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Those are new fixer uppers.
The cabinets and vanities will need replacing soon after purchase, the siding is crooked and warped and I'm sure the slabs will shift, rendering it all hopeless. Cheap thin paint will look bad after a year.................
I met one where the air conditioning plenum was reduced by 1/2 just to squeeze through the joists that couldn't be cut. Told them I couldn't fix it without moving the entire indoor unit and ducting. Inspections are worthless.
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Centex built one of the newer buildings in the late '90's at a Naval Base I worked at. Large cracks in the thick poured concrete floor (single floor, although a very high bay building) that caused concerns with our Structural Engineer as to the integrity of the foundation and floor. Upper management had brought Centex's representatives in to analyze the issue, but I switched jobs before the resolution of the problem. I do know there were many other issues with the building as well a couple of which I was able to address as they were within my discipline. Overall, I was not impressed and swore to never buy a Centex home if that's how they construct a multi-million dollar "commercial" building.
Paul
Paul
They were right, I SHOULDN'T have tried it at home!
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I had no idea what a Centex home was. I googled it. Their site says, "At Centex, we don’t just build homes—we build memories."
I guess "bad memories".
There is a "factory builder" of homes near my house. I did a walk through of the homes and a tour of the factory. I was impressed. Their homes are well-regarded in the area. There is a limitation on the width of the houses, but not the length.
The factory was built near the land that the development was on. So typically the move was less than a mile.
They are now selling houses in other areas. They sold one near the local cemetery. The slab was poured (no basements in that area because of the water table). In two days after they started on the actual home, it was in place. They moved the front and the back of the house separately. They joined the halves and added the ridge to joint he roof.
within a week the garage door was installed, all the windows were installed and the house looked complete. I could not see what was going on inside however.
The walls are all built on a flat table with squaring fixtures to assure accuracy. There are jigs to assure spacing on the studs, it is a highly mechanized and accurate way to build.
On the other hand their "base" model includes electric heat, which they can fully wire at the factory. But it is ghastly expensive way to heat a house. They also offer forced air and hot water heating, but at a significant upcharge.
The models I looked at had "builders' basic" fittings and finishes and were unimpressive. They did offer upscale finishes but when you went to sell, it would be hard to recoup the extra expense as all the "comps" would be much cheaper.
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There is a monthly magazine on concrete homes that I leaf through occasionally when I am having coffee at Barnes & Noble. Some of the techniques are very appealing, and they all seem hurricane resistant.
Some claim that the concrete (like the logs on a cabin) are the insulation. They are not. They are just slow conductors of heat and cold.
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