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Photos
courtesy Tod Bedrosian -- Hoopa Valley
Tribe members, including Chairman Clifford
Lyle Marshall, toured the first model home
built by Hoopa Modular Building Enterprise
during the grand opening celebration June
20. The 60,000-square-foot plant is an
entrepreneurial employment and economic
revitalization vision of the Hoopa Valley
Tribal Council. (bottom photo) -- Hoopa
Valley Chairman Clifford Lyle Marshall
coming out of the first model home at the
grand opening celebration. |
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HOOPA, Calif. -
The Hoopa Valley Reservation in northern
California now has the largest residential
modular home manufacturing plant in
California.
After months of constructing a
60,000-square-foot manufacturing building and
hiring and training the initial administrative
and factory employees, the plant is now
turning out homes for sale throughout the
West. The multi-million-dollar venture is an
entrepreneurial employment and economic
revitalization vision of the Hoopa Valley
Tribal Council. Employment of Hoopa Valley
tribal members and members of other American
Indian tribes is a key component of the
business plan.
At the plant's June 20 grand opening, Hoopa
Valley Tribal Chairman Clifford Lyle Marshall
told an overflow crowd, ''This plant
represents the optimism that we feel for our
people. It will bring homes, jobs and a better
future to us all.''
Providing homes to American Indians at Hoopa
and other reservations is a marketing
priority, according to Hayley Hutt, sales
coordinator for the venture. ''From what we
have thus far experienced, prospects for
future sales are very good. We are filling the
void in a major segment of the housing market
- those people who are looking for
high-quality affordable housing.''
Hutt, a tribal member, said the first units
from the plant are being constructed on
building sites located on the Hoopa Valley
Reservation, the largest reservation in
California, and surrounding communities.
The Hoopa Tribe has historically been
entrepreneurial and autonomous. The
98,000-acre reservation operates as a thriving
municipality, with about 2,300 tribal members
working at tribal forestry, fishery,
education, governmental and other jobs.
Marshall noted that 94 percent of Hoopa
Modular Building Enterprise's 52 plant
employees are American Indian, mostly from the
Hoopa Valley Reservation.
While the plant is located on the reservation
in Humboldt County, it has a market area
radiating 500 miles, according to Marshall.
''This is a dynamic new business opportunity
that will create economic prosperity with new
jobs, training and homes for our tribal
membership. There will also be benefits beyond
our reservation where we will provide
high-quality, affordable housing for other
communities.''
Training and mentoring have, and always will
be, key components of the plant's operation,
said William Bobbitt, the tribe's on-site
modular consultant and president/CEO. ''I am
confident the Hoopa modular factory will
demonstrate how today's factory-built homes
are the most structurally sound homes built,
while at the same time delivering high
quality, affordable homes that are
aesthetically compatible with urban and
suburban neighborhoods.'' Bobbitt is a 35-year
veteran of the factory-built housing industry.
A typical modular unit of production for the
HMBE factory contains 600 - 700 square feet of
finished living area. Two or more of those
modular units of production are used in the
construction of single- or multi-family
housing. Bobbitt said the plant is scheduled
to produce modular units of production
sufficient to build more than 100 ranch-style
homes in its first year of operation. The
production rate will be increased to where the
plant can produce up to 400 homes annually
over the next five years.
The HMBE factory has 15 assembly line
workstations. At one unit of production per
day, it takes three weeks for a home to go
through the manufacturing process; however, at
the planned rate of production a modular unit
will complete the manufacturing cycle in about
five working days. Once they arrive at the job
site, the modular units take about a week to
be completed.
Bobbitt said modular homes offer the
advantages of faster completion, standardized
building components, factory quality control
with superior craftsmanship with reduced labor
costs. Those cost-saving measures, along with
other factory-built housing advantages, often
allow for the sale of modular homes at a cost
much lower than their conventionally built
counterparts. According to Bobbitt, ''It is
important to note all materials used in HMBE
homes will be of the highest quality. The
lumber is all grade-stamped and kiln-dried,
windows are vinyl with dual glazing, ...
finished kitchen cabinet and bath vanities,
Moen fixtures in kitchen and baths; Alloc
laminate flooring; Congoleum flooring; Shaw
carpet; GAF roof shingles; and a host of other
products from nationally known material
suppliers.''
The Hoopa Valley Tribe's modular home factory
is part of the home-building trend of the
future. Industry trade publication Automated
Builder Magazine predicts that by 2020, 20
percent of America's housing starts will be
modular. ''We are helping our tribal members
with training, jobs and homes,'' said
Marshall. ''One of our first markets is homes
for Native Americans on reservations; however,
the potential to help all home consumers
realize the dream of having their own home is
great. I see this as a win for Native
Americans, the economy of northern California
and all home consumers.''
More information about HMBE can be attained by
calling Hayley Hutt, sales coordinator, at
(530) 625-4551 or by e-mailing sales@hoopamodular.com.
To learn more, visit www.hoopamodular.com.
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