DREAM HOMES THAT COME IN A CRATE
This is truly thinking outside the box! So Mod and Contemporary and making good use of materials.
Architects and designers redefine what's possible with shipping container homes. Photo: Architecture and Hygiene. |
The use of rudimentary containers to ship cargo began in the late 17th century. By the 1950s, Malcolm McLean of Sea-Land Shipping, pushed by the U.S. military to standardize their design, was building strong, uniform, theft-resistant, stackable shipping containers that were easy to load and unload by truck, rail and ship, and easy to store.
A trade imbalance has led the containers piling up around U.S. hubs, and storing them increases the cost of doing business.
One response to the problem: Re-engineer the containers. As architects and designers around the world evolve and refine creative reuse, containers are reshaping as disaster-relief shelters, coffee shops, student housing, custom homes, retail towers, even storing physical books after they are digitized.
The richly furnished interior contrasts to the minimalist, industrial exterior. Photo: Architecture and Hygiene |
Alex Klein of Container Home Consultants Inc. has been involved in shipping container conversions for 30 years, while Heather Levin said she appreciates container homes after noticing how much of her hard-earned dollars went to a bank as mortgage loan interest.
This container house in France was completed in 2010. Photo: CG Architects, France |
21st Century Homes & Structures builds modular homes and claims it is the "original approved shipping container home manufacturer in New York... certified since 1985."
A colorful, lego-block-esque apartment complex in England. Photo: plentyofants|Flickr |
An Argentinian-born woman living in California identified by faircompanies.com as "Lulu" (no last name given), was reportedly forced by the recession to downsize, and found and modified a free shipping container. She took a couple of months to gather mostly recycled components to remodel the unit, faircompanies.com reported, and it took another month to convert the original 360-square-foot space into a home for herself and her small daughter.
Container homes can take on more conventional shapes as well. Photo: Alex Klein, Container Home Consultants Inc |
See full story: Container homes: out-of-the-box thinking
By Susan Galleymore, Inman News
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