Doublewide with 3 bedrooms and 2 bathrooms.
Located in Bothell, WA within King County
Factory-built covered porches ship already framed, sided, and roofline-matched to the home — built to the same HUD federal standards as the rest of the structure. No separate permit, no second contractor, no $30K add-on after delivery. This small 2-section home is perfectly adapted for a community mobile home park with covered living space built in the factory and ready to enjoy and low cost but high convenience.
Doublewides in the 24-to-28-foot width range are purpose-built for tight settings like mobile home parks, infill lots, and side-yard placements where every foot of clearance counts. Inside, open-concept living areas, vaulted ceilings, kitchen islands, and walk-in closets all fit without feeling compromised — the factory has decades of practice making narrow spaces feel generous. Bedrooms can be positioned at opposite ends of the home for privacy, primary bathrooms come standard with double vanities and step-in showers, and laundry rooms tuck cleanly into the floor plan rather than stealing from the living space. Because everything is built on an indoor assembly line using materials purchased in trainload quantities, that level of finish costs roughly a third of what equivalent site-built construction would run. Where the package gets even better for narrow-lot buyers is the factory-built covered porch option: rather than hiring a contractor after delivery to frame, roof, side, and inspect an attached porch — which can easily 30,000 dollars and weeks of permit waiting — the porch arrives already constructed as part of the home itself. It's built to the same HUD federal standards as the rest of the home, matches the roofline and siding exactly so it looks integrated rather than tacked on, and ships pre-finished with paint, trim, and decking already done. There's no second framing crew, no extra concrete pour beyond what the home already sits on, no mismatched materials, and no third-party inspection of the porch itself because it's part of the original factory-built structure. The result is a covered outdoor space — somewhere to pull off muddy boots, sit with morning coffee, or watch the rain — that lands on your lot the same day the home does, fully ready to use. For mobile home park residents the appeal compounds: park setbacks and lot dimensions often rule out adding a porch after the fact, but a factory-integrated porch is calculated into the home's footprint from the start, so what fits on paper fits in reality. Park managers approve the home and porch as a single unit, eliminating back-and-forth on secondary structure approvals. For Western Washington buyers especially, where rain shapes outdoor living from October through May, a covered porch is the difference between a home you enter through a wet doorway and one you genuinely enjoy stepping into.