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Impact
of Manufactured Housing on Property Values
For
years, many people have believed that having manufactured housing,
either on a scattered site or in communities, near or adjacent
to site-built housing would depreciate the property values of the
site-built housing. There is little evidence to support this notion,
yet this belief has been used time and again to block manufactured
housing developments. In fact, all the recent studies on the subject
have come to the conclusion that manufactured homes, either in
communities or on individual lots, have no impact on the property
values of site-built homes that are adjacent to or in close proximity
to them.
One
of the first studies to tackle this issue was produced in 1986
by the Joint Center for Housing Studies of the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology and Harvard University. In its analysis of a New
Hampshire town without zoning restrictions for manufactured housing,
the authors could find no statistically significant evidence that
manufactured housing had any impact on adjacent site-built homes. 5
This
conclusion was also supported by a 1993 study by the University
of Michigan's College of Architecture and Planning. In its examination
of the impact of three Michigan manufactured home communities on
adjacent residential property values, the authors stated:
...in
all the cases we reviewed, the adjacent residential property
values showed substantial rates of appreciation that were similar
to the appreciation of comparable non-adjacent properties. We
found that neither the private market nor local public officials
differentiate between adjacent and non-adjacent properties when
valuation levels are established. 6
And
in 1997, the East Carolina University Department of Planning conducted
the most extensive study to date on the topic. Using Geographical
Information Systems (GIS) and spatial analysis, the authors analyzed
the impact of both scattered manufactured housing and manufactured
home communities on neighboring site-built homes in four North
Carolina counties (Carteret, Henderson, Pitt and Wake). Even this
extensive study came to the conclusion that the presence of manufactured
home communities or individual manufactured homes had no impact
on the property values of adjacent site-built residential properties. 7
Do
manufactured homes appreciate in value?
In general,
manufactured homes will appreciate at the same market rate as other
homes in the same neighborhood, but, as with all housing, it is
subject to the same market factors which affect appreciation. The
factors that impact future value include:
- the
housing market in which the home is located;
- the
community in which the home is located;
- the
initial price paid for the home;
- the
age and maintenance of the home;
- the
inflation rate;
- influences
on the home's value; and
- the
extent of an organized resale network, where an organized network
will usually result in homes selling for a higher price than
in markets without such an organized network.
5 Thomas
E. Nutt-Powell, David Hoaglin and Jonathan Layzer, Residential
Property Value and Manufactured Homes, Working Paper 86-1, Joint
Center for Housing Studies of the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology and Harvard University, 1986
6 Kate
Warner and Jeff Scheurer, Manufactured Housing Impacts on Adjacent
Property Values, Manufactured Housing Research Project Report
No. 4, University of Michigan College of Architecture & Urban
Planning, 1993
7 Guaqiang
Shen and Richard Stephenson, The Impact of Manufactured Housing
on Adjacent Site-Built Residential Properties in North Carolina,
East Carolina University Department of Planning, 1997
Back to "What
is a Manufactured Home?"
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