I have been in many modular homes, but I’ve never really liked them.
- There is the lack of individuality when every home looks the same and is the same shape.
They remind me of the cookie cutter houses in the original HOA developments. After we sold our home, my husband and i wanted to buy a home in a retirement village. We owned our homes, and we wouldn’t be in an apartment. Neither of us wanted to give up our independence. We may have been retired and considered elderly, but we didn’t want to be in close contact with people who talked about death all the time. We were vibrant, love travel, dancing with the grandkids, and golfing with our daughter and son-in-law. When we visited the retirement village, it reminded me of the HOAs of the 1970s. All the houses were the same, and I wasn’t happy. The realtor said they were modular homes, and able to be moved. As long as they left the truck frame underneath, we could move it to another community, but they didn’t recommend it. I looked at my husband, who had his left eyebrow raised. Modular housing was not for us, and we weren’t ready for retirement even though we were retired. Six months later, we found a small home in the middle of nowhere. We knew it was a modular home, but it was tucked away on the side of a mountain where our nearest neighbor was half a mile away, but we still had cell service and satellite TV. My husband could shoot his gun without giving someone a heart attack.
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