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Shipping Container Houses
No title
Shipping Container Houses
Could America's record balance of payments deficit with China be the solution
to low cost housing?
Might it even be an unprecedented opportunity to be Green?
If that sounds like two really stupid questions, well maybe not so much.
America is buying so much merchandise from other countries, primarily China
and selling so little back to them that shipping containers are actually becoming
an environmental hazard. Apparently it is cheaper to manufacture new ones on
the opposite side of the ocean than transport
them empty back to where they originated.
In port cities and areas around inland freight transit terminals hundreds
of thousands of empty containers are piling up. The stacks, dozens of containers
high, loom over the landscape and there are residential neighborhoods in their
shadow where the sun sets an hour earlier than in the surrounding areas.
The containers, properly called inter-modal steel building units (ISBUs)
are familiar to almost everyone. Even inland they are seen riding on flatbed
railroad cars or hauled on a dolly behind tractors on interstate highways and
are featured in the stock film footage on the news channels, illustrating every
story about port security. ISBUs are manufactured of heavy-gauge
Corten steel and are water-proof, fire resistant, impervious to bugs and
built to hold cargo securely on the pitching deck of a ship.
You can almost imagine an architect staring at an impressive tower of containers
when the light-bulb flashed on. Wow, a low cost, resource efficient, readily
available, and incredibly ugly source of housing.
But architects are working on many plans and building techniques to make
shipping container
housing attractive and functional. They do not have to be square and flat-roofed
- some are finished off with trussed roofs and interior and exterior finishes
make them look very much like conventional housing.
ISBUs are supposedly manufactured in two sizes - 20' x 8' x 8' and 40' x
8' x 8' and one container can form the basis for a small, low cost home - perhaps
emergency temporary housing following an earthquake or hurricane - or multiple
containers can be used as building blocks to create larger and more permanent
structures. For example, four 40 foot units placed side by side with the side
walls of the inner two containers removed provides an open space 40' x 32' -
1,280 sq. ft of living area. The containers are manufactured to be stacked as
much as nine high without compromising their structural integrity so second
or third stories are no problem.
Architects are acting like kids in configuring these huge Lego's into bold
designs and blueprints for college dorms, artist loft space, shopping areas,
and now a wide variety of housing. They line them up, pile them up, cantilever
them, and add on decks, canopies, and achieve a final result that can appear
ultra modern, traditional, or whimsical.
Container housing is not an American innovation. Containers have been used
in Europe, New Zealand, and many third-world countries and they are far ahead
of us in the number of completed projects and in innovative technology. Still,
building companies and architects are jumping in and it is expected that prices
for completed homes will be coming down to a level which will make ISBU homes
appealing to American consumers.
This could be a do-it-yourself project, and there are plans available in
books and on the Internet, but Bob Villa's website and his television program
recently featured a project building a container house by Tampa Armature Works
(TAW), a Florida company which has been developing approaches to adapting containers
for use as housing units. TAW custom fits the containers at their plant - generally
removing all but the outer side panels, leaving the vertical steel support beams
for structural integrity and cutting openings for windows and doors in the remaining
walls. The company uses a spray-on ceramic coating on both sides of the remaining
walls. This spray has an R value of R-19 and bonds nicely to the steel surface.
The insulate can be covered with drywall on the inside and a number of finishes
such as stucco on the exterior.
At the site - which must be accessible for heavy
trucking and a crane
- the owner or local builder assembles a concrete block foundation with an appropriately
sized stem-wall foundation reinforced with steel rebar. The cells are then filled
with concrete and half-inch thick steel plates with a J-hook are embedded into
the concrete at the corners. The J-hook connects the ISBU to the rebar and ties
it all the way down to the footing. Additional block and concrete work is done
to support the sides of the other containers. The ISBU are lifted onto the foundation
by crane, hooked down and then welded to the steel embedded in the foundation
and at the corners. According to Villa's website, these containers are so strong
- each is designed to carry over 26 tons of cargo
- that they only must be fastened at the corners but attaching them to the rebar
and welding them in place "ensures they will be immovable."
The multiple containers are welded together at top and bottom and roof, where
specified, trusses are put on with steel straps that are welded to the steel
roof of the container. Interior finish work is done with metal studding and
drywall and when finished, the container looks like a real house.
So what are the advantages?
The containers are exceptionally strong and may be a solution to construction
in hurricane prone areas and they nearly eliminate the use of trees to build
a home. They are energy efficient and since they are built to factory specifications
guesswork and fitting is eliminated. This reduces construction time for building
crews and wasted materials. While container
construction does not necessarily produce cost savings at present, as more
and more homes are built with this technology, there will be significant savings.
Of course, one of the big advantages is in eliminating what promises to be
a progressive environmental impact on areas around container depots and the
recycling rather than land filling of resources.
So how do you find a shipping container and how much do they cost? Well,
believe it or not, on eBay. We found quite a number of them and they were available
nationwide. A 40' container was for sale in Salt
Lake City for $2,800 and another in Houston for $3,900. 20 footers ranged
from $1,100 in Long Beach to $2,500 in Florida. We even found places advertising
containers that were outside the dimensions specified above. We located containers
for sale that were 10, 30, 45, and 48 feet long and as much at 9.5 feet high.
Perhaps the construction of these put them outside of the ISBU definition but
they were of steel construction and their availability would open more design
possibilities. Shipping the containers of course adds to the cost, but if you
are interested, perhaps you can arrange to deliver a load of winter wheat from
Salt Lake or motor oil from Houston to your new doorstep and cover part of the
cost.
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Comments:
On 2008 March 11 21:50 A better soluti wrote:
On 2008 March 13 19:57 houstonhere wrote:
http://www.myfoxhouston.com/myfox/pages/InsideFox/Detail?contentId=6003085&version=3&locale=EN-US&layoutCode=VSTY&pageId=5.2.1
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