I just read an old thread about modular homes and I thought I'd throw in my two cents, albeit a bit late.
We plan to relocate to northern Walton or Okaloosa in about a year and after buying overpriced land we will have a modular home assembled there.
Our home will be a Deltec home. The difference there is the polygonal design. You've all seen them around I'm sure. We were concerned about them after Katrina, Dennis, etc. but in viewing beachfront video from Ivan, Dennis, and Katrina, we saw numerous Deltecs standing unscathed while traditional houses were crumbled beside it.
There are no guarantees in life, of course, but it just makes sense that only an eight foot wall will hit the winds headon and that's got to be better than twenty or thirty feet of a flat square box.
I come from Louisiana, where modular homes (i.e. trailers) are regularly twisted by tornadoes so I'm not a fan of them all. But the controlled environment of assembly (i.e. inside a factory) has got to be better. If they split into pieces after assembly, then it was the contractor, not the product.
You can't fight physics and the shape has simply got to be a plus (www.deltechomes.com).
We plan to relocate to northern Walton or Okaloosa in about a year and after buying overpriced land we will have a modular home assembled there.
Our home will be a Deltec home. The difference there is the polygonal design. You've all seen them around I'm sure. We were concerned about them after Katrina, Dennis, etc. but in viewing beachfront video from Ivan, Dennis, and Katrina, we saw numerous Deltecs standing unscathed while traditional houses were crumbled beside it.
There are no guarantees in life, of course, but it just makes sense that only an eight foot wall will hit the winds headon and that's got to be better than twenty or thirty feet of a flat square box.
I come from Louisiana, where modular homes (i.e. trailers) are regularly twisted by tornadoes so I'm not a fan of them all. But the controlled environment of assembly (i.e. inside a factory) has got to be better. If they split into pieces after assembly, then it was the contractor, not the product.
You can't fight physics and the shape has simply got to be a plus (www.deltechomes.com).