Why A Modular House Or A Manufactured Home Is The Future

Generally, nobody likes a modular house these days. Even a manufactured home of minuscule size is frowned upon by families that are still mostly looking to get a big house. Unfortunately, the clock is ticking. And at the rate that the human population is fast approaching the 8 billion mark–people around the world are in dire need of what author Stephen Covey calls a paradigm shift.

There’s a big reason why the typical family is always hooting for a big house as opposed to a manufactured home that has limited space. We all want every family member to be comfortable. For example, every family member should be entitled to a room so that the children can all grow up in a natural way with happy memories of a shared abode and loving parents.

Nobody wants kids to spend their growing up years in a cramped modular house that is about the size of the average tractor trailer. But the fact is that once the kids are all grown up, the aging parents are left with a big house that the latter ends up selling anyway. Surely, there has got to be a better way to ensure that none of the Earth’s resources go to waste.

The sad truth is that housing authorities worldwide still haven’t come to terms with existing realities. A manufactured home is being frowned upon as some kind of a pipe dream. Everybody including government authorities is still in denial when it comes to the true state of affairs of the environment.

Like global warming, many conspiracy theorists are convinced that sounding the alarm bells for the depletion of natural resources is some kind of a gospel purported by those in power to sow fear and discord among the citizenry.

Maybe, it will take an Avengers villain like Thanos to convince the world that at the present rate of population growth, systematically exterminating half of the planet’s citizens is the only viable approach. So before this happens, we should all look to a modular house or manufactured home before it’s too late.

Just consider the fact that the increasing number of toilets being built is causing a drain on the world water supply. Economists have often extolled the virtues of frugality. Although they are considered by many as doomsday prophets, there is truth to the argument that the planet’s resources are scarce.

So until we have another planet to move to, a modular house or a manufactured home is our best bet. Just like the rising tide of the world’s oceans, the reality that the space problem is closing in on all of us should, by all means, be a serious matter of deliberation by the United Nations. Just imagine, if even just half of the world’s population were to switch to a modular house. Such a move, however dream-like, could help solve the rampant attrition of natural resources.

Covey is right. We are all like a frog being boiled slowly in a pot. We don’t really sense the impending doom until the tragedy strikes. By then it will be too late.

Maybe it will take communism or socialism to help us wake up from a deep sleep before everything is gone. The fact that the population of the bees is shrinking is quite instructive. And Albert Einstein had always argued that once the bees get exterminated, humanity only has a few weeks to live.

Until scientists completely figure out how to resolve the seemingly unstoppable bee extermination, the only solution to overcrowded cities is for people to learn to live in a modular house. This solution stares us in the face and yet it’s very easy to ignore.

Maybe we need the situation to escalate into a Hunger Games scenario before we accept the plain truth. There is a lesson that we all need to learn from the bees. And that is, we as a species must learn to live in tight spaces in order to save the world. In this regard, a fabricated home is like saving the world one modular house at a time. There’s no ifs or buts about it.

We as a collective must learn to embrace modular homes as the solution to world hunger and overall resource depletion. It isn’t just a pipe dream. Numerous models of trailer-size homes are already in production.

We don’t have to live like the bees. There’s no need to move back to our parents’ house. Or for that matter, there’s no need to even live in a commune-like a philosopher Plato argued in his landmark masterpiece titled The Republic. Utopia is within reach.

Perhaps the best thing about it is that the average modular house or manufactured home can be easily built from recycled plastic, tires or even car wrecks. Dozens of architects from California to South Korea are showing the world that a modular house doesn’t have to be shabby at all. And meanwhile, in Japan, even the wealthy elite is showing the world that limited living quarters don’t have to be a social stigma. Just think futon which Ikea has popularized so well.

The bottom line is that we don’t have to live in the garage. With space-saving furniture, we can all still manage to live in style. That is if we learn to embrace the concept of a modular house or a manufactured home as a whole and work from it. In fact, if Elon Musk’s company SpaceX can indeed manage to send manned missions to Mars as early as the 2030s, the modular house is one sure candidate for planetary migration. The future doesn’t have to be dark. It can look bright with lots of creativity and of course, the manufactured home in the equation.