A prefabricated house — commonly called a prefab home — is any dwelling whose structural components, interior modules, or complete volumetric units are manufactured in a controlled factory environment and then transported to a site for final assembly.
The concept is not new: factory-built housing dates to the mid-19th century catalogue homes, but the modern incarnation is a precision-engineered product that routinely outperforms traditional site-built construction on speed, quality consistency, material waste, and total lifecycle cost. Driven by global housing shortages, labour-market constraints, and accelerating sustainability mandates, the prefab sector is now one of the fastest-growing segments in the global built environment.
Unlike manufactured housing (a US regulatory term for homes built to HUD code and placed on a permanent chassis), the broader category of prefab encompasses a spectrum of products: panelised systems, modular volumetric units, container conversions, light steel frame kits, and hybrid approaches that combine several of these. Understanding where a product sits on this spectrum is the essential first step for any developer, architect, or homeowner.
The structural performance of a prefab building is determined by three interlocking systems: the primary load-bearing frame, the lateral bracing system, and the connection details. Understanding each is essential for design, procurement, and regulatory compliance.
The critical engineering challenge in any prefab structure is ensuring that gravity, wind, and seismic loads transfer continuously and predictably through module-to-module interfaces. In modular construction, loads must cross the joint between factory-completed volumes.
The building envelope is the thermal and moisture boundary between conditioned interior space and the external environment. In prefab construction, envelope components are often pre-assembled as composite sandwich panels or layered systems at the factory, ensuring consistent quality that is difficult to match on a muddy construction site.
Modern prefab wall panels are composite assemblies that simultaneously provide structure, thermal insulation, weatherproofing, and finished interior surfaces.

Prefab roofs can be pitched or flat, and are often one of the last assemblies completed before shipping to prevent rain infiltration during transport. Common systems include metal standing-seam, interlocking steel roof tiles (offering the aesthetics of clay tile with a fraction of the weight), built-up EPDM or TPO flat membranes, and structural insulated roof panels (SIRPs) that combine sheathing, insulation, and interior lining in one factory-assembled unit.
Stone Plastic Composite (SPC) flooring has emerged as the dominant flooring choice in factory-built housing because it addresses the primary challenges of the prefab environment: dimensional stability during transport, moisture resistance in bathrooms and kitchens, and fast click-and-lock installation that does not require adhesives or lengthy cure times.
SPC core consists of natural limestone powder, polyvinyl chloride, and plasticiser — compressed and fused under heat and pressure into a rigid, dimensionally stable tile with essentially zero expansion across a temperature range of –20°C to +60°C. Over this core sits a photographic décor layer (wood grain, stone, tile patterns) protected by a transparent wear layer of 0.3–0.5 mm thickness rated for residential to heavy commercial use. FSILON's SPC flooring range covers the full specification from entry-level residential to high-durability commercial grades.
| Property | SPC | Laminate | Engineered Wood | Ceramic Tile |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Water resistance | 100% waterproof | Moisture-resistant only | Moisture-sensitive | Waterproof (joints vulnerable) |
| Dimensional stability | Very high (rigid core) | Moderate (HDF swells) | Low–moderate (wood movement) | Very high |
| Install method | Click-lock floating | Click-lock floating | Nail/glue/float | Full bed mortar |
| Install time (per m²) | ~5 min | ~5 min | ~10 min | ~20–30 min + cure |
| Thermal mass | Low | Very low | Low–moderate | High |
| Underfloor heating compatible | Yes (<28°C slab) | Limited | Limited | Yes |
A complete prefab housing solution does not stop at the structural shell. The most cost-efficient and time-efficient approach extends prefabrication philosophy deep into the interior — ceilings, wall claddings, joinery, and mechanical systems are all factory-assembled or kit-supplied. This is sometimes called fit-out prefabrication or integrated decoration industrialisation.
Factory-supplied suspended ceiling systems from manufacturers like FSILON use a main-tee and cross-tee aluminium or galvanised-steel grid that hangs from the structural ceiling on adjustable suspension wires. Infill panels can be mineral fibre (acoustic), calcium silicate (fire-rated), metal perforated (aesthetic), or integrated panel-and-lighting modules. The suspended ceiling also provides a service void for MEP runs — electrical conduit, ventilation ducts, sprinkler pipework — that is accessible for maintenance without demolition.
Prefab cabinetry is supplied as flat-pack or assembled carcase units in standard module widths (typically 300 mm, 400 mm, 450 mm, 600 mm, 900 mm) with a range of door and drawer front options. Materials include moisture-resistant melamine-faced particleboard (MFP-MR), PVC-wrapped MDF, and solid-surface or laminate door fronts. In prefab housing, the ability to pre-plan kitchen and bathroom joinery layouts in BIM (Building Information Modelling) and receive coordinated kit deliveries eliminates the costly trade sequencing issues that plague site-built interior fit-outs.
Interior and exterior door sets in prefab housing arrive pre-hung in their frames, reducing on-site labour to fixing and adjustment. Hollow-core flush doors for interior use, solid-core fire doors for rated separations, and composite insulated exterior doors with multi-point locking systems are all standard catalogue items from integrated manufacturers such as FSILON.
The construction industry globally accounts for approximately 38% of energy-related CO₂ emissions (IEA, 2023), split roughly between operational energy (heating, cooling, lighting) and embodied energy (materials production, transport, construction). Prefab addresses both categories more effectively than conventional construction when properly designed and manufactured.
Factory production concentrates waste at a single point where it can be segregated and recycled at far higher rates than on-site. Studies have consistently found that controlled off-site manufacturing reduces construction waste by 15–25% by mass compared with equivalent site-built projects. Steel — the dominant structural material in CFS and container prefab — has a well-established recycling infrastructure, with an average recycled content of 28–34% in new CFS products and a near-100% end-of-life recyclability rate.
Prefab wall and roof panels can achieve far tighter air-leakage rates than site-built equivalents because joints are sealed in controlled conditions. The US Department of Energy's Building America program has documented that factory-built structures can achieve airtightness of 1–3 ACH50 without specialist blower-door testing requirements, versus 5–8 ACH50 typical of site-built light-frame construction.
Leading prefab manufacturers have formalised ESG (Environmental, Social, Governance) frameworks that cover production waste targets, supply-chain carbon footprinting, and end-of-life disassembly design. FSILON publishes its ESG programme at fsl-bm.com/esg, covering testing standards, sustainability certifications, innovation initiatives, and sustainable project case studies — a level of transparency increasingly demanded by international developers and government procurement programmes.
The quality and cost of a prefab house are ultimately determined by the sophistication of its manufacturing process and the resilience of the supply chain that feeds it. Understanding how a factory operates — and what questions to ask a supplier — is critical for developers and procurement teams.
Roll-forming lines produce CFS studs, tracks, joists, and purlins from steel coil in a single automated pass. Holes for services, punchouts for bridging, and end notches for clips can all be incorporated inline, eliminating secondary fabrication. CNC router tables cut OSB, SIP, and wall panel sheets to exact dimensions from digital nesting files — reducing waste and ensuring dimensional accuracy to ±1 mm.
Panel assembly jigs hold CFS members in precise alignment during screwing, ensuring that the finished panel is square and flat before sheathing is applied. Automated screw guns torque each fastener to specification, creating an auditable quality record that is increasingly demanded by building control authorities.
BIM-to-factory integration (sometimes called "design for manufacture and assembly," or DfMA) is the gold standard for large-scale prefab projects. Architects model the entire building in a BIM platform (Revit, ArchiCAD, Vectorworks), which generates cut lists and CNC programs directly, eliminating the manual re-entry of dimensions that is a common source of error in traditional procurement.
FSILON's export base and Global Trade Hub in the Yangtze River Delta (Haiyan, Zhejiang Province) spans a total developed and planned area of 390,000 m², with the core smart home industrial park at 260,000 m². The facility is China's first Global Expansion Hub (GEH) dedicated to prefabricated buildings and materials — an integrated platform combining R&D, mass production, quality testing, logistics, and international trade services under one roof.
This scale enables FSILON to serve as a single-source supplier for complete housing kits — from structural steel and CFS framing through to finished SPC flooring, wall panels, cabinetry, and doors — eliminating the multi-vendor coordination that drives cost and schedule overruns in conventional construction procurement.
The global prefabricated construction market was valued at approximately USD 187 billion in 2024 and is projected to expand at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 6.5–7.5% through 2030, driven by urbanisation in the Global South, housing affordability crises in developed economies, and post-pandemic supply-chain realignment favouring domestic and near-shore factory production.
Few market segments better illustrate the demand for intelligent prefab than the US Accessory Dwelling Unit (ADU) boom. Changes in California (ADU Streamlining Acts 2017–2020), Oregon, Washington, and many other states have dramatically simplified planning approval for second units on residential lots, creating a massive addressable market for factory-built ADU products that can be designed, permitted, and installed in weeks rather than the 12–18 months typical of a site-built addition.
FSILON has developed a dedicated ADU apartment plan for the US market using its modular assembly system, incorporating pre-engineered framing, pre-designed floor plans, and a coordinated package of structural and interior components optimised for US code compliance and the typical 400–1,200 sq ft ADU footprint.
Whether you are a developer procuring 500 modular apartments or a homeowner buying a single ADU kit, the following technical checklist will help you evaluate suppliers and specifications systematically.
These six domains should be evaluated systematically before committing to a supplier. For large projects, request third-party test certificates, factory audit reports, and BIM model files. For smaller ADU or single-home purchases, ask specifically about whether components are pre-tested as a system or simply as individual products — system-level testing (e.g. a full wall specimen tested for fire, wind, and moisture simultaneously) is far more meaningful than component-only data.
The total timeline from design sign-off to occupancy varies widely by product type and project complexity. A simple single-volume ADU or container house can be factory-completed and site-installed in 8–16 weeks. A multi-module residential building typically requires 16–36 weeks from design to handover. Compare this with 12–24 months for an equivalent site-built project.
Yes — and in many respects more so. Cold-formed steel does not rot, is not susceptible to termite damage, and does not experience the dimensional movement (shrinkage, creep) common in timber-frame construction. Properly galvanised CFS studs have a service life exceeding 50 years. Container structures are engineered to withstand ocean shipping loads far exceeding any building code wind or seismic requirement.
Modern prefab platforms offer significant customisation within a standardised structural system. Floor plan layouts, façade cladding materials, roof profiles, window sizes and positions, and interior finish specifications are all typically adjustable. Full bespoke design is also possible — it simply requires more lead time for engineering and panel/module programming. FSILON's range spans from standard catalogue products to fully engineered custom solutions; contact their team via fsl-bm.com/contact for project-specific enquiries.
Direct cost comparison depends heavily on location, specification, scale, and local labour costs. In high-labour-cost markets (US, Western Europe, Australia), prefab typically delivers a 10–20% saving in total construction cost, with larger savings achievable at greater scale. In low-labour-cost markets, the advantage shifts to quality consistency and speed rather than direct cost savings. Lifecycle cost — including reduced maintenance, lower energy bills, and faster project income — almost universally favours prefab.