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Pre Fabricated Homes in Costa Rica using shipping containers By www.containerhomes.net Dated: Jun 17, 2009 The pre fabricated home in Costa Rica can be completed by using a standard ISO steel shipping container. The used shipping containers are converted into homes in less than one month and then they are delivered. Contact us at: www.containerhomes.net PRLog.Org - Global Press Release Distribution
Six Degrees of Reparation INNOVATIVE RECYCLING by building a home from a shipping container.
1. The construction of homes using shipping containers eliminates a waste disposal problem/cleans up coastline. 2. The shipping container home provides affordable housing. 3. The shipping container home is a low cost and low impact form of construction. 4. The shipping container home construction accomplishes this using a minimal amount of energy and non-renewable resources. 5. The shipping container home construction comes with additional Green features. 6. The shipping container can be configured for other uses as well. 7. The shipping container is transportable (can be taken where they are needed)
  1. Multi- Purpose Recycling In the United States, the importation of goods and services is nearly 60% higher than exportation. This influx of imported goods creates what is known as a trade deficit. America is buying so much merchandise from other countries, primarily China, and selling so little back to them that shipping containers are an impending waste disposal problem and a potential environmental hazard.

Shipping containers are used to transport goods all over the world. It is estimated that 90 percent of the world's trade goods are moved in shipping containers. One hundred million container loads crisscross the world's oceans each year in over 5,000 container ships. There is a very big chance that a lot of the stuff you own or buy came to you in a shipping container. But these shipping containers create problems too. After they are used a few times, they become used shipping containers and nobody wants them. These containers currently have no real use since it is not cost effective to return empty containers to their point of origin. One estimate is $900 per container for the average return trip.
Since it’s cheaper to manufacture new shipping containers on the opposite side of the ocean than to transport the empty ones back, the shipping container industry continues to produce more of them each and every year. You might say that shipping containers are a renewable resource of sorts.
But unlike bamboo, or other sustainable resources, shipping containers do not “grow” benignly. They are not (yet) harmless in their effect on the environment. In fact, they are stacked, dozens of containers high, in port cities and areas around inland freight transit terminals. In some residential neighborhoods, these mountainous stacks of hundreds of thousands of empty shipping containers actually cast a shadow causing the sun to “set” an hour earlier than in the surrounding area! So, they are already impacting the lifestyle of some coastal residents.
Besides being an aesthetic nightmare, these shipping containers pose a serious waste disposal problem. Unless something is done, the environmental impact will only worsen. Twenty-one thousand containers hit American shores every day of the year, and tens of thousands reach the waterfronts of other countries, with many more at sea on any given day. This method of transporting goods is unlikely to change. As long as we are trading with Asia, there is going to be a glut of shipping containers. We can’t change this situation. What can change is how we look at it.
Rather than looking at these shipping containers as a waste disposal problem, we can choose to regard them as an abundance of potential building material. Shipping containers are readily available across the globe. So there is a bright spot in this darkening sky. Some architects and builders are beginning to take advantage of this surplus to recycle the containers. This then, is the first degree of reparation: to clean up the coastlines by recycling these used shipping containers. Recycling in this way will result in cleaner and healthier coastlines without creating another problem like huge areas of landfill.

  1. Transition from waste disposal to housing. The Chinese say that every perceived problem holds opportunities. And so it is with the current need for
low cost and emergency housing. Not all solutions come by design. Some arrive disguised as problems. Some arrive by happenstance. And some arrive… by boat!
One level at which this problem can be addressed is recycling. Just in general, it’s a good thing to recycle materials that otherwise have no further use for their intended purpose, and this holds true here. But to what use should we put 8,000 lbs of steel? An idea whose time seems to have arrived is the use of stockpiled shipping containers to build prefab homes. Why not take something just going to waste and difficult to dispose of and turn it into something useful? Making a building (which can last and last) out of what is essentially a huge piece of industrial waste takes recycling to a whole new level. Few ideas can compete with the pragmatic beauty of this one.
Prefab shipping container housing can represent a real solution to some social and ecological problems. Low cost housng built using a minimal amount of energy and a maximum of renewable resources is the second degree of reparation. One shipping container can form the basis for a small, low cost home.
For some people, it’s hard to imagine that a shipping container, a steel box that might have just brought a load of wheat across an ocean, can be transformed into a comfortable home. But that skepticism quickly fades once they tour a prefab shipping container home. They are actually quite spacious. Two generous bedrooms ( or a bedroom and an office ), a bathroom and a kitchen are an easy fit in just one container. which can be as large as 20-by-48-feet.
Take a country like Costa Rica, for example. The value of land has increased to a level where only foreigners can afford to own property and some Costa Ricans who were once property owners are being displaced or have become employees of the new landowners. The cost of conventional building materials has also risen prohibitively. Used shipping containers are a viable and worldwide option for many people in this position.
They can also be the answer to more affordable housing for families worldwide. Container homes can be a great solution for third world countries with housing problems. One container can form the basis for a small, low cost home. Multiple containers can be used as building blocks to create larger and more permanent structures. The containers are manufactured to be stacked much as nine high without compromising their structural integrity so second or third stories are no problem.

3. And low income apartment buildings are beginning to emerge on the landscape.
A small carbon footprint There are several reasons for recycling shipping containers into homes rather than something else. One of the most important reasons is the amount of energy required to repurpose them. David Cross, a business development director, explains that melting down an 8000 lb steel shipping container to make steel beams, for example, requires 8000 kW-hrs of energy. The process of recycling that entire 8000 lbs of steel into a shipping container home takes only 400 kW-hrs of electrical energy or about 5% of the energy needed to melt it.
Reusing shipping containers in this way saves not only electrical energy but also the expenditure of human energy (time and labor costs) and the fuel used to ship them back to their country of origin. And since they are built to factory specifications, a lot of guesswork is eliminated. This reduces construction time for building crews and wasted materials. The nature of shipping containers as building material also allows for the possibility of a number of energy-saving designs. So shipping container homes are energy efficient in many ways.
Contact us at: http://www.containerhomes.net/
Containerhomes.net builds homes in Costa Rica using shipping containers as the main building block for construction. These steel homes are perfect for the security of your home and can be prefabricated at our factory in San Ramon, Costa Rica in one month. Category Shipping Containers Tags shipping, container, Home, construction, design, costa, rica, prefabricated, homes Email Click to email author Country Costa Rica Page 3/3
EMAIL sent 10/26/09 by JEM

We are interested in whether you have detailed construction plans for house -- small (two or three containers) and family size )(four to six containers). My house will be a small one and I will use strawbales on the outside for insulation. The outside of the strawbales would be stucco. I would add a gable roof. What do you use for the foundation? How do you get a building permit? Does the Uniform Building Code provide for using containers? Do you have pictures of what you have built? What do you charge for the plans?
I have a project which could use 8 x 16' containers. Do you have a source for such sizes or anything close?


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