Shipping container home basics

Shipping container home basics

Shipping container home basics

Over the past decade, there has been a variety of innovative, unique, and in some cases quirky home ideas and designs.
In the on generations, there has been a desire to move from the city and live away from what was considered an average neighbourhood or housing development into something alternative. Even older generations have swapped out of the same, boring, single family home for a customised and home with some difference. There have been some new types of homes have caught the eye of the public but one that is standing out our shipping container homes. It’s correct; these houses are constructed from good old shipping containers that you see at a seaport.
At first, thought living in a shipping container might sound a weird little proposal to suggest. Shipping containers, however, can provide an ideal material with this is because they are credible, movable, strong, stackable, very strong and plentiful and supply as well as cheap to buy. Shipping containers have become hugely popular and the uses expanded not only from building homes but also shops, small cafes, officers, schools and school dormitories. They have also been used as emergency shelters, and even an Australian engineer in Fiji built an entire village community from shipping containers of which survived an incredibly strong hurricane that hit the country. As we noted in an another article shipping containers can also be used for aboveground swimming pools and are ideal for people that move from place to place within a locality – the swimming pool was very portable.
Some reference online may refer to shipping containers as storage container homes. Remember that these are equally interchangeable terms mean basically the same thing.
What our shipping container homes
As a term says shipping container homes are simply that, I am is made from shipping containers that you would otherwise see at a seaport. If ever you have driven past a shipping port area you will have seen large, rectangular metal boxes – these are shipping containers.
Shipping containers have a lifespan of around 30 years that most companies stop using them at around ten years to avoid any liability issues. It is then that the shipping containers may be recycled or sold to individuals or businesses.
Your probably wondering then how do you make a shipping container home?
This is up to the homeowner or developer and relates to the design chosen. The number of shipping containers for the N project will vary and can be one for smaller shipping container home or 10 or more for a larger home which all depends on budget and the creative mind.
The containers can be set on a foundation or sent side-by-side. This will be ideal for a single level one story home, but more creative designs can incorporate stacking the containers on top of each other forming a multi-story dwelling.
Some shipping containers are more suitable for the construction of residential homes than other shipping containers. One source that I referred to said that there might be up to 50 different types of storage containers used. The types of shipping containers use can be:
Open top – this is a container that has an open top and is used for top loading materials into it. The side of the container may open also.
Dry freight – these can also be called cube containers. They are front opening with the remaining part of the container sealed.
Thermal/insulated – carrying frozen goods and needing to stay cold during the shipping process. Insulated for temperature maintenance only but no external source of cooling.
Refrigeration – also known in the industry as reefer shipping containers. Can have the temperature controlling ability with a cooling system usually built and for shipping perishable goods.
Tank – can be rectangular or cylindrical in shape for transporting bulk or liquid material.
Dimensions of the containers above are usually ISO regulated – International standards organisation for height and width.
shipping container sizes are 20 feet or 40 feet, but some of the longer containers can go up to 56 feet. 20/40 is commonly referred for container lengths.

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