Predictable process
The main work runs in a controlled sequence inside the factory, without the daily weather risks of the construction site. That reduces delays, hidden extra works and the “discoveries” that typically make classic builds stressful for the client.
Factory preparation
Frame, insulation, façade, interior finish, window and door installation and utility prep all happen in dry conditions. This protects material quality and reduces moisture risk that is always present on an open site.
Clear budget logic
Modular is not automatically cheap, but the package scope is laid out more clearly upfront than in classic construction. The package content is fixed, extras are counted separately, and the total breaks down into understandable parts.
The exact scope, materials and conditions are always fixed in the written offer and depend on the selected model and package.
Lighter construction and foundation
A timber-frame module is significantly lighter than a heavy masonry build. That often allows a simpler foundation, but the final foundation type is decided by the soil, the site, the model and the package - not by the generic “modular” label.
Insulation and energy logic
The insulation layer is built in the factory with carefully detailed junctions to minimise thermal bridges. We use ROCKWOOL or, depending on the package specification, equivalent stone wool. Exact layer thicknesses and technical parameters depend on the chosen model and package and are captured in the offer.
Flexibility and growth
Module logic allows starting smaller and adding later, but this is not automatic for every house - extension depends on the specific model, the foundation, the joints and the site. If you anticipate growth now, it is easier to choose a suitable model and foundation from the start.
- Single-unit compact home
- A larger house from several modules
- An additional module later (model-, foundation- and site-dependent)
Eco-friendly materials and durability
The frame is timber, the insulation is stone wool, parts of the interior surfaces are gypsum and wood-fibre boards. These are materials with a well-documented production cycle and service life, not an experiment. Manufacturer warranties often reach fifty years or more, but the specific validity always depends on each material and the way the house is used.
- Timber and stone wool as the core structural pairing
- Materials from recognised producers with long warranties
- Interior surfaces that can be serviced or refreshed when needed
The exact scope, materials and conditions are always fixed in the written offer and depend on the selected model and package.
Year-round use, including colder regions
Packages aimed at northern markets combine a thicker stone-wool layer, carefully sealed junctions and energy-efficient windows. According to the manufacturer, such a setup also fits very cold winters. The actual thermal behaviour depends on the model, the package, the foundation and the site, and is clarified in the offer.
The exact scope, materials and conditions are always fixed in the written offer and depend on the selected model and package.
Timeline: indicative numbers
In practice, for a frame-modular house we work with an indicative timeline of about one and a half to three months. This covers module production in the factory and placement on site. The model-specific numbers are shown on each house page in the catalog and always depend on the current order queue and logistics.
Site condition, access and logistics affect the final process and schedule.
What is not automatic
A modular house is not automatically ready to move in immediately, nor automatically suited to every plot, every local rule or every lifestyle. Foundation, utilities, local permits and site preparation are always separate decisions.
Site condition, access and logistics affect the final process and schedule.
Next step
The actual scope of model and package is shown on Pricing and on each model page in the catalog. Context-specific decisions are captured in the written offer.

