Often zoning approval from local town officials is the longest part of the process to make your home accessible through a major renovation, a stick-built addition, or an accessible modular home. After a traumatic accident, a diagnosis, or a family decision to move a grandparent into your home instead of sending them to a nursing home, a WheelPad® accessible modular home can be quickly ordered and installed if you have planned ahead for potential local zoning and permitting snafus. Let’s look at how to chart your course for success.
First, you will need to look up the zoning for your property. It is most efficient to speak directly with your town officials about this and learn what the requirements are for your property. Some larger towns/cities may have an online database where you can look up the zoning requirements for different parcels. Important details to gather are around required setbacks (the distance from the side of a structure to the property line), wastewater lines and septic/sewage requirements, and finally the zoning category. If the property where your addition/tiny home or ADU (accessory dwelling unit) will be placed is already a residence, it is most likely in a residential zone, however there may be zoning laws that affect your ability to place, for example, a mobile home or additional stand-alone structures on the property. Historical zoning as well as aesthetic zoning may also come into play if your property is in one of those zones.
After you’ve decided to add accessible living space to your property, the next step is to speak with your town officials to understand what paperwork is needed in order to proceed legally with the project. If you are working within the existing footprint of your home, in most cases a building permit will be required from your local government officials. A simple internet search will pull up either an online portal where you can apply for a permit or the phone number you will need to call in order to start the process. Often your contractor or builder will obtain the required permit(s) on your behalf.
If you will be expanding your existing footprint, you will also need to work with your local zoning office to ensure that you have permission in place to add onto your existing structure or to add a structure to your property. WheelPad staff will support you and your general contractor in navigating through this process.
While both modular housing and manufactured homes are built offsite, there are differences between the two.
There are often differences in local zoning laws regarding modular and manufactured housing. Some neighborhoods, for example, may not allow manufactured housing.
WheelPad’s accessible modular homes are unique in that they are delivered on a trailer which can serve as the foundation, or it can be installed on a more traditional type of foundation, like a concrete slab. This allows your WheelPad home to meet both common zoning requirements: some towns require ADUs or additions to be placed on a permanent foundation, and others want them to be temporary structures.
Additionally, our experience in working with zoning officials over the past 5 years has been overwhelmingly favorable. Once zoning offices understand that your accessible modular home is being installed due to medical necessity, they approve the permit and the installation can move forward. Many towns have concerns about ADUs being added to residential areas for short-term rental purposes, so speaking to the officials and telling them your story can go a long way in helping smooth the process.
To recap, here are tips for communicating with your local town officials.
Contact your local zoning office early on in your planning process.
The main thing to keep in mind is to simply communicate. Initiate the process, share information as you have it, respond to questions, attend town meetings pertaining to your request (or send someone on your behalf), and be sure to follow up in a kind manner if you are running into delays that affect your family. In our experience, enabling housing choices for people affected by mobility changes and keeping families together is a commonly shared community value.