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Home Energy Magazine Online March/April 1998
Manufactured Housing: Proving Ground for SIPs?
By Allen D. Lee and George James
HUD-code manufactured housing is one of the fastest
growing types of housing and one of the most affordable. Recent studies
suggest that introducing structural insulated panels (SIPs) into the manufactured
housing industry may be an effective way to improve energy efficiency,
improve construction quality, reduce dependence on diminishing and increasingly
costly lumber supplies, and bring down the cost of SIPs.
Manufactured homes, often referred to as mobile
homes, are constructed in a factory under conditions that permit systematic
cost and quality control. For the past five years, the U.S. Department
of Energy (DOE) and Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) have been
investigating the feasibility of building manufactured homes using SIPs.
HUD-code manufactured homes are transported structures
built on a permanent chassis and regulated by the U.S. Department of Housing
and Urban Development (HUD). The HUD building code is preemptive, so HUD-code
housing is not subject to local or state codes. The market share of manufactured
homes has grown rapidly in the past five years; today they constitute about
one-third of all new single-family homes in this country. In 1996, about
360,000 manufactured homes were produced (see "Heat
Pumps and Manufactured Homes: Making the Marriage Work," HE
Nov/Dec '96, p. 14).
Energy efficiency improvements in manufactured
homes have not kept pace with the advances in site-built homes in many
locations. Bonneville Power Administration, utilities, state energy offices,
and their industry partners in the Pacific Northwest have conducted voluntary
programs to address this need. These programs have highlighted the need
to investigate other construction materials that might improve energy efficiency.
The volatility and general upward trend of lumber prices has been another
force pushing the industry to investigate other construction materials.
SIPs offer several advantages that might make
them attractive to the manufactured housing industry, yet important questions
remain. The SIP industry sees manufactured housing as an attractive and
potentially very large market.
SIP producers tell researchers that SIPs are
a good match with manufactured housing because both rely on assembly line
production techniques. SIP producers also note that a major advantage is
the possibility of keeping panel production rates at high levels year-round.
Underutilization of production facilities appears to be one of the major
contributors to SIP costs.
When SIP producers identify potential disadvantages
of using SIPs in manufactured homes, one major concern is the SIP industry's
lack of familiarity with HUD-code housing. Panel manufacturers say that
HUD-code producers are probably resistant to change. SIP producers also
acknowledge that panels are probably not currently cost-competitive with
conventional construction.
In 1992-93, PNNL researchers surveyed six regional
HUD-code manufactured home producers. They presented foam panel technical
specifications, and then administered a questionnaire. They wondered what
initial impressions manufacturers had about how using foam panels in manufactured
homes would affect production and design. Table 1
summarizes the perceived advantages and disadvantages from the survey and
from subsequent industry input.
| HUD-Code Manufacturers' Perceived
Advantages and Disadvantages of Using SIPs in HUD-Code Housing |
| Perceived Advantages |
Perceived Disadvantages |
-
Reduce reliance on wood
-
Allow use of less expensive windows
-
Increase interior volume
-
Improve component strength
-
Reduce labor
-
Production line oriented
-
Minimal floor plan dimension modifications
-
Reduce infiltration sealing and caulking
-
Improve thermal performance
-
Improve quality control
|
-
Cost
-
Difficulty wiring
-
Unfamiliar technology
-
Structural engineering and testing requirements
-
Floor system redesign
-
Limit or alter flexibility for customization
-
Production line sequence alteration
-
Uncertainty about effects of transportation on structure
|
Manufactured home producers anticipated cost reductions
from labor savings and improved quality control. Improved shear strength
could be an advantage that would reduce damage during transportation. Manufacturers
said that because SIPs are assembly line products, they might integrate
well with the assembly line process used to manufacture homes. They also
said that compared with other alternative materials, SIPs would require
the fewest changes in floor plans.
Manufacturers identified several potential disadvantages
to using SIPs as well. Their biggest concern was that SIPs would probably
cost more to use, initially. Many of their comments reflected a lack of
familiarity with the product, including how wiring would be done. They
identified the floor system as the component requiring the most redesign.
Some felt that SIPs would reduce design flexibility. They all raised the
issue of obtaining approval under the HUD code--and specifically, what
engineering and testing would be required. They were also uncertain how
transportation would affect a manufactured home constructed of SIPs.
At this point, there is no way of knowing what
it would cost to use SIPs in manufactured homes. Very likely, the costs
will be higher initially, but volume production might lead to significant
cost reductions in the long run.
Demo Project
For almost a year, PNNL and DOE have been working
with manufactured home producers and SIP manufacturers to develop a demonstration
project for testing the use of SIPs in manufactured HUD housing.
This demonstration will show the feasibility
of using SIPs in a home that complies with the HUD code. This will necessitate
going through the usual review and inspection process and demonstrating
that the homes comply with HUD's requirements, including performance during
transportation. A secondary objective will be to document the design and
construction process, including labor requirements and costs. Data for
the first units built of SIPs will not reflect conditions when SIPs are
fully integrated into the production process, but the information will
be useful to suggest where improvements can and should be made.
Allen D. Lee, formerly of PNNL, now works
with XENERGY Incorporated in Portland, Oregon. George James is program
manager of the Industrialized Housing Program at U.S. Department of Energy.
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