A residential home, built as a modular by OHTS building trades students, rests on lowbed trailers before being transported to its permanent site in Norway. Nicole Carter / Advertiser Democrat PARIS — For the third time since 2022, a joint venture between Oxford Hills Tech School, Turn Key Homes and Hammond Lumber has produced a residential house built on a foundation at Oxford Hills Comprehensive High Schools, and moved in modular fashion to its forever home, this time in a Norway neighborhood. One half of a house built by Oxford Hills Tech School building technology students swings in the air from its temporary foundation at the school onto a flatbed trailer June 4.
The house was delivered to its new owners’ homesite in Norway in two sections. Supplied photo “We sold this house before we even started,” said Dan Daniels, instructor for OHTS’ Building Construction Technology program. “The style of the house was changed up this year.
We built it with a larger kitchen and it will have an upstairs, as it’s being set on a daylight basement. “The first year my assistant at the time, Cimeron Colby, bought the house. And he has since gone to work for Turn Key.
The second year, Turn Key’s operations manager’s daughter bought the house we built here. And this one was bought by a Turn Key employee also.” Both the introductory and continuing classes in the building trades program worked on the house this year.
“Our first-year students have been very talented,” D.
