Now that's thinking outside the box! Amazing pictures of 'green' condos, offices and a pop-up lobster shack made up entirely of empty shipping containers

By Daily Mail Reporter

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As the saying goes, home is where the heart is, and for a growing number of people in the U.S. and beyond its borders, that special place is a stack of shipping containers.

With the demand for affordable housing on the rise across the country, some developers in cities like Detroit and Seattle have been using a truly outside-the-box thinking to come up with a solution to the problem: building condominiums out of discarded shipping containers.  

About 25 million of these 20-by-40 feet boxes move through U.S. ports every year, hauling everything from children’s toys to computers and chemicals.

Container to condo: A work is under way on the Exceptional Green Living on Rosa Parks in Detroit which, when completed, will be the first multi-family residence made up of boxes in the U.S.

Container to condo: A work is under way on the Exceptional Green Living on Rosa Parks in Detroit which, when completed, will be the first multi-family residence made up of boxes in the U.S.

The Office: The Box Office was constructed in Providence, Rhode Island, out of 35 stacked empty shipping boxes, making it the largest office building of its kind in the U.S.

The Office: The Box Office was constructed in Providence, Rhode Island, out of 35 stacked empty shipping boxes, making it the largest office building of its kind in the U.S.

Just like Legos: The Container City project at Trinity Buoy Wharf in London

Just like Legos: The Container City project at Trinity Buoy Wharf in London

In the past, when a container was retired from service in the shipping industry, it would end up discarded in a ship yard to be slowly consumed by rust. But now, the colourful steel boxes get a new lease on life by being transformed into apartments, art studios, office buildings and even restaurants.

HyBrid Architecture, based in Seattle, Washington, has been building housing from containers for nearly 10 years now and is credited with coining the term 'cargotecture' to describe this ‘green’ approach to construction, ABC News reported.

 

Homes and businesses pieced together out of the multicolored boxes which can be purchased for as little as $2,500 each have been springing up from coast to coast in recent years.

In Detroit, a project is under way to build a four-story condominium complex consisting of 93 stacked cargo boxes. Dubbed the Exceptional Green Living on Rosa Parks, the development has been in the pipeline for four years now, but suffered a delay due to the recent real estate bust.

Downsized: The Sunset Cargotecture cottage in Seattle comes in at only 192 square feet, but it is powered by solar energy and features a galley kitchen, a micro-bathroom, a transformer couch and folding bed

Downsized: The Sunset Cargotecture cottage in Seattle comes in at only 192 square feet, but it is powered by solar energy and features a galley kitchen, a micro-bathroom, a transformer couch and folding bed

Hybrid: The solar-powered Container House in Nederland, Colorado, includes a main wooden structure sandwiched between two crates which house an office and a bedroom

Hybrid: The solar-powered Container House in Nederland, Colorado, includes a main wooden structure sandwiched between two crates which house an office and a bedroom

Down to earth: The five freestanding shipping crates that make up the Camp Cinco in Brewster County, Texas, each serve a different purpose: a living room, two bedrooms and bathrooms, a kitchen and dining room and a storage unit

Down to earth: The five freestanding shipping crates that make up the Camp Cinco in Brewster County, Texas, each serve a different purpose: a living room, two bedrooms and bathrooms, a kitchen and dining room and a storage unit

When completed, the condo building will be the first multi-family residence built from containers in the U.S. According to the plan, each unit will feature ductless heating and air systems, tankless water heaters and other energy-saving solutions.

In Seattle, the aforementioned firm HyBrid Architecture constructed the Sunset Cargotecture cottage in 2011. While the dwelling is miniscule, coming in at only 192 square feet, it is powered by solar energy and is equipped with all the basic necessities: a galley kitchen, a micro-bathroom, a transformer couch and a foldout bed.

While most architects see containers as Lego-like building blocks that are most useful when stacked, Mark Wallen went the other route when he designed Camp Cinco in the rugged terrain of Brewster County, Texas.

Instead of manipulating the boxes, he left them free-standing on the ground, with each container serving a different, clearly defined purpose: a living room, two bedrooms and bathrooms, a kitchen and dining room and a storage unit.

Workplace: Containership Office shown as part of the 2008 East Bay Green Home Tour in Richmond, California

Workplace: Containership Office shown as part of the 2008 East Bay Green Home Tour in Richmond, California

Outside the box: Potential buyers and an agent look out of a $100,000 three-bedroom home made from four old shipping containers priced at $100,000 in Sydney,

Outside the box: Potential buyers and an agent look out of a $100,000 three-bedroom home made from four old shipping containers priced at $100,000 in Sydney,

Home sweet crate: A home made of shipping containers in Richmond California

Home sweet crate: A home made of shipping containers in Richmond California

The ranch was commissioned by Roger Black, a former Rolling Stone magazine designer who moved to the rocky desert in Texas to get away from the Hamptons.

A jumble of 35 blue and lime-green containers stacked one on top of the other make up the Box Office in Providence, Rhode Island. The 12,000-square-foot complex is the largest office building of its kind in the U.S.

Despite the easily accessible and relatively cheap building materials, developer Peter Case said the project set him back as much as $1.6million due to the high costs associated with transforming an empty crate into a functioning office space.

Besides living quarters and workplaces, containers have been used to erect some of the more unusual commercial spaces, like the pop-up lobster shack on wheels called Muvbox, complete with unfolding table seating and awnings.

Shipping souk: The Dekalb Market in downtown Brooklyn is made up of empty containers where 60 vendors sell arts and clothing

Shipping souk: The Dekalb Market in downtown Brooklyn is made up of empty containers where 60 vendors sell arts and clothing

Dinner box: Restaurateur Kirk Lance opened a Mexican restaurant along an Oregon highway housed inside a shipping crate

Lunch box: Restaurateur Kirk Lance opened a Mexican restaurant along an Oregon highway housed inside a shipping crate

Meals of wheels: The first Muvbox pop-up lobster shack sprung up in Montreal in 2006, but the idea have since spread to Toronto, New york and Paris

Meals of wheels: The first Muvbox portable pop-up lobster shack sprung up in Montreal in 2006, but the idea have since spread to Toronto, New york and Paris

The idea for the quirky, crustacean-themed eatery was borne out of an art project in Montreal in 2006. Since then, similar boxes have surfaced in Toronto, Times Square in New York and even Paris.

In Brooklyn, 60 vendors have been selling their wares, from arts and crafts to clothing, out of shipping containers scattered around an empty parking lot dubbed the DeKalb Market.

But perhaps one of the more unusual ideas for how to use empty containers came one day to restaurateur Kirk Lance, who opened a taqueria along an Oregon highway housed inside a shipping crate he bought for $3,000.



 

 

The comments below have not been moderated.

While the house in Richmond, California and the Mexican restaurant in Oregon look great, the general idea is a little bit shanty-town chic, although practical. It does reuse these shipping containers, which is good. However, what happens when it hails and how do you keep these things cool? A metal house sounds like it would get a little hot in the summer.

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Saw them on a camp site in Spain , it's the inthing now

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I wouldn't knock these - especially the ones in Detroit. After all, they're about 600 feet ABOVE sea level!

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Come to Christchurch in new Zealand...Our post earthquake central city has been condensed to a strip of foot mall, about 600m long, and all but one (I think) of our new shops and businesses are being run out of shipping containers...coffee shops, fashions stores, groceries...we may be little, we may be still shaking and still have 10,000 households living in dreadfully unacceptable conditions (over 2 years on), but we can still show the future King Of England a good time. Shipping containers..not what we expected to be shopping in, but Cantabs are a strong bunch!!!!!

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They look really cool!

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I can't imagine the sound of rain on them; hailstones, worse. But I love the look of them.

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Wouldn't they be a bit cold in the winter. I do like them though. Think it is a great idea to use them for that.

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Nothing new - haven't you seen the Homebase advert??

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I don't see any of them passing the Florida building codes for hurricanes and tropical storms. :)

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The 5th & 7th photos show just how variable finishes can be applied, this along with modern insulation makes them ideal starter homes or for single people. You can forget about those that say they wouldn't live in them, they don't have to, but there are thousands that would. Thats if your local planners will let them. So here are thousands of cheap nearly ready made dwellings to help with the chronic housing shortage, so forget it as it won't happen, thats the way most good ideas go isn't it?.

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