Trailer Park
Nation: Love the Double-Wide
By Oliver Libaw
Nov. 8, 2002
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.