The "Bottoms-Up" Modular Housing Plan
The "Bottoms-Up" Modular Housing Plan
Factory-Based Production Integration: Moving a large percentage of local residential building work to indoor environments. This approach eliminates weather delays and materials theft, cutting residential build timelines down by up to 30% to 60%. [1]
Statewide Standardization Advocacy: Backing centralized zoning and permitting standards. Similar to the intent of the real-world Colorado SB25-002 Factory-Built Structures Legislation, his platform supports removing local red tape so a pre-approved modular home template can be deployed across wider regional zones without redundant bureaucratic delays. [2, 3]
Modular Manufacturing Plants: Utilizing economic incentives to construct dedicated modular home factories throughout the state. He argues this will scale up the consistent production of modular homes, tiny houses, and accessory dwelling units (ADUs) to create thousands of ready-to-assemble units annually. [4, 5, 6]
Pre-Wired and Plumbed Modules: Demanding that baseline utilities—such as wall-integrated wiring and complex plumbing—be completed inside a controlled factory environment before delivery. On-site construction labor is reduced to connecting the modules to a permanent foundation, creating extreme energy efficiency. [1, 7]
Key Campaign Logistics
[2] https://cdola.colorado.gov
[6] https://www.taxcreditadvisor.com

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