Building codes affect housing construction costs, including manufactured housing (which is cheaper), and multifamily units.
by Christian Britschgi
In his 1942 book Capitalism, Socialism, and Democracy Joseph Schumpeter praised capitalist mass production for bringing almost every basic commodity, from food to clothing, within the affordable reach of the working man. The one exception he highlighted was housing, which he confidently predicted would soon see a similar collapse in prices due to mass-produced manufactured housing.
As it happens, manufactured housing production—which is built in factories and then shipped and installed on-site—peaked in the mid-1970s and has been limping along as a small share of overall home construction ever since.
Nevertheless, the dream that cheap, factory-built homes can deliver lower-cost housing has never died.
It’s certainly alive and well in the current White House.
This past week, the Biden-Harris administration released a “fact sheet” of actions it was taking to lower housing costs. It included an in-progress regulatory change that would allow two-, three-, and four-unit homes to be built under the federal manufactured housing code set by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD).
“The HUD Code creates economies of scale for manufacturers, resulting in significantly lower costs for buyers,” says the White House in that fact sheet. Letting small multifamily housing be built under the HUD code will extend “the cost-saving benefits of manufactured housing to denser urban and suburban infill contexts,” it says.
IRC, IBC, or HUD Codes
The proposed change comes at an interesting time for small multifamily housing construction.
Across the country, more and more states and localities are allowing more two-, three-, and four-unit homes to be built in formerly single-family-only areas.
That liberalization of the zoning code (which regulates what types of buildings can be built where) has set off a follow-on debate about which building code (which regulates construction standards) newly legal multiplexes should be regulated under.
Currently, the options are either the International Building Code (IBC) or the International Residential Code (IRC).
The IBC and IRC are model codes created by the non-profit International Code Council, which are then adopted (often with tweaks and changes) by states and localities.
The IBC typically covers apartment buildings of three or more units, while the IRC covers single-family homes. Neither is particularly well-suited for the regulation of smaller multi-family buildings that cities are now legalizing.
The IBC, for instance, requires expensive sprinkler systems that don’t do much to improve fire safety in smaller buildings but can make their construction cost-prohibitive.
Zoning reformers have responded by trying to shift the regulation of smaller apartments into the IRC. But that raises its own problems, says Stephen Smith of the Center for Building in North America.
“It’s a complicated thing to do because the IRC is not written for small multi-family. It’s written for detached single-family,” he says. “For traditional apartment buildings with a single entrance and stairs and halls and stuff, it’s not really clear how the IRC would work with that.”
The White House’s proposed changes open the possibility of sidestepping this IRC-IBC dilemma entirely by letting builders of manufactured, multifamily housing opt into a single, national set of regulations.
A Floor or a Ceiling?
The question then is whether this will actually make life easier for builders.
The effect of HUD regulation on the production of single-family manufactured housing is a topic of intense debate.
Prior to the 1970s, manufactured housing was governed by a patchwork of state and local building codes. In 1974 Congress passed legislation that gives HUD the power to regulate manufactured housing.
Critics of HUD regulation argue that its initial implementation caused the steep decline in manufactured housing production in the 1970s.
In particular, they point to the HUD requirement that manufactured housing must sit on a steel chassis as a regulation that increases costs and decreases production.
Brian Potter, a senior fellow at the Institute for Progress and writer of the Construction Physics Substack, contrastingly argues that HUD regulation has actually helped keep the cost of building manufactured housing down.
The production of all housing, not just manufactured housing, plummeted in the 1970s, he notes. Since the 1970s, the costs of non-manufactured, site-built housing have skyrocketed while the costs of building manufactured housing have risen much less, he points out. Potter argues that the effect of the steel chassis requirement is also overstated.
To this day, manufactured housing is the cheapest type of housing to produce when comparing smaller manufactured housing units to smaller site-built single-family housing units. The HUD code has less expensive requirements and allows builders more flexibility in the construction of units.
“The most interesting and attractive thing about the HUD code is that HUD code homes tend to be much, much less expensive than single-family homes,” says Potter.
The hope is that allowing newly legal duplexes, triplexes, and fourplexes to be built under HUD standards would reduce costs compared to building them under IBC or IRC regulations.
Degrees of Change
While the HUD code has been in existence since the 1970s, its explicit exclusion of manufactured, multifamily housing is a relatively recent development. In 2014, HUD issued a memorandum saying that only single-family housing can be built under the department’s manufactured housing standards.
In a 2022 public comment on the proposed updates, the Manufactured Housing Association for Regulatory Reform argues that the 2014 memorandum was in error and that HUD actually has no regulatory authority to cap the number of units that can be built under the code.
According to the White House fact sheet, the Biden administration’s proposed updates to the HUD code would once again allow up to four units of housing to be built under the code once again.
If the HUD code critics are correct, then this will make a minimal difference. Under this theory, builders would just have another cost-increasing building code to choose from. If folks like Potter are correct, however, this should allow builders to opt into less demanding regulations. We might therefore see an increase in the number of two-, three-, and four-unit homes built.
Building code liberalization will still only be effective in places where zoning code liberalization has already happened. Cities and states still have every power to zone out multifamily housing and ban the placement of manufactured housing.
Where cities have made those “missing middle” reforms, however, it’s possible the White House’s proposed regulatory changes will increase the production of manufactured, multifamily housing while policymakers figure out whether how to change the IBC or IRC to allow more site-built multiplexes.
Originally published by the Reason Foundation. Republished with permission.
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