Module logic, plainly
A modular house is built in the factory in a defined order: frame, insulation, façade and interior finish, windows, doors and utility preparation all happen under a roof in a controlled sequence. The house arrives on site close to finished.
On site we handle the foundation, the crane-assisted module placement, the local connections and the agreed finishing work. The advantage is tighter control and less dependence on weather at the build site.
Module, frame and barnhouse
In practice we use frame-modular logic: the house is built from timber-frame modules assembled in the factory. Frame and modular are not opposites - in our projects they describe the same structural approach at different stages of factory completion.
Barnhouse is a style, not a construction type. It is a house with clear geometry, a defined ridge and a minimalist façade. The same look can be built with frame-modular methods or other approaches - we focus on the frame-modular version.
One module or several
A compact home often fits in a single module: every room is built in the factory as one unit and arrives on site together. A larger house consists of several modules that are joined and finished at their seams on site.
- Single-module house - simpler logistics and faster placement
- Multi-module house - more area, more complex seam logic
- Additional module later - depends on model, foundation and site
Delivery across Europe and on-site assembly
The module travels from the factory to the client's plot by truck. Before departure it is covered with transport protection - film and protective layers that keep the façade, windows and interior finish stable during transit. The route and the load are supervised by the factory's logistics team.
On site the module is placed by crane, as a rule within a single working day, provided the foundation, access and local connections are ready for that date. The seam finishing and the extras agreed in the package follow.
Site condition, access and logistics affect the final process and schedule.
Seasonal and year-round use
Modular houses come with different package tiers: some are designed for year-round living, others use a lighter insulation build and suit seasonal or secondary use. Suitability is decided by the specific model and the engineering inside the package, not by the umbrella term “modular house”.
We do not promise that any module is automatically ready to live in straight away, or that it fits any site. The exact scope, intended use and local requirements are always captured in the written offer.
The exact scope, materials and conditions are always fixed in the written offer and depend on the selected model and package.
What happens in the factory, what on site
The factory handles the main work in dry, controlled conditions: frame, insulation, interior and exterior finish, window and door installation, and most of the electrical and plumbing prep. On site we do the foundation, module placement, local connections and the extras agreed in the package.
Site condition, access and logistics affect the final process and schedule.
Who modular suits in practice
Modular suits a client who values a clear model and a predictable process more than a fully bespoke project from scratch. It fits well when the site is understood and access allows a truck and a crane.
- A first own home as a ready solution
- A year-round secondary home on the plot
- Short-rental, glamping or small-hotel project with a clear unit
Next step
If the direction is clear, browse the catalog for models whose area, layout and package logic match your situation - the exact scope is captured in the written offer.

