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sbp
11-10-2002, 03:35 AM
Was it ever really?

Mobile Homes Go Upscale — Jacuzzi, Anyone? (http://abcnews.go.com/sections/us/DailyNews/trailerparks021108.html)

Could it be that the beleaguered trailer park is finally getting some respect?

Well, trailers have gotten a foothold in swanky Beverly Hills, and appear set to get their own historic monument.
And trailers today — now called mobile homes, or "manufactured housing" by the industry — offer perks such as Jacuzzis and custom kitchens, and dealers insist you'd be hard pressed to tell one from a traditional "site-built" home.

"They've made incredible strides," says Brian Ballinger, a service manager at Tom Raper RVs in Richmond, Ind., one of the largest RV and mobile home dealers in the nation.

"Basically anything that you'd want in a site-built home, we can do."

For several years, the industry has been pushing to move upscale from the much-ridiculed boxlike single-wide.

At Coastal Homes in Brunswick, Ga., a typical customer these days will spend around $40,000 for a three-bedroom, two-bath double-wide, with a dining room and "huge kitchen."

"Those days of single-wide sales that used to drive our sales, they're gone," says Coastal Homes owner Joe Barlow.

People who conjure up images of low ceilings, thin walls and a floor with the "trailer-park bounce" would be surprised by the quality of a modern mobile home, he insists.

"You probably wouldn't recognize it," Barlow says proudly. "If I didn't tell you what it was, you probably wouldn't know."

Mobile homes today can have garages, porches, breezeways, and steeped roofs likes those found in traditional homes. They come in styles ranging from Victorian to Cape Cods.

The move toward more elaborate mobile homes is evident nationwide. Single-wide trailers accounted for only a quarter of all new mobile home sales last year, according to the Manufactured Housing Institute.

And despite the name, most mobile homes are never moved.

In 2000, 22 million Americans lived full-time in "manufactured homes," according to the MHI. Residents — typically retirees or young, lower-income couples — have an average age of 52.6 and a median income is $26,900.

They are cheaper than traditional homes — averaging $48,800 each, plus the cost of renting land, compared to $207,000 for an typical new standard home — but they have other costs associated with them. Lenders typically charge significantly higher interest rates for mobile home mortgages, and mobile homes lose value over time, unlike the typical traditional house.

Buyers at Coastal Homes these days pay 8.5 percent to 10 percent interest rates on their mortgages, significantly higher than owners of permanent homes.

Brushing Up the Image …

The move upscale isn't the only way mobile homes are trying to burnish their image.

The Los Angeles City Council is pushing to make its Monterey Trailer Park a historic monument. If the council approves the L.A. Cultural Heritage Commission's request, the Monterey site would join such Southern California icons as the Hollywood hillside sign.

As the Monterey Auto Camp, the park appeared soon after Model T's first hit the roads.

Down the road in Beverly Hills, the rich and famous are chowing down on Wally Burgers and "Hunka Hunka Burnin' Love" pancakes at the Airstream Diner — a converted trailer that offers a warm-hearted — albeit kitschy — take on trailer-park culture.

Many mobile-home residents just shrug off the bad image.

"I'm just really happy there," says Joan Benkoil, who lives with her husband in a mobile-home community by the Pacific Ocean, in San Pedro, Calif. "I just can't complain about anything."

The 55-and-over residents have a nine-hole golf course, a heated pool, saunas, and a dog run, among other amenities.

"It's not the picture one conjures up at all," Benkoil says. "It certainly should not be put down that way anymore as trailer trash."

If she has any gripes over mobile home living, it's the cost. A rental plot can run upward of $900 a month.

"I wish it was a little cheaper," she admits.

Even at more traditional trailer parks, poverty does not always mean desolation.

With a monthly rental charge of as little as $110 a month, the Shady Acres Mobile Home Park, in Albany, Ill., may be one of the least expensive housing options in the region. But the retirees and young low-income families at the 48 mobile homes there keep their trailers tidy, nonetheless.

"It's nice and clean," says Mary Main, the park's manager. "Everybody takes care of their own yards."

… But a Long Way to Go

Still, fancier mobile homes, historic monuments, and a hip diner have not overcome the trailer's image as the barely adequate last refuge of the poor.

The jokes are everywhere, and can be downright cruel. You know you are "trailer trash" when the Halloween pumpkin on your porch has more teeth than your spouse, according to one attempt at humor. Or when you've been married three times and still have the same in-laws. Or if you think the last words of "The Star-Spangled Banner" are "Gentlemen, start your engines."

The list goes on and on.

"There is a stigma," admits Betty Tripp, the founder of the Mobile Home Board, which publishes newsletters for mobile-home parks throughout California. "It's 'trailer trash — these people can't afford anything else.'"

Even the effort to rehabilitate the trailer park's image has become fodder for critics.

"First it was a 'trailer,' then a 'mobile home,' and now the preferred nomenclature is 'manufactured housing.' We predict the next moniker will be 'candominiums,'" jokes Drbukk.com, one of the many satirical Web sites devoted to mocking trailer life.

Problems From Drugs to Forced Relocation

And of course many trailer parks are as grim as critics imagine.

Some — like the Valley Village Mobile Home Park, in the North Hollywood section of Los Angeles — are filled with rusted out, ramshackle homes that authorities say are littered with drug dealers and prostitutes.

Even well-kept trailer parks often fight with neighboring communities over water and sewage access, and zoning laws.

In areas of steady growth and suburban sprawl, longtime residents face the threat of rising rents and forced relocation.

Since they typically rent the land underneath their homes, trailer park dwellers find they have little power in the face of market forces.

At the Lakeside Trailer Court, located in one of Detroit's most exclusive areas, residents were told over the summer they may be forced to relocate, in order to free up the riverfront land for development.

And of course, mobile home residents face being stereotyped as ignorant and lazy.

"There are wealthy homes next to trailer parks; it's tough on kids in the schools," says Carol Snively, a professor at the University of Missouri-Columbia's School of Social Work, who has worked with residents of local mobile home parks.

The industry has been hit hard in recent years. Lenders have shied away from providing mobile homes loans, after a wave of bad debt in the mid-1990s. Mobile home shipments are down this year again — the industry expects to ship 177,925 homes this year, compared to 304,000 in 1994.

At Joe Barlow's dealership in southeast Georgia, the economic downturn has also hurt sales.

"One of our largest paper mills [in the area] just shut down," he says. "That's a humongous negative that we're absorbing right as we speak."

‘I Can’t Believe It’s Not Site-Built!’

Mobile home sales have fallen in the last few years, but the gradual move toward alternatives to the traditional house may be inevitable.

In some areas of the country, mobile homes now account for half of new housing. And some experts predict the line between mobile homes and traditional housing will continue to blur, as builders create factory-built homes with the same materials and code regulations as a site-built house.

These houses — known as "modular housing," as opposed to "mobile homes" — account for only a tiny percentage of new housing today, but they have several advantages, says Fred Hallahan of Hallahan Associates, a Baltimore-based industry consultant.

They can be custom-built in areas with lower labor costs and then transported around the country. Once in place, few people would suspect it is a descendent of venerable single-wide.

"For all intents and purposes, there's no way to distinguish a completed modular home from a completed conventional home," Hallahan says.

JackHammer
11-10-2002, 07:23 AM
I gotta see some of these upscale trailer homes.

dbax791
11-10-2002, 08:18 AM
:sing: "Two trailer park girls go 'round the outside, 'round the outside"

:D

whitak24
11-10-2002, 08:52 AM
i think trying to draw the link between manufactured homes and trailer houses is weak. while there are some similarities, there are major differences.

basically, you can take a manuf. home, put it on a basement, and you'd never know that it wasn't a "site-built" home. you can't do that with a tin trailer.

additionally, the same technology that is used to build the basic single-wide manuf. home is also used to build much larger modular homes. you can get a 2-story cape cod with cathedral ceilings as a "modular" home. however, i don't think you see 2-story, 3000 sq. ft. homes built with "trailer" technology.

granted, many manuf. home communities have the same problems as trailer parks as far as low class residents, crime, tackiness all around, etc. since i live in an apt, i'm always getting flyers in the mail encouraging me to buy a home in one of the area manuf. home communities, where for $2500 down and $300/month, you can get a 1000 sq. ft. brand new home (incl. site lease). obviously, when you're only charging $300/month, you're going to get some pretty low-class people and you're going to have some problems.

but at the same time, there are some communities that are rather upscale. it's all in where you go and how much they're charging (as with any other kind of housing). trailer parks, on the other hand, are rarely "nice". (although there are some trailer parks that are VERY well maintained and have a much class as you can expect from rows of in boxes. it all depends on the management and whether they are trying to pack in the most people with the least expense, or if they're trying to attract a nicer clientle and charge a little more).

another point: manuf. homes don't lose their value nearly as quickly as trailer homes. a trailer depreciates as fast as a car (because it's made with the same basic technology). you're looking at basically 0 residual value after 15-20 years. a well-maintained manuf. home, on the other hand, doesn't appreciate like a house, but after 10 years, you'll see them for sale for maybe 15% less than new models are going for (which after accounting for inflation, is probably only about a 5% loss on the original price).

DankNstickY
11-10-2002, 01:45 PM
dang... pretty soon there's gonna be some pretty upper class ppl living there.


:sing: two trailer park doctors go round the outside, round the outside, round the outside...

:P

IntegraTypeR
11-10-2002, 04:21 PM
manufactured home ? ... talk about PC .. pretty soon all of our vocabulary will consist of words that are no less than 4 syllables each in an effort to be inoffensive to everyone.

sizemic1
11-12-2002, 11:39 AM
heheh..i was vacationing in Utah and passed a trailer park named "Cedar City Mobile Manors" :heh:

welfareloser
11-12-2002, 01:37 PM
they are affordable, attractive, comfortable... i wouldn't hesitate to live in once except for two things:

1. they get broken into at astonishing rates. dunno if its because of the neighborhood or because they're easy to get into, but eek.

2. i'm in the midwest. tornadoes happen. i have hidden from them at least half a dozen times in my life. the last one, i wound up throwing evilgremlin into a car and outdriving the damned thing to get him somewhere with a basement, because my townhouse didn't have one. my basement is worth every penny i throw into my mortgage.

apmiller
11-12-2002, 01:47 PM
The wife and I were going to move into one a year back. They are freakin great! You walk into one of those and never know the outside looked like a trailer house. Wood trim every where, oak floor, fully funrnished kitchen. 4 bed rooms and a den! Master bedroom has walk in closet and a bathroom the size of one of the bedrooms! It was way cool.

BUT! Like with what welfareloser said, there's no way to keep out the criminals thanks to paper thin walls and someone one sneezes and half the county falls over. If they could make those a little more stable I would still consider it. Nice places...

cheapie
11-12-2002, 01:47 PM
Originally posted by chosenfool
in an economic point of view, it seems VERY viable for low to median income bracket families or individuals. its actually a great way to have a home - unlike a house, its VERY affordable, and unlike an apartment, you pay to OWN, not just rent, and at teh end of the payments, you OWN the unit, and have the option to sell, and maybe turn a profit.


ha. turn a profit? those things drop in value faster than you can pay them off. a buddy of mine STUPIDLY bought a new one about 5 years ago. it's in a nice setting and is in great condition and he can't get rid of the stupid thing! he's even offered to pay the buyer $1,500 to buy it. he told me he'd pay me a couple g's to burn it to the ground :heh:

welfareloser
11-12-2002, 03:20 PM
Originally posted by cheapbast@rd


ha. turn a profit? those things drop in value faster than you can pay them off. a buddy of mine STUPIDLY bought a new one about 5 years ago. it's in a nice setting and is in great condition and he can't get rid of the stupid thing! he's even offered to pay the buyer $1,500 to buy it. he told me he'd pay me a couple g's to burn it to the ground :heh:

depends on your geographic location... some places the value really does hold up well. i think they will become more desireable as the economy cools off, too.

OC
11-12-2002, 05:41 PM
Last I knew, mobile homes were registered with the DMV as a trailer. Being "non real estate" they do not appreciate like other homes usually do.

A manufactured home, on the other hand, is "real estate" and so will likely appreciate like other homes usually do.

If you're talking brand-new, it's roughly the same cost going in, but the latter is by far a better investment. Usually, anyway - so you exception mongers can bite me. :P

-OC