.9% CAGR by Forecast 2025 The Bisouv Network - The Bisouv... - February 20th, 2021 [February 20th, 2021]
- Backyard ADUs of Whately wins Small Home Hero Award - The Recorder - February 20th, 2021 [February 20th, 2021]
- Domestic Vacation and Buy-In Developments Adapt a Year Into the Pandemic - Barron's - February 20th, 2021 [February 20th, 2021]
- Is Amber Portwood moving onto ex Gary Shirleys property? - Monsters and Critics - February 20th, 2021 [February 20th, 2021]
- The Top 10 IKEA-worthy work from home furniture designs that will be the best investments of 2021! - Yanko Design - February 20th, 2021 [February 20th, 2021]
- Comprehensive Analysis of Modular Homes Market Profitable Key Business Trends Growth Rate and Top Key Players - NeighborWebSJ - February 16th, 2021 [February 16th, 2021]
- WeHOPE And United Hope Builders Announce Capital Campaign To Build Factory For Manufacturing Affordable Modular Homes Designed To Address Bay Area... - February 16th, 2021 [February 16th, 2021]
- Modular Homes Market 2020 | Covid19 Impact Analysis | Industry Overview, Growth, Revenue, Trends and Forecasts 2026 | Daiwa House, Laing O'rourke,... - February 16th, 2021 [February 16th, 2021]
- Modular Construction Has An Image Problem. Housing Proponents Are Trying To Fix It - Bisnow - February 16th, 2021 [February 16th, 2021]
- How Higher Green Standards Are Affecting the Housing Market - Innovation Origins - February 16th, 2021 [February 16th, 2021]
- Landfill gases could play role in Vespra St. housing project - BarrieToday - February 16th, 2021 [February 16th, 2021]
- The history in the walls of City Hall - The Navasota Examiner - February 16th, 2021 [February 16th, 2021]
- 140 homes for the homeless proposed next to future Arbutus Station in Kitsilano | Urbanized - Daily Hive - February 16th, 2021 [February 16th, 2021]
- This modular furniture system was designed to provide privacy and organization for co-living spaces! - Yanko Design - February 16th, 2021 [February 16th, 2021]
- The Top 10 cabin designs of January are here to provide the perfect architectural escapism! - Yanko Design - February 16th, 2021 [February 16th, 2021]
- Complete DIY Plans to Build the Home in the Film Herself Are Available for Free - Dwell - February 16th, 2021 [February 16th, 2021]
- Virtual meeting to hear about amended plans for housing at Westwood Lodge - The Isle of Thanet News - February 16th, 2021 [February 16th, 2021]
- Meet the bike-loving chief executive who wants to make his charity and himself redundant - Yorkshire Post - February 16th, 2021 [February 16th, 2021]
- Work starts on Bermondsey airspace development - The Construction Index - February 9th, 2021 [February 9th, 2021]
- Autovol Robots and Solutioneers Now Building Affordable Housing - PR Web - February 9th, 2021 [February 9th, 2021]
- TopHat to build modular homes at Urban & Civic's 6200-home project - Housing Today - January 20th, 2021 [January 20th, 2021]
- Modular Homes Market Set to Expand by 2021-2026 Focusing on Key Players Three Sinha, Olinco Engineering , Nuwani Construction , LAUGFS Holdings - The... - January 20th, 2021 [January 20th, 2021]
- Stacey Cassidy: Development of modular a key step on the road towards sustainable housing - Scottish Housing News - January 20th, 2021 [January 20th, 2021]
- ilke Homes secures first site in the South East of England - Planning, BIM & Construction Today - January 20th, 2021 [January 20th, 2021]
- Creating A Trust Is Only Half The Battle, It Needs To Be Supplemented - Insurance News Net - January 20th, 2021 [January 20th, 2021]
- What it takes to build a modular opera - The Boston Globe - January 20th, 2021 [January 20th, 2021]
- Letters to the Editor: Tuesday, January 19, 2021 | Opinion - pentictonherald.ca - January 20th, 2021 [January 20th, 2021]
- Augusta approves mobile home in zoning district where they are banned - Kennebec Journal and Morning Sentinel - January 20th, 2021 [January 20th, 2021]
- Department of Commerce invests $97 million in affordable housing projects - State of Reform - State of Reform - January 3rd, 2021 [January 3rd, 2021]
- Modular Construction Market Subjected to Expand Moderately by 2023 - Farming Sector - January 3rd, 2021 [January 3rd, 2021]
- Big Boom in Multifamily Modular and Prefabricated Housing Construction Market over 2020-2027 with Top Vendors Like ATCO, Skanska AB, Algeco, Katerra,... - January 3rd, 2021 [January 3rd, 2021]
- How the idea of the tiny house evolved in 2020 - Fast Company - January 3rd, 2021 [January 3rd, 2021]
- Modular Homes Market: Drivers, Restraints, Opportunities, and Threats 2020-2025 - The Courier - December 10th, 2020 [December 10th, 2020]
- Modular Construction Market Report 2018-2025 | Proficient Analysis of Key Players, Types, Future Prospects Details for Business Rate - SpinazzolaLive - December 10th, 2020 [December 10th, 2020]
- Modular Homes Market Size, Trends, Share, Analysis, Regional Outlook and Forecast 2020-2027 - The Haitian-Caribbean News Network - December 10th, 2020 [December 10th, 2020]
- Hunt begins for contractors to deliver factory-built homes in Oxfordshire - Planning, BIM & Construction Today - December 10th, 2020 [December 10th, 2020]
- This container house in the middle of the desert can be yours for $3.5M - Inman - December 10th, 2020 [December 10th, 2020]
- Inland Homes receives two new award wins - ShareCast - December 10th, 2020 [December 10th, 2020]
- Samsung nixes modularity to make MicroLED TV consumer-ready - New Atlas - December 10th, 2020 [December 10th, 2020]
- Modular architectural design that brings a healthy mix of Scandinavian design and sustainability to your home! - Yanko Design - December 4th, 2020 [December 4th, 2020]
- Impact Of Covid-19 on Modular Homes Market 2020 Industry Challenges, Business Overview and Forecast Research Study 2026 - Factory Maintenance - December 4th, 2020 [December 4th, 2020]
- Modular Homes Market Size, Trends, Growth, Scope, Overall Analysis and Forecast by 2027 - The Haitian-Caribbean News Network - December 4th, 2020 [December 4th, 2020]
- Manufactured Homes and Mobile Homes Market Comprehensive Analysis, Growth Forecast from 2020 to 2025 - AlgosOnline - December 4th, 2020 [December 4th, 2020]
- Latest Study explores the Manufactured Homes, Modular Homes, and Mobile Homes Market Witness Highest Growth in near future - News by Decresearch - December 4th, 2020 [December 4th, 2020]
- Factory_OS Raises $55 Million to Advance Modular Construction to Help Solve Housing Crises - ForConstructionPros.com - December 4th, 2020 [December 4th, 2020]
- Modular house build gets the go-ahead in Mirehouse | News and Star - News & Star - December 4th, 2020 [December 4th, 2020]
- COVID-19 recovery is an opportunity to tackle worsening climate crisis: New report - The Conversation CA - December 4th, 2020 [December 4th, 2020]
- Mochdre employment academy is just the job for 60 out-of-work tenants - North Wales Pioneer - December 4th, 2020 [December 4th, 2020]
- Housebuilding soars to a 33-year high in England - BuyAssociation - December 4th, 2020 [December 4th, 2020]
- Global Panelized and Modular Building System Market Growth in the Forecast Period of 2020 to 2026 With Top Companies: Algeco Scotsman, Champion Home... - December 4th, 2020 [December 4th, 2020]
- 100 new jobs to be created as modular homes building comes to sprawling Hull site - Business Live - November 8th, 2020 [November 8th, 2020]
- There's no such thing as affordable housing in Toronto - NOW Toronto - November 8th, 2020 [November 8th, 2020]
- The Best Lego Sets for Kids and Adults - BobVila.com - November 8th, 2020 [November 8th, 2020]
- Global Multifamily Modular Construction Outlook 2020-In-Depth Insight Of Sales Analysis, Growth Forecast And Upcoming Trends 2026 - The Think... - November 8th, 2020 [November 8th, 2020]
- Former Jersey City elected official indicted - The Hudson Reporter - November 8th, 2020 [November 8th, 2020]
- Meet the RESI Trailblazers | Insight - Property Week - November 8th, 2020 [November 8th, 2020]
- Global Manufactured Homes, Modular Homes, and Mobile Homes Market 2020 with COVID-19 After Effects Growth Drivers, Top Key Players, Industry Segments... - October 23rd, 2020 [October 23rd, 2020]
- Global Modular Homes Market Current Trends, SWOT Analysis, Strategies, Industry Challenges, Business Overview and Forecast Research Study - The Think... - October 23rd, 2020 [October 23rd, 2020]
- Manufactured Homes, Modular Homes, and Mobile Homes Market Detail Analysis focusing on Application, Types and Regional Outlook - The Think Curiouser - October 23rd, 2020 [October 23rd, 2020]
- Plans to turn derelict land in former pit village into more than 100 modular home - Nottinghamshire Live - October 23rd, 2020 [October 23rd, 2020]