Little boxes, little boxes

June 10, 2009 | Africa, Configuration, Construction, Embryo house, Innovations, Research, Self-built Housing

If we want to make housing affordable, shouldn’t we be looking at inexpensive construction materials?  That’s the premise of a short Climate Progress article, Shipping containers provide affordable housing, from the Center for American Progress’s “It’s Easy Being Green” series.

 

There’s an emerging and innovative solution to the environmental, economic, and housing concerns we face around the globe: shipping container homes.

 

Climateprogress_shipping_containers_containers_090402

Few shipping containers come with nice large portholes – not cheap!

 

It turns out reusing the old containers is an inexpensive, efficient, and environmentally friendly way to build homes that can be used by low-income residents or as temporary housing following a natural disaster.

 

(Readers must make due allowance for the credulous gee-whiz writing, which flits lightly over numerous practical problems, as we’ll see.)

 

A decade ago, on vacation in Australia’s Northern territory, we visited Kakadu National Park, where in the midst of a torrential downpour we stayed in the relative luxury of what the guidebook called a ‘donger‘,

Aussie slang for a shipping container cut in half and converted into a single-room accommodation.

 

Donger_in_the_making

Donger in the making?  Just bifurcate and add people

 

The prefab metal box or can has a long history in makeshift housing, from the Quonset Hut (to the Airstream trailer, up through the increasingly immobile home, whose history I’ve previously told.

 

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Spam in a can?  Newlywed WW2 couple with their Quonset hut

 

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Some day, son, you’ll live in a full cylinder, not just half of one

 

The Quonset is the American successor to the British WW1 Nissen hut, which was invented (I have just discovered) by a Norwegian-American, Peter Norman Nissen:

 

The special thing about The Nissen Hut is unbuilt it can fit in the back of a 3-tone truck, making it the first pre-fab house ever. It is made out of corrugated iron with a metal frame; it also has a wooden door and a few oiled cloth widows, instead of glass.

 

Nissen_hut_packed_small

Just follow the badly-photocopied instructions, and four hours later, a structure!

 

The Nissen Hut was also new and unique because is only took four hours for six men to assemble, the record time was 1 hour 27 min.

 

Quonsets are scattered about rural America, and because they are unbelievably durable (even if quite Spartan), they attract occupation and reuse:

 

Quonset_rose_cobis_2003

Rose Cobis had been a squatter in this Quonset hut for years before she purchased it from the city of Kodiak and transformed it into the Quonset home it is today.

 

Back to the shipping container possibility:

 

Architects and humanitarians alike have jumped on the bandwagon to make everything from chic urban spaces and stylish homes to disaster relief and affordable housing.

 

Because they are made of such high-grade corrugated steel, shipping containers make a terrific structural material.  Perfectly orthogonal, they stack, inviting adaptive amalgamation:

 

Keetwonen
Billed as the largest container city in the world, Amsterdam’s massive Keetwonen complex houses 1,000 students.

 

They are particularly well suited for constructing buildings, as they are stackable and their steel walls are durable, fireproof, and resistant to rust, mold, and termites. Shipping container homes can be constructed for far less cost than traditional building methods and use as much as 80 percent recycled materials.  The homes can also be prefabricated, a method or a system where the structure or its components are manufactured at a facility and transported to the building site.  This reduces the amount of time needed to complete a house, drives down costs, and uses indoor construction, which eliminates interruptions from inclement weather.

 

Throughout Africa and South Asia, containers are commonly reused for other purposes:

 

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Container reused into bus stop, KwaZulu Natal, South Africa

 

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Container converted into a phone center, Durban, South Africa

 

Empty containers accumulate [in importing countries] because it is too expensive and wasteful to ship them back to their countries of origin–the United States in particular has a large surplus of containers due to its trade deficit.

 

The problem thus isn’t using the shipping containers in Africa or South Asia, but getting them to Africa or South Asia.

 

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Gotta get ‘em over the water

 

Better, I think, would be to enable dismantlement and reassembly, such as with hammered barrels. 

 

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House made of hammered barrels, Cape Flats, Cape Town, South Africa

 

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House made of hammered barrels, Athi River, Nairobi, kenya

 

Improvability is an intrinsic element of the desirable single-family home.

 

One organization utilizing this building technique is PFNC Global communities, which stands for “Por Fin Nuestra Casa,” the Spanish equivalent of “Finally, a Home of Our Own.” PFNC is in the process of launching their one-unit shipping container home business, and they plan to create housing for people currently living in dangerous or insufficient housing situations around the world. They can put together a unit for less than $10,000.

 

That’s too expensive for very poor people, as is this New Zealand gimmick, the porta-bach:

 

Porta_batch

 

Need some flexibility with security? Need a temporary structure or small vacation home? Going off the grid? The Port-a-Bach system from New Zealand’s Atelier Workshop might be a good fit.

 

Costing around $55,000, Port-a-Bach sleeps two adults and two children comfortably, in a dwelling that folds up into a fully enclosed steel shell.

 

Nowhere near affordable, even if entertaining.

 

It comes with large internal storage cupboards and shelves; a stainless steel kitchen; bathroom with shower, sink and composting toilet; bunk beds and dressing room. Fabric screens allow you to shape internal space, as well as shelter the outdoor deck area.

 

Bach (pronounced Batch) is Kiwi slang for “Bachelor Pad,” and refers to the many small cabins that dot the famously picturesque country.

 

Nor is this concept house financially feasible:

 

Little_boxes_1

The Redondo beach house: 1

 

Some architectural innovators have also used the containers to create sleek, modern, and architecturally stunning homes, apartments, and office buildings. California architect Peter DeMaria built the first two-story shipping container home in the United States in 2006 using recycled steel containers and a combination of conventional stick frame construction and prefabricated assemblies.

 

Little_boxes_2

The Redondo beach house: 2

 

The result was a Redondo, CA Beach Home that won the 2007 American Institute of Architects Award for Design Excellence/Special Innovation.

 

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The Redondo beach house: 3

 

The design resembles the geometric focus, simplicity, and openness of Frank Lloyd Wright.

 

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The Redondo beach house: 4

 

Unfortunately for affordability, to convert the small, rigid, and dark containers into housing required so much adaptive reuse that the containers are little more than cumbersome wall panels.

 

Still, with all these metal boxes, somebody ought to be able to do something with them (and there are examples, such as Cargotecture):

 

The shipping container method is also ideal for creating portable temporary disaster relief shelters. Small units can be constructed quickly and then shipped out to provide people with a roof and basic amenities until they are back on their feet.

 

The temporary usually becomes the permanent, as our humble Quonset Huts show:

 

Quonset_church_1980

The Quonset hut of St. Patrick’s Catholic Church served as the center of Catholic life in Barrow until 1993. The church replaced the hut with a wood-framed structure.

 

With some adaptability, and possibly some easy-disassembly features, reusable shipping containers could represent the embryo house, giving people a nexus around which to establish a tenure and tenancy and gradually improve and personalize their homes.

 

Quonset_rozkydal_palmer_alaska_2003

Martie Rozkydal and her granddaughter, Julia Nesslage, beside the hut they painted together, 2003

 

Not surprisingly, the frontier for such housing in America is Alaska, where they are scattered about the wilderness, attracting home-makers just as dead Australian trees attract birds:

 

Quonset_rose_cobis_2003

Rose Cobis had been a squatter in this Quonset hut for years before she purchased it from the city of Kodiak and transformed it into the Quonset home it is today.

 

Be it ever so humble, if it’s ours, we’ll improve it:

 

Quonset_cohoe_studio_2003

Cohoe Studio storage shed painted by artist and proprietor Lee Culhane, 2003, Cohoe, Alaska


 

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