A number of companies offered kit houses, and sometimes also offered rudimentary "industrial" and summer cottages lacking bathrooms, as well as
garages,
duplexes,
apartment buildings,
barns and other farm buildings, and even
outhouses. •
The T. Eaton Co. Ltd. – by far the most important mail-order general retailer in Canada in the early twentieth century, it was also a provider of house kits from 1910 to 1932. They were only available in
Western Canada, not in Ontario or the East. Eaton's sold at least 40 different house plans, but the most common type was the -storey, sometimes referred to as the
semi-bungalow. In the 1919 and 1920 catalogues, all Eaton's houses were given a name starting in "Ea", thus, the Eatoncourt, Eastbourne, Easton, Eager, Earlswood, and Earlscourt. Although Eaton's houses were sold as kits, they were
not pre-cut. • Bennett Homes,
North Tonawanda, New York – 1902 to 1935 or later • Fenner Factory Cut Homes, Ready Built House Company,
North Portland, Oregon – 1912 to 1928 •
Gordon-Van Tine Homes,
Davenport, Iowa, with additional plants in
St. Louis, Missouri;
Chehalis, Washington; Louisiana; and
Hattiesburg, Mississippi – 1907 to 1947 • Harris Homes, Harris Brothers Company,
Chicago, Illinois – 1913 to 1960 • Hewitt-Lea-Funck Company,
Seattle, Washington • Liberty Homes, Lewis Manufacturing, Bay City, Michigan – 1925 to 1973 •
Pacific Ready Cut Homes, Los Angeles – 1908 to 1940 •
Sears Modern Homes,
Sears, Roebuck, Chicago – 1908 to 1940 • Sterling Homes, International Mill and Timber Company, Bay City, Michigan – 1915 to 1971 • Wardway Homes,
Montgomery Ward, Chicago, Illinois – 1910 to 1931 (actual manufacture of homes was subcontracted to Gordon-Van Tine) Kit house companies left the business for various economic reasons before, during, and after the
Great Depression; some went bankrupt, while others returned to their original function as suppliers of building materials. According to researcher Wolicki: Contrary to popular belief Montgomery-Ward and Sears Roebuck did not discontinue their pre-cut housing departments because of customers who defaulted on their mortgages. The
New Deal programs introduced by the Roosevelt administration encouraged homeowners to refinance existing mortgages at a lower rate through programs established by the
Federal Housing Administration. Throughout 1934 and 1935, customers paid off their home mortgages with Sears and Montgomery Ward. Without the profitable mortgage program Montgomery Ward decided to discontinue its offerings of pre-cut houses and building materials entirely. Sears, Roebuck continued to sell pre-cut houses but scaled back their operations significantly. Some kit house companies continued after
World War II, but most homebuyers flocked to the new, inexpensive
tract house subdivisions springing up across the country. Among the kit house models manufactured after World War II were the
Marshall Erdman Prefab Houses, designed by
Frank Lloyd Wright in the 1950s. Although none of the traditional kit house companies are still in business, pre-cut
log home and
geodesic dome kits are offered by a number of manufacturers.
Lindal Homes, a kit house company established in 1945 and headquartered in Seattle, continues to sell its pre-cut exterior materials home packages internationally through a network of independent distributors. And beginning in 2006, for a few years
Lowe's supplied plans and materials (not pre-cut) for small
stick-built homes called
Katrina Cottages, with walls designed to withstand 140 mile-per-hour (223 kilometer-per-hour) winds, intended to provide temporary housing for
Gulf Coast residents who had lost their homes to
Hurricane Katrina. Initially offered through Lowe's stores in
Mississippi and
Louisiana, in 2008 Lowe's began offering the cottages at all of its stores nationwide. However, although initially "hailed as the new Sears & Roebuck house," the program faced strong opposition from local governments in the Gulf Coast region who feared the cottages would lower property values, and by mid-2011, Lowe's had discontinued its product line. ==Other countries==