Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Council to weigh manufactur­ed housing proposal

- STEPHEN SIMPSON ARKANSAS DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE

NORTH LITTLE ROCK — City Council members are set to vote next month on whether to allow modular homes in the Military Heights neighborho­od, raising an issue of manufactur­ed housing that has for years drawn national debate.

The City Council is scheduled to vote April 12 on an ordinance that would allow a modular home at 504 W. 25th St.

The ordinance states the modular home must be a 1,620-square-foot Amori DV5801 home that meets the requiremen­ts of the Arkansas Fire Prevention Code, city code and state code. The home would also have brick underpinni­ngs to match the neighborho­od, and there would have to be at least one tree on the lot.

A modular home is a house built in a factory setting, then transporte­d to the building site and assembled on a foundation.

Modular homes became popular in the 1980s and 1990s as an affordable alternativ­e in neighborho­ods where trailers are banned.

The controvers­y around them reached its peak in the early 2000s when cities across the country tried to ban modular homes as residents complained about them not “fitting into” neighborho­ods, according to an article from the Chicago Tribune.

Manufactur­ed housing is rarely used in metropolit­an communitie­s because of regulatory restrictio­ns.

The Manufactur­ed Housing Institute states that more than 22 million people nationwide live in manufactur­ed homes because they’re the least expensive kind of housing available without a government subsidy.

The ordinance was originally proposed at the March 22 meeting, but it was held by Council Member Nathan Hamilton after other members and some neighbors in the area known as the Military Heights Renewal Addition expressed hesitancy about placing a manufactur­ed home on the vacant lot.

“How can we be assured that there is not shoddy workmanshi­p going on?” Brenda Hampton, who identified herself as a Military Heights resident, said during the City Council meeting. “Would you allow this on Main Street? Would you allow this on Park Hill where there are vacant lots? If you wouldn’t allow it in these neighborho­ods, then it’s better to have a vacant lot than to bring in something shoddy.”

Council Member Linda Robinson said she received several phone calls and some negative feedback about the modular home.

“The people that live in Military Heights are very active and very protective of their neighborho­od,” she said. “They don’t want their neighborho­od to change. I know a lot of the community doesn’t want modular homes.”

David Bedford, who applied to install the modular home, said during the meeting that the house would be a “solid foundation home.”

“It will be brick, and it will have a driveway,” he said. “It will be a regular home, and I chose Military Heights because I wanted to live there.”

Hamilton said Bedford wants to build the manufactur­ed home to allow his retired sister to move back into Military Heights and that it would be “financiall­y ridiculous” for him to build a traditiona­l house there.

“If I were to vote no on this, I would be telling the residents of Military Heights that ‘a vacant lot is all that we can do for you,’” Hamilton said. “’We can’t do anymore.’ And I won’t do that.”

The issue was held at the suggestion of Council Members Ron Harris and Maurice Taylor, who said Hamilton should present his argument to the Military Heights community to see if he changes some minds before the next City Council meeting.

Hamilton said in an interview on Tuesday that he plans to have an open meeting in a park in Military Heights to explain the concept of modular homes to the neighborho­od. He added that if the neighbors don’t want the modular home, then he will vote against it, but he wants to ensure they understand the concept.

“Do I believe this will help the neighborho­od? Yes. Will I have a conversati­on with the neighborho­od? Yes,” he said. “If they still disagree, then I don’t want to do this with the objections of the neighborho­od.”

Hamilton added that he thinks manufactur­ed homes could be one way to improve home values in the area.

“Vacant lots, blighted homes and condemned homes, what is the answer if modular homes aren’t?” he said. “I would like people to look at modular homes and possible solutions when we don’t have the economics in place to build traditiona­l homes.”

“Vacant lots, blighted homes and condemned homes, what is the answer if modular homes aren’t?”

— Nathan Hamilton, council member

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