
Not every home built off-site is the same. Understanding whether yours is a manufactured, modular, park model or site-built home changes how it's supported, inspected, financed and repaired — and Mesic Contracting is the Arizona specialist for every one of them.
People use "mobile home," "manufactured home," "modular" and "trailer" as if they all mean the same thing. They don't — and the differences matter a great deal when it's time to level the home, certify a foundation for a loan, file an insurance claim or pass a HUD inspection. The single biggest divide comes down to which building code the home was built to.
Manufactured homes are built entirely in a factory to the federal HUD Code (the HUD Manufactured Home Construction and Safety Standards, in effect since June 15, 1976). Every manufactured home is constructed on a permanent steel chassis and transported to the site on its own running gear. Even after it's set and skirted, that chassis stays part of the home — which is exactly why supports, anchoring, the belly board and re-leveling all have to be handled by someone who understands HUD-code construction. Homes built before 1976 are properly called mobile homes, and they follow different, older standards.
Modular homes are also built in a factory, but to the same state and local building codes (the IRC — International Residential Code) as a site-built house. They arrive in sections, or "modules," and are craned onto a permanent foundation and assembled on site. A modular home has no permanent chassis and, once finished, is treated by lenders and appraisers much like a stick-built home.
Park models — technically recreational park trailers (RPTs) — are compact units around 400 square feet, built to the ANSI A119.5 recreational-vehicle standard rather than to HUD or IRC. They're everywhere in Arizona's 55+ and resort communities. And of course, site-built (stick-built) homes are framed entirely on the lot to local IRC code.
The bottom line: Mesic Contracting services them all — manufactured, mobile, modular, park model and site-built — with crews who know the code, the structure and the Arizona conditions each one has to survive.
Jump to the service that fits your home. Every project is handled by specialists, documented with photos, and completed to the standard your inspector, lender or insurer expects.
Specialist contractors for modular homes assembled on site and for manufactured & mobile homes on permanent chassis — repairs, foundations and structural work.
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Repair, re-level, re-roof and skirt the ~400 sq ft park models found throughout Arizona's 55+ and resort communities.
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Durable metal roofing and roof-overs built for the Arizona sun — cooler, longer-lasting protection for manufactured homes.
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Whether your home was assembled from modules on a permanent foundation or set on a steel chassis and skirted in, we're the contractors who know the difference — and know exactly how each one has to be supported, sealed and repaired.
Modular homes are built to the same IRC state and local codes as a site-built house, then craned into place and joined section-by-section on site. The "marriage line" where modules meet, the roof ridge, and the foundation connections are all points where quality workmanship matters. We handle finish-out, structural repairs, foundation and leveling issues, and damage restoration on modular homes throughout the Valley.
Manufactured and mobile homes are a different animal. Built to the federal HUD Code (post-1976 manufactured; pre-1976 mobile), they ride on a permanent chassis with a belly board, insulation and straps underneath. That underbelly, the pier-and-anchor support system and the marriage line between multi-section homes are precisely the areas most general remodelers get wrong. Owner Tim Mesic worked in a factory that built more than 10,000 of these homes — so we treat them the way the factory intended.
Park models — officially recreational park trailers — are the compact, roughly 400-square-foot homes that fill Arizona's 55+ communities, RV resorts and seasonal parks. Built to the ANSI A119.5 recreational standard rather than the HUD or IRC codes, they have their own quirks: lighter framing, tight utility runs, low-slope roofs and skirting that has to breathe while keeping the desert heat and critters out.
Because so many park model owners are seasonal or snowbird residents, small problems — a slow roof leak, a settled corner, sun-cracked skirting — tend to go unnoticed until they become expensive. We keep park models tight, level and protected so they're ready whenever you are.
Nothing tests a manufactured-home roof like the Arizona sun. Decades of UV, monsoon storms and 115-degree summers break down old coatings and flat membrane roofs — and once water finds a seam, it travels along the frame and into the ceiling before you ever see a stain. That's why we install durable metal roofing and metal roof-overs built for the desert.
A metal roof-over adds a new, properly pitched metal roof over your existing one, creating an insulating air gap that reflects heat, sheds monsoon rain, and can noticeably lower cooling bills. Metal stands up to sun and wind far longer than coatings alone, and it's one of the best long-term investments you can make in a manufactured, mobile or park model home in Arizona.
From the crawl space to the roof, manufactured homes have systems that behave nothing like a stick-built house — and repairs done by a general handyman often fail inspection or simply don't last. We repair what we find with the correct HUD-compliant materials and methods, so the work holds up and your home stays insurable and financeable.
Cracked walls, sticking doors and sloping floors usually trace back to support and leveling. Water stains and soft spots point to roof, plumbing or underbelly issues. Whatever the symptom, we diagnose the real cause and fix it once — not patch it twice.
Owner Tim Mesic worked in a factory that built more than 10,000 homes and has helped over 20,000 homeowners since 1992. We understand every home type from the chassis to the finish.
Repairs meet HUD guidelines and lender requirements, so your home passes inspection and stays insurable, financeable and ready to refinance or sell.
ROC# 264936. We document everything with photos, coordinate with adjusters and lenders, and stand behind our work across the Phoenix metro and statewide Arizona.
Manufactured, modular, park model or site-built — tell us what's going on and we'll explain your options, timelines and next steps. One call gets a real Arizona specialist on your project.