Shipping container cabin concept.

November 15th, 2008

VANCOUVER, BC, CANADA
SATURDAY, NOV 15th, 2008

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The design proposal features 7, 20 foot containers with a great room facing the ocean,
two lofts above for the kids and a master bedroom facing the back of the property.

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Out the master bedroom deck is a hot tub which is standing on a piling with a fireplace \
at the ground level so the water can be heated naturally by firewood. A circulating pump keeps things cozy.

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Eighty-six shipping containers make up the new Travelodge Hotel in Uxbridge, England.

Most people would not consider a shipping container to be a comfortable place to spend the night, but a new Travelodge hotel in England thinks it has found a way to make it appealing.

Located in a suburb of London called Uxbridge, the new hotel contains 120 rooms and was constructed in about four months on site, said Greg Dawson, a spokesman for Travelodge. That time included laying the foundations for the building. If constructed using traditional methods, the entire project would have taken about 15 months to two years to complete, he said. The hotel opened on August 15.

The modified steel shipping containers were fitted with hotel fixtures in Shenzen, China and then transported to England by boat, Travelodge said in a statement. The 86 individual containers then were stacked together “like giant Lego blocks” on the actual site in about 20 days.

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The shipping containers were fitted with fixtures in China before being sent to England.

The building method is very efficient and makes it possible to build in tricky locations, Dawson said. He noted that the location of the Uxbridge hotel at a former bus station in a busy shopping district probably could not have supported traditional building methods because of limited access.

The building style is also cheaper than traditional methods, Dawson said. The rates at the hotel currently match those at conventionally-built ones. But Dawson said the savings from the lower building costs get passed on to the consumer because they will allow the company to keep prices at the same rate even as utility prices and other costs continue to rise. The rooms at the hotel are about £20 (about $37) if booked online and £40-50 (about $73-$92) for walk-in guests, Dawson said.

Verbus Systems, a U.K. contractor, approached Travelodge with the idea, Dawson said. The hotel company currently has plans to open a new hotel in the U.K. every week for the next ten years, Dawson said, and the shipping container building method that Verbus proposed would help the company keep up with its target rate of growth. Travelodge has opened about 100 hotels in the last four years.

Travelodge is exploring the idea of building more shipping container hotels in the U.K. A similar project of 310 rooms is already under construction near Heathrow airport and will likely open in December, Dawson said.

Readers, what do you think of this building method?

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read here: http://weburbanist.com/2008/05/26/cargo-container-homes-and-offices/

Container home cliff side

May 29th, 2008

How about a cliff top container house?
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What is New York winners have been selected http://www.whatifnyc.net/

Many of the submissions feature recycled shipping containers, containers used as homes and shelter. The submissions are offered as solutions to a problem; “What if New York faced a catastrophic event?” whatif1.jpg

We have outfitted 20 and 40 foot containers for industrial & emergency applications available.
Our new line consists of basic shells, bunkhouses and restroom facilities. All units are
available now, UL & ULC approved and can be delivered Worldwide.

Typical used would be forestry, mining, oil exploration camps, temporary office space
and such.

Prefab housing, recycled shipping containers

May 11th, 2008

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I really dig this concept from Enovo . It reminds me a lot of building with recycled shipping containers. This company did a great job on the realism of the mock-ups. This would be an awesome cabin to own by a lake or ocean front.

Port-a-Bach Shipping Container | Bring Your Home With You Anywhere
April 23, 2008 in Containers, Green Living by Steve Qunell

1 Read the rest of this entry »

New Zealand Container Home

April 20th, 2008

Sure, this New Zealand home is heavy on the industrial, nuclear reactor look, but it has a certain draw to it, don’t you think? I was pointed to these images in a flickr photoset owned by petraalsbach and was struck by the interesting use of containers — as you can tell, the home was built right up to, and possibly into, the hill. Containers are strong and stackable,and it seems like lots of people are using them right now in home design. Container homes may just become more popular than modern prefab …

nz Read the rest of this entry »

MetroCabin

April 8th, 2008

Here is a great idea for a compact weekender:

metrocabin1 Read the rest of this entry »