June 1, 2004
Report

Revision of the Energy-Efficiency Requirements in the Manufactured Home Construction and Safety Standards

Abstract

Energy-efficiency requirements were developed for manufactured (mobile) homes, which are regulated by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. A life-cycle cost analysis from the homeowner's perspective was used to establish parameters for a least-cost home in a large number of cities. Economic, financial, and energy-efficiency measures for the life-cycle cost analysis were selected and documented. The resulting energy-efficiency levels were aggregated to zones that were expressed as a maximum overall home U-factor (thermal transmittance) requirement for the building envelope. The proposed revised standard's costs, benefits, and net value to the consumer were quantified. This analysis updates a similar effort completed in 1992, which was the basis for the existing HUD code overall U-factor requirement.

Revised: October 27, 2005 | Published: June 1, 2004

Citation

Conner C.C., H.E. Dillon, R.G. Lucas, and M. Lubliner. 2004. Revision of the Energy-Efficiency Requirements in the Manufactured Home Construction and Safety Standards Richland, WA: Pacific Northwest National Laboratory.