Tuesday, February 11, 2025

'Complete fabrication'

That writing prompt I received in a recent Meetup writing group meeting got me to thinking that "complete fabrication," indeed may be the answer to the housing crisis we are ignoring, neglecting, disdaining, or forgetting the existence of. Mobile homes, prefabricated homes, tech-built homes—all the technology is there, the price is right, and the living is easy, so why don't we do them more often? Are we too focused on the bad rap prefab has gotten as a symbol of just eking by, living hand-to-mouth? Is the Sears-Roebuck kit of parts of the past not dream-home enough for us? 

In short, are we too upwardly mobile to go mobile?

Frankly, mobile homes and trailers fascinate me, for the way they bring back the vintage practice of homesteading, as a couple I knew did when they bought some cheap land in the population-challenged community of Friendsville, Pennsylvania, placed a mobile home like this one on top of it, and made the perfect housewarming temple out of it. 

A mobile home and trailer park on the cliffs above BeerDevonEngland.
Riding by a trailer-park community on largely unspoiled land in rural Connecticut that resembled this one in England, I realized how little is necessary to meet our living needs. And there are more than 100 such communities in Massachusetts—are people aware of them? Or does the mobile-home, trailer-park image suggest homelessness and vagrancy? 

Are we too proud to live in our only affordable option? Or does complete fabrication mean it'll wear out quickly, either when it shows wear and tear or when our interests change and we become upwardly 'mobile' again?

Thank you for visiting. I welcome your comments!

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