shipping containers

How Do We Build a House? - Shipping Container Architecture

My wife has almost died several times and we found out it's from extensive formaldehyde and other toxin overdoses from our manufactured home and now she has lupus. We are wanting to move and would like to make this move as green as we can afford. We are looking at recycling used shipping containers to build a home with. One of our problems is that there are 10 in our family. Does anyone have any suggestions and/or help and/or information? Would Building Green TV be interested in doing a show(s) about this? Thanks.


a six container home in mexico

Sparks (link to his blog at end of post) has joined fabprefab, and just posted a six-container-home project being built on a hillside in the small community of Cuastecomate, just outside of Melaque on the southern coast of Jalisco, Mexico. Just look at that view! I'll be watching and waiting to see how this project progresses....



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Sparks Mexico


Win $10,000 in free green design services from Group 41 Inc.

San Francisco-based architecture firm Group 41 Inc. is feeling really generous. So, if you own a piece of land (preferably rural) and you'd like a modern, green home or commercial building designed for you at no cost, you should definitely pay attention.

Group 41 Inc. has put out a call to anyone, anywhere who has land who would like a residential or commercial structure built for them out of recycled shipping containers—and the hook? They're offering their schematic and design services at no cost—a $10,000 dollar value.

The mind behind this "contest" is architect Joel Karr.

"I have been intrigued by shipping containers for years," Joel told us, via email, "and always talked about it with clients, friends and colleagues, basically anyone who would listen, and have never been able to find anyone who is serious enough about using them to commission me for a project. I genuinely believe, not only in the “kewl” factor of these ready-made building blocks, but in the truly sustainable story behind the idea of their use ... By making this 'extreme offer,' I am hopeful that there is someone out there who shares my vision, and is genuinely excited by the notion of creating something that is at once a truly sustainable and wonderful space."

Anyone (with land) who is interested in entering the contest can contact Joel Karr directly at 415-431-0300, or by email — joel [at] group41inc.com.


Building blocks

Green building, aside from making the world a healthier, more sustainable place, also makes beautiful use of some pretty interesting materials: manure, dirt and straw to name a few. It should come as no surprise then that one of the most interesting and modernist trends in the green building movement depends on what is probably the ugliest material—old shipping containers. Yes, the same shipping containers that travel here from Asia, then across the country on the backs of trains. They're big, they're kind of dingy, beaten-up, graffiti-ed even, and they make for a very green building alternative.

Similar to prefab housing, even considered a type of prefab in and of itself, building with shipping containers is attractive because of the ease of assembly as well as the fact that the containers are essentially a waste material. As this article at SFGate.com points out, "Many more full containers arrive on our shores than depart, so ports either ship them back empty—to the tune of about $900 per—or sell them."

Used containers are often insulated and are strong enough to be stacked extremely high (up to 12 containers). And, of course, despite their original state, can end up creating modern, beautiful homes. Take, for instance, Adam Kalkin's 12 Container House (pictured above).

The one thing to be sure of, when picking the containers you want to build with, is that the floors have not been treated with any unhealthy chemicals.

Image www.architectureandhygiene.com, Peter Aaron