Move over mobile homes, container living is here to stay.
Once confined to scrap metal yards or landfills, shipping
containers are quickly becoming the darlings of the modern
architectural world. Easily transportable, widely available and
practically indestructible, these metal boxes just may be an answer to
the worldwide housing crisis.
Oh, and they're cheeeaaaap. A used container can be bought for
around $2,000. Not bad, considering the average price of a house in
California still hovers at around $400k. With such affordable pricing,
architects and designers have had ample room to experiment, resulting
in much chicer and more forward-thinking designs than the dissected
mobile homes once traveling the US highways.
Architect Adam Kalkin has received much notoriety for the high design of his Quick Houses.
Based around the construction of five shipping containers and coming
in at a cost of just $100 per square foot, multiple floor plans are
available for customization boasting many of today's modern
appetencies; stainless steel kitchens, wood floors, and walk-in closets.
Even big business is jumping on the bandwagon. Hospitality
giant Travel Lodge has recently finished construction on a 100 room
hotel made by cleverly fitting 88 recycled shipping containers
together. The Uxbridge, England building cost much less and was
finished more quickly than new construction.
Although in truth there are a finite number of containers
available for recycling, that number is in the millions, making
container construction a viable alternative in worldwide building.
Looks like we may all be sleeping in a box sooner than we thought.