Home Sweet Manufactured Home

3 August 2015

As published in CK Momentum Issue 1  (Click here to download)

When we think of property development, we usually think of flat land subdivisions and unit or townhouse community titles schemes. 

However, Property & Projects Partner, Dick Burr, shares some insights into the recent phenomenon of manufactured home parks.

In recent years, purpose built parks that have been planned, developed and constructed as dedicated manufactured home parks no longer contain the traditional mobile homes and modest “shacks on stumps”. Instead, these parks offer high quality accommodation and a wide range of community facilities which provide owners with considerable lifestyle and financial benefits.

Essentially, a manufactured home is a structure (other than a caravan or tent) that is not permanently attached to land and is designed to be moved. Nowadays, modern four bedroom two storey homes are being designed to comply with the legislation and to look like well built permanent structures.

Manufactured home parks have evolved and Australia’s ageing population are discovering a compelling and affordable alternative to retirement villages and community titles schemes. Currently, there are 165 manufactured home parks in Queensland and over 21,000 manufactured homes.

BENEFITS OF THE MANUFACTURED HOMES MODEL INCLUDE:

  • no capital gains;
  • interests can be sold or passed under a Will;
  • no stamp duty, land tax, rates or registration fees;
  • no exit fees, body corporate fees or deferred management fees;
  • access to state of the art facilities;
  • community living without the typical body corporate obligations;
  • a secure and caring environment.

The Manufactured Homes (Residential Parks) Act 2003 (Qld) is under review by the Queensland Government to ensure it protects residents, promotes fair trading practices, and encourages the growth and viability of the residential park industry. The consultation period has now closed and responses are being considered. Further public consultation will take place when a discussion paper is released this year. 

We will keep you up to date with any developments. 

This bulletin is produced as general information in summary for clients and subscribers and should not be relied upon as a substitute for detailed legal advice or as a basis for formulating business or other decisions. ClarkeKann asserts copyright over the contents of this document. This bulletin is produced by ClarkeKann. It is intended to provide general information in summary form on legal topics, current at the time of publication. The contents do not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Formal legal advice should be sought in particular matters. Liability limited by a scheme approved under professional standards legislation. Privacy Policy

Subscribe

…and we’ll email you valuable insights into issues affecting you and your business.

More Insights

Unfair Contract Terms Reform Alert (2022)

Unfair Contract Terms Reform Alert (2022)

There are changes happening! Significant changes are set to shake up the law of Unfair Contract Terms in small business standard form contracts. The changes come into effect on 9 November 2023 and will introduce serious penalties for businesses that use and rely on...

read more
Director disqualified for breach of SMSF rules

Director disqualified for breach of SMSF rules

A recent decision by the Administrative Appeals Tribunal (AAT) has upheld the disqualification of a director of a corporate trustee of a self-managed super fund (SMSF) for several contraventions of the Superannuation Industry (Supervision) Act 1993 (SIS Act). Key...

read more