Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Walters : Factory-Produced Housing Could Help Solve Affordability Crisis
gvw_calmatters
By CalMatters
Published 4 years ago on
March 28, 2021

Share

Two years ago, CalMatters housing writer Matt Levin described a factory in Vallejo that was building housing modules that could quickly — and relatively inexpensively — be assembled into multi-story apartment houses.

Levin described the factory as more resembling an automobile assembly line than a construction site. “They build one floor approximately every two and a half hours,” Larry Pace, co-founder of Factory OS, told Levin. “It’s fast.”

Potential Solution to State’s Housing Crisis

Modular construction offers a potential solution to one of the most vexing aspects of California’s housing crisis — the extremely high costs of building apartments meant to house low- and moderate-income families.

Dan Walters

Opinion

Statewide, those costs average about $500,000 a unit, encompassing land costs, governmental red tape, ever-rising prices for materials and, finally, wages for unionized workers who build, plumb and electrify the apartments.

“Further inside the massive Vallejo plant, there’s a station for cabinets, a station for roofing and a station for plumbing and electrical wiring,” Levin wrote. “Station 33 looks like a furniture showroom not quite ready for the floor — washer, dryer and microwave included.

“From there the apartment pieces are wrapped and trucked to the construction site, where they’re assembled in a matter of days, not months.”

Modular Housing Project Being Assembled in San Francisco

Pace said that his modules can be assembled into three- to five-story apartment buildings 40% more quickly and 20% less expensively than traditional construction, which means more bang for the buck.

Today, a Factory OS apartment house for 145 hitherto homeless residents is being assembled in downtown San Francisco in what appears to be proof of what Pace told Levin.

San Francisco Chronicle columnist Heather Knight described the project in a recent article, saying, “The project at 833 Bryant St. is being built faster and cheaper than the typical affordable housing development in San Francisco, the ones that notoriously drag on for six years or more and cost an average of $700,000 per unit. This project will take just three years and clock in at $383,000 per unit.”

In other words, by using modular construction San Francisco could supply twice as many units for the same money. So what’s not to like? Knight tells us what.

“At issue,” she writes, “is how the project was built so quickly: with modular units made in a Vallejo factory. Each unit was trucked across the Bay Bridge, strung from a crane and locked in place like a giant Lego creation. San Francisco unions don’t like the method because it leaves them out, but considering the city’s extreme homelessness crisis, City Hall can’t afford to toss the idea.”

Factory OS uses unionized workers, but through an agreement with the carpenters’ union, workers perform a variety of tasks on the housing assembly line, rather than having the work divvied up among specialists, and the company employs many former prison inmates.

Trade Unions Pushing to Stop Concept from Spreading

Politically influential construction trades unions are pushing San Francisco’s city officials to make 833 Bryant St. a one-time event rather than the beginning of a trend.

Larry Mazzola Jr., president of the San Francisco Building and Construction Trades Council, is sending a letter to Mayor London Breed and city supervisors criticizing the project’s “mistakes and over-costs.”

“The quality is crap, to put it basically,” Mazzola told Knight “They don’t have plumbers doing the plumbing. They don’t have electricians doing electrical. They get them from San Quentin, and they’re not trained at all. We’re going to fight vigorously with the city not to do any more of these.”

Modular housing is not a panacea for California’s housing woes, but it deals with one major factor. The question is whether politicians will embrace it or strangle it.

CalMatters is a public interest journalism venture committed to explaining how California’s state Capitol works and why it matters. For more stories by Dan Walters, go to calmatters.org/commentary.

[activecampaign form=19]

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

What Are Fresno Real Estate Experts Predicting for 2025 and Beyond?

DON'T MISS

First California EV Mandates Hit Automakers This Year. Most Are Not Even Close

DON'T MISS

Residents Stockpile Food, Rush to Bunkers as Conflict Rattles India and Pakistan

DON'T MISS

Other States Are Showing California How to Protect Its Budget Without Cutting Needed Services

DON'T MISS

Nitrous Oxide Recreational Use Risks: Brain Damage, Death, and Easy Access

DON'T MISS

Federal Cuts Threaten Science, Ethics, and Public Health

DON'T MISS

Former Supreme Court Justice David Souter, a Republican Who Became a Liberal Darling, Dies at 85

DON'T MISS

Pope Leo XIV Celebrates First Mass as Pope and Calls His Election Both a Cross and a Blessing

DON'T MISS

Texas Measles Cases Rise to 709, State Health Department Says

DON'T MISS

The Latest: Trump Floats Cutting China Tariffs to 80% Ahead of Weekend Meeting

DON'T MISS

Wall Street Drifts as It Waits for a Highly Anticipated US-China Meeting on Trade

DON'T MISS

Israel Won’t Be Involved in New Gaza Aid Plan, Only in Security, US Envoy Says

UP NEXT

Nitrous Oxide Recreational Use Risks: Brain Damage, Death, and Easy Access

UP NEXT

Former Supreme Court Justice David Souter, a Republican Who Became a Liberal Darling, Dies at 85

UP NEXT

Pope Leo XIV Celebrates First Mass as Pope and Calls His Election Both a Cross and a Blessing

UP NEXT

Selma Bear Sighting Prompts Police, Wildlife Response

UP NEXT

Republicans’ Trust in Media Increases Following Trump’s Return to White House

UP NEXT

Rejoicing Peruvians See Pope Leo XIV as One of Their Own After His Many Years in Peru

UP NEXT

Shohei Ohtani Could Have Landed 15-Year Deal, Agent Says, but He Didn’t Want to Risk Skills Decline

UP NEXT

Joe Biden Blames Kamala Harris’ Loss on Sexism and Racism and Rejects Concerns About His Age

UP NEXT

Before Tariff Price Increases, Mark Cuban Suggests Stocking Up on These Items

UP NEXT

He Was Killed in a Road Rage Shooting. AI Allowed Him to Deliver His Own Victim Impact Statement

Federal Cuts Threaten Science, Ethics, and Public Health

58 minutes ago

Former Supreme Court Justice David Souter, a Republican Who Became a Liberal Darling, Dies at 85

1 hour ago

Pope Leo XIV Celebrates First Mass as Pope and Calls His Election Both a Cross and a Blessing

1 hour ago

Texas Measles Cases Rise to 709, State Health Department Says

1 hour ago

The Latest: Trump Floats Cutting China Tariffs to 80% Ahead of Weekend Meeting

1 hour ago

Wall Street Drifts as It Waits for a Highly Anticipated US-China Meeting on Trade

1 hour ago

Israel Won’t Be Involved in New Gaza Aid Plan, Only in Security, US Envoy Says

1 hour ago

National Hummus Day Highlights New Ways to Enjoy an Old Favorite

2 hours ago

Madera Traffic Crackdown Nets 134 Citations, 1 Arrest

2 hours ago

Panasonic to Cut 10,000 Jobs, Expects $900 Million in Restructuring Costs

2 hours ago

Residents Stockpile Food, Rush to Bunkers as Conflict Rattles India and Pakistan

LAHORE/MUZAFARRABAD, Pakistan/AMRITSAR, India (Reuters) – Residents across Pakistan and India rushed to stockpile foods and other esse...

9 minutes ago

https://www.communitymedical.org/thecause?utm_source=Misfit+Digital&utm_medium=GVWire+Banner+Ads&utm_campaign=Branding+2025&utm_content=thecause
People shop for essential goods at a supermarket in Amritsar, India, May 9, 2025. REUTERS/Francis Mascarenhas
9 minutes ago

Residents Stockpile Food, Rush to Bunkers as Conflict Rattles India and Pakistan

39 minutes ago

Other States Are Showing California How to Protect Its Budget Without Cutting Needed Services

46 minutes ago

Nitrous Oxide Recreational Use Risks: Brain Damage, Death, and Easy Access

58 minutes ago

Federal Cuts Threaten Science, Ethics, and Public Health

1 hour ago

Former Supreme Court Justice David Souter, a Republican Who Became a Liberal Darling, Dies at 85

1 hour ago

Pope Leo XIV Celebrates First Mass as Pope and Calls His Election Both a Cross and a Blessing

A sign reading "measles testing" is seen as an outbreak in Gaines County, Texas, has raised concerns over its spread to other parts of the state, in Seminole, Texas, U.S., February 25, 2025. REUTERS/Sebastian Rocandio/File Photo
1 hour ago

Texas Measles Cases Rise to 709, State Health Department Says

1 hour ago

The Latest: Trump Floats Cutting China Tariffs to 80% Ahead of Weekend Meeting

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend