7 reasons why shipping container homes are a SCAM

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  • Опубликовано: 7 апр 2020
  • • Responding to comments...
    Check out my latest follow-up video to this one where I elaborate on some of the points and address some comments
    Shipping container homes are glamorized all over social media but are they everything they are marketed as? In this video, I uncover 7 reasons why you should stay away from shipping container homes.
    Since the early 2000s, shipping containers have captured the imagination of designers and home builders worldwide. They fit in with the very popular tiny house movement that advocates living simpler and in smaller homes. The corrugated metal exterior of shipping containers gives it a trendy, industrial look. Thousands of shipping containers are discarded every year. So, there is a sense of being socially responsible and environmentally conscious when one rescues a shipping container from a junk yard and converts it into a home.
    First issue: the size constraints. Standard shipping containers are 20 feet and 40 feet long and 8 feet wide. Most of these containers are 8.5 feet tall but you can order custom ones that are 9.5 feet tall.
    Second issue: A metal container works as a system, the idea that every part of this box is structural is false. Every single cut that you make for plumbing, windows, doors, roof openings into its structural frame or corrugated metal siding compromises its strength so you have to reinforce it with metal or wood.
    Third issue: the thermal conductivity of steel. It’s not a good insulator, so you can expect the inside of these containers to get very hot in summer and very cold in winter.
    Fourth issue: the health risks that come with buying old shipping containers. You can track the locations that the container has been to around the world, but you can’t track exactly what it has carried. It could have carried toxic chemicals such as pesticides or fumigants and the contents might have leaked into the wooden floorboards.
    Fifth issue: this type of building is not the best for all locations. It might make sense in coastal regions near port cities where a container is readily available. If you are inland, the cost to transport it all the way to your plot of land is not logical. Also, building with native materials is the most eco-friendly and cost-effective method.
    Sixth issue: the idea that you are saving the environment when you use shipping containers and that is a highly sustainable practice. Another important thing to consider is the carbon footprint of your container home. Steel construction is not as environmentally friendly as wood.
    Seventh issue: the idea that shipping containers can be the solution to the housing crisis in the world but, this crisis is not a technology problem, it’s far more complex. Purely from a financial aspect, it would be cheaper to build a homeless shelter with wood than build a complex shipping container building. This type of building can maybe be 20% cheaper, not more. The modifications that you need to make a metal box livable aren’t cheap.
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    #shippingcontainer #home #scam #automation #buildingconstruction #ecofriendly #mythbuster
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Комментарии • 25 тыс.

  • @BelindaCarr
    @BelindaCarr  4 года назад +3933

    The overwhelming response to this video deserved a follow-up ruclips.net/video/kjbgduaH_7U/видео.html
    I address some comments that I received on this video.

    • @yemo34
      @yemo34 4 года назад +68

      Yeah, I'd like a cool sci-fi/dystopian house myself. Yet I'd rather hire an architect to be creative then build something out of toxic of trash though. Great video!

    • @womendesireetripleadvance9060
      @womendesireetripleadvance9060 4 года назад +26

      Good insight. I found that in Malaysia using a shipping container is more expensive because of the reasons you mention above... plus in Malaysia almost everything is expensive unless you're a tourist... nice video..

    • @DylanBegazo
      @DylanBegazo 4 года назад +29

      Full size School bus tiny homes are less space than shipping containers yet they are quite sustainable.

    • @fatjellydonutglaze2230
      @fatjellydonutglaze2230 4 года назад +16

      Good video even before this video I wouldn't use one for a home probably use it for a tool shed

    • @lucidshotz6222
      @lucidshotz6222 4 года назад +98

      Made a whole video about nothing

  • @tankwfw
    @tankwfw 2 года назад +6300

    As a kid I remember being made fun of for living in a trailer, and now hipsters are doing it to be trendy

    • @lio8161
      @lio8161 2 года назад +472

      Hell some trailer homes looking better then some standard homes

    • @waaargh2985
      @waaargh2985 2 года назад +70

      Think it started in france or something and these hipsters followed the trend

    • @nicksrandomness2774
      @nicksrandomness2774 2 года назад +140

      Someone in my town bought some property beside a church. It’s probably 1-2 acres. At first he had just one double wide trailer. With in a few months he had it looking like a house. Full garage, front porch, and now he has a little horse pasture

    • @GeeMannn
      @GeeMannn 2 года назад +160

      Hipsters thrive off LARPing as an impoverished spiritual guru

    • @JonatasAdoM
      @JonatasAdoM 2 года назад +94

      I remember my grandmother saying "wearing sandals used to be a sign of poverty and hillbillies and now it is fashion to use them.."

  • @MayaNirwan
    @MayaNirwan 3 года назад +3382

    You know what is scam... Mortgage, debt ridden life... That's a scam..

    • @ahhwe-any7434
      @ahhwe-any7434 3 года назад +17

      I know. This is my imitation of some "rich" ppl.
      Random person: yeah, so i can only do w/ what i have. I mean, if you really had to hear that. Anywho, I was wondering if i could get __
      Rich person: yeah so anyways, about me. & What do you mean you dont have more crack? 😤 How dare you.

    • @wesleyhedanek1604
      @wesleyhedanek1604 3 года назад +222

      I feel like people who call shipping container homes a scam are real estate agents/agencies who just want people to continue buy or rent houses from them to support their own cash flow.

    • @bossdawg165
      @bossdawg165 3 года назад +82

      School loans.... add that in

    • @MayaNirwan
      @MayaNirwan 3 года назад +27

      @@bossdawg165 Debt!!!

    • @bill944
      @bill944 3 года назад +68

      So, paying for someone's services, labor and materials is a scam? With that logic, buying groceries, a car or getting a haircut is a scam also. You don't have to engage in the free market. Live under a bridge or on the streets. Or, buy all of the materials and build it yourself.

  • @shiloh4184
    @shiloh4184 Год назад +370

    When the average cost of a home is 700k+, container homes start to look real good.

    • @tremainebligh8984
      @tremainebligh8984 7 месяцев назад +67

      This video probably paid by realestates lol because a shipping container house can last long forever and it's cheaper. Why pay for a house that will cost you 10-20 minimum years of work and I'm young and seen workers who are 40-70 working all their life for a land and a house and still broke

    • @foodstampz
      @foodstampz 6 месяцев назад +11

      When it comes to small scale it makes sense

    • @Freedomcustom
      @Freedomcustom 6 месяцев назад

      @@tremainebligh8984 rust is a thing, like any home maintenance is required and with one made of metal u CANNOT afford any part of it to be exposed or any part to begin eroding.

    • @scottdavidson526
      @scottdavidson526 6 месяцев назад +2

      Exactly. I live in Ohio. They're not that pricey here, depending where you live, but they're still more money than I care to pay. 8:40

    • @arsenii_yavorskyi
      @arsenii_yavorskyi 4 месяца назад

      that's an existing house. building one from scratch can't possibly cost that much.

  • @robkamanda
    @robkamanda 7 месяцев назад +162

    I lived in an unislated shipping container home for over 14 years. I was in a coastal city though. With the exception of some minor rust from salt air and periodic molding from humidity due to the tropical humidity, I thought it was a comfortable and manageble spot to live. I would totally recommend their use to help combat homelessness in big cities.

    • @WattersWaveYo
      @WattersWaveYo 7 месяцев назад +8

      Someone didn't watch the video.

    • @Lmaxk007
      @Lmaxk007 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@WattersWaveYosay 😂 shills

    • @jshkrueger
      @jshkrueger 4 месяца назад +6

      Yeah, because everyone is ok with periodic mold. You are in the extreme minority if you're ok with mold in your home. That stuff can kill you, ya know.

    • @vernonjackson3435
      @vernonjackson3435 4 месяца назад +1

      @@WattersWaveYo I don't about the @#$%! It's up to the person building it and
      from my viewpoint, The maker of this video has her OWN Agenda and I saw nothing mentioned about that!!!!!!!!

    • @hardtymz2517
      @hardtymz2517 3 месяца назад

      Rob's family informed me he just passed from tetanus aids. the medical examiner said it was cause he lived in that gross house. homeless people deserve BETTER than these crust factories.

  • @kevinh2345
    @kevinh2345 2 года назад +10743

    The problem with the whole "sustainablility" movement is when marketers realized that people are willing to spend more if they think they are saving the planet. Tons of counterintuitive products have been far more costly to the environment than what they were marketed to solve.

    • @mikesouthey1657
      @mikesouthey1657 2 года назад +229

      hehe, batteries for vehicle power storage instead of old school fuel

    • @fromfareast3070
      @fromfareast3070 2 года назад +325

      @@mikesouthey1657 I think that makes sense, even the electricity was produced by the same fossil fuel, the power plant is way more efficient than internal combustion engine. Concentrated pollution source is way more easier to manage than thousands of sparse pollution source.

    • @TekkLuthor
      @TekkLuthor 2 года назад +221

      cough, Apple justifying why they removed chargers from new phones

    • @olstar18
      @olstar18 2 года назад +215

      @@fromfareast3070 And dont forget the pollution created to mine and process the lithium for those batteries.

    • @austinbeale4879
      @austinbeale4879 2 года назад +138

      eco friendly water bottles made from a plant, they're cutting down rain forest to farm the plants lol

  • @Liwaaaah
    @Liwaaaah 2 года назад +2058

    I really thought she would say “to add insult to insulation” that one time

    • @ambientoblivion
      @ambientoblivion 2 года назад +14

      missed opportunity

    • @zconiglietti
      @zconiglietti 2 года назад +9

      I mean I heard it so clear even if she didn't say it 😂

    • @Liwaaaah
      @Liwaaaah 2 года назад +2

      @@ambientoblivion i swer to God! 😂

    • @Liwaaaah
      @Liwaaaah 2 года назад +2

      @@zconiglietti me too!

    • @pseguin7124
      @pseguin7124 2 года назад +4

      Me too I even finished the sentence

  • @andreidemian25
    @andreidemian25 Год назад +45

    I would still spend 20k building a container house than spend 100k building a normal house

    • @chrisallen2005
      @chrisallen2005 3 месяца назад

      Do some real arithmetic, math is not required, and reread your comment. You have your head stuck somewhere dark and smelly.

    • @allananderson949
      @allananderson949 18 дней назад +2

      Why not just spend 20k building a small house? You'll get more for your money

  • @paulgewiss9238
    @paulgewiss9238 5 месяцев назад +14

    I'm a carpenter . I have 39 years in my trade, 24 of those years I spent framing homes. Now I just repair them.
    Recently my wife and I purchased rural land with the intent of building a house.
    The option of a container home has come to the table. There's a lot to think about when designing one.
    Your video has a lot of valid points and I'm going to watch it over again and share it with my wife.
    My skills unfortunately do not include welding which seems to be a requirement in the construction of a container home which means that I would need to hire a welder.
    Cost as always is a prime factor and I feel that your video along with some others has shed enough light on the subject for me to make an educated decision. Thank you

    • @chrisallen2005
      @chrisallen2005 3 месяца назад

      I will bet that a great part of the reason you are repairing wood frame homes is because framers get paid by piecework and take every shortcut possible while building. When you go to build your own home you hopefully will not take the same shortcut. Unless you don't actually know anymore what the correct way to build is.

    • @lazguevara151
      @lazguevara151 Месяц назад

      Run!

    • @allananderson949
      @allananderson949 18 дней назад

      You can buy a mig welder pretty cheaply

  • @charlespratt8663
    @charlespratt8663 2 года назад +345

    I lived in a dumpster once. It's the tiny house version of a shipping container.

  • @NotBrianStelter
    @NotBrianStelter 2 года назад +7814

    I don’t know why this video was recommended to me, but it was oddly fascinating. Very clearly explained.

    • @melissaivy5199
      @melissaivy5199 2 года назад +24

      Me to totally agree with you👍

    • @nbucwa6621
      @nbucwa6621 2 года назад +9

      Same

    • @hewhoisonewiththeforce8643
      @hewhoisonewiththeforce8643 2 года назад +17

      So it's not just me😅

    • @SuperGibby
      @SuperGibby 2 года назад +6

      Same lmao

    • @jadeelasia
      @jadeelasia 2 года назад +15

      right? i never wanted a shipping container as my home and now we know how people live in them 😭😭

  • @brandonyoung2029
    @brandonyoung2029 Год назад +10

    Shipping container home builds are the best bang for your buck. If you're smart and know what you're doing, you can't lose financially. Even reinforcing the containers is less than a third of the cost of a stick built home framework.

    • @supereero9
      @supereero9 10 дней назад

      Does it stay warm for the winter? The temperature goes down to -30 at the worst where I live

  • @XtomJamesExtra
    @XtomJamesExtra 8 месяцев назад +76

    There are several inaccuracies in this video, let's go over some of them.
    1) Shipping containers do require some reinforcement, but recycling even a one time use shipping container into a permanent structure is environmentally sound, and even if you do use steel reinforcement the steel used for that reinforcement is relatively inexpensive. The reason why it's environmentally sound is because one time use shipping containers are actually very common. This video doesn't touch on shipping practices and there are many good containers that end up being stacked in some warehouse field that are destined to rot because they'll never be shipped out again.
    2) You can use 1x1 framing on the interior and exterior with environmentally friendly spray foam insulations (which have been available for nearly a decade now) thus preventing sweating, reducing interior space loss, while reducing overall frame out costs and cladding costs.
    3) Under US law, the contents of a shipping container and its full history must be disclosed. So not just where it's been, but what it contained. Shipping containers that are damaged or have been exposed to chemicals that may or are known to cause health issues aren't allowed to be sold to the general public. This is regulated under the EPA.
    4) Interior shipping costs for a shipping container are actually far lower than you might think. In almost every state in the US you can buy a shipping container for under $2000 and if you're within 100 miles of the seller's location, they'll ship it to you for free.
    5) The exterior paint may contain some carcinogenic or hazardous chemicals (anti-corrosives), however, new sealant layers can prevent leeching, and is generally recommended anyways to prevent rusting.
    Overall container homes are actually a valid and inexpensive way to construct a shell for a home or building. They repurpose an otherwise wasteful and carbon intensive material (steel boxes) into something with longevity after their useful life as a shipping container is complete.

  • @frodobaggins7252
    @frodobaggins7252 2 года назад +1249

    Before people started using shipping containers for homes they cost anywhere from $250 to $850 dollars each. Now they cost upwards of $5,000 each. The manufacturers will just continue to raise the cost of them as demand grows.
    When they were inexpensive it made sense to use them as housing alternatives because the cost to fortify them was offset by the cheap initial investment. Now, the cost per square foot of living space is prohibitive.

    • @capsfederation3154
      @capsfederation3154 2 года назад +23

      Seriously it once was 250? Wow i thought theyd be 10k even after wear and tear 😂

    • @TheMuddatrucker
      @TheMuddatrucker 2 года назад +53

      @@capsfederation3154 you’re right, they’re nothing like $250 😂 and never have been! Maybe you could have found a really badly beaten up one for $1500-2000 but they’re hard to come by because you don’t really scrap old shipping containers, you repair them and keep them in service.

    • @mgmg116
      @mgmg116 2 года назад +67

      @@capsfederation3154 this is an outright lie. You really think all the shipping companies buying up shipping containers for product shipment was a smaller demand than a niche portion of the homeowner population? Lol.
      Shipping containers were NEVER $250, that's absolute nonsense.
      Well, maybe in the 1960s?
      They've ALWAYS been expensive.
      And right now, where I live, there sre companies that resell them in 10'x10'x40 for $2k apiece. Yes, it's getting pricier, but houses are FAR more expensive.
      Videos like these are just propaganda to try and discourage property ownership so governments can push the populations of their country towards getting comfortable with permanent rentals.
      Someday, EVERYTHING is going to be subscription based.
      And society will be divided by what 'tier' of subscription costs they pay for food, cars, housing, healthcare, etc, you watch.
      These rich bastards will bleed us dry every step of the way in every aspect of our lives. We're just cash cows to them

    • @GreenTimeEagle
      @GreenTimeEagle 2 года назад +66

      @@mgmg116 The video was not propaganda. She made valid points that make sense to me, someone who works in construction.
      For instance, a big point she was talking about was modification to make the containers livable. Every hole cut for a window or door must be reinforced.
      Generally speaking, going back to modify will be more expensive than having a plan before work to build from the ground up, especially due to labour costs.

    • @buzz86us2005
      @buzz86us2005 2 года назад +16

      I was looking into this, but for $3k I might as well buy a used camper

  • @tehmorninstah
    @tehmorninstah 2 года назад +1380

    "Reinforcing the walls" was enough as a reason, because essentially the whole point of those containers is to avoid building walls.

    • @ShogunThomsen
      @ShogunThomsen 2 года назад +29

      Good thing there's something called a "column".

    • @MyNam3isNot
      @MyNam3isNot 2 года назад +24

      Add to that the current price of steel. Is crazy expensive and long lead time.

    • @crayder1100
      @crayder1100 2 года назад +7

      It's not a requirement. If you feel that way just don't do that part.

    • @g-maof8491
      @g-maof8491 2 года назад +25

      Except that essentially the whole point is to avoid FINISHING the walls, i.e. buying and installing the siding. Belinda failed to mention you can widen your living space by coupling 2 containers and opening up opposing portions of each container. Installing a weight-bearing frame between the 2 openings is not very complicated, and the weight the frame must bear is not very substantial.

    • @rafaelamador9090
      @rafaelamador9090 2 года назад +42

      @@g-maof8491 She mentions it on minute 3, just not as specific as you did.

  • @rsuriyop
    @rsuriyop 4 месяца назад +4

    I’ve been watching a lot of your videos lately. So basically, what I’m getting at is: don’t buy shipping container homes (including expandable ones), manufactured homes, modular homes, and Boxabls. Don’t even buy land because of all the prepping trouble that it’ll cost you. But sheds that you can buy from Home Depot that you can convert seem to be okay (although you still need to have land to put that on).

    • @bobmirror7164
      @bobmirror7164 4 месяца назад +1

      Yep. I think she is a propagandist as well. Getting paid by Russia.

  • @catseuza2013
    @catseuza2013 Год назад +74

    Shipping containers can still be used for lots of other projects, I've had family that used them as small stables/shelter for their farm animals. This way it didn't need to be insulated and it as pretty cost effective :)

    • @JustanotherLiz
      @JustanotherLiz 11 месяцев назад +7

      So the poor animals don’t feel cold or hot? How cruel

    • @cldn2
      @cldn2 11 месяцев назад +5

      Do humans need insulation more than them or something?

    • @leesanurse6474
      @leesanurse6474 11 месяцев назад

      Those poor animals were in a shipping container that wasn't insulated!?!???? Wtf where is P.E.T.A when u need them. Do u know how hot a shipping container gets just sitting without insulation.... I'm guessing u just made this up .... U need more ppl we do NOT believe u

    • @Criticalnin
      @Criticalnin 11 месяцев назад +14

      ⁠@@JustanotherLizanimals usually sleep outside just fine without a house lol

    • @Michael-yo3vu
      @Michael-yo3vu 10 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@CriticalninThey usually do it under a shade or somewhere with a light breeze

  • @fjoa123
    @fjoa123 2 года назад +3480

    The worst thing about shipping container homes, is how difficult it is to convince your clients that it is an unfathomably terrible idea.

    • @MyNam3isNot
      @MyNam3isNot 2 года назад +189

      Show them the transportation cost and crane fees. Yikes.

    • @alexanderrahl7034
      @alexanderrahl7034 2 года назад +206

      @You are correct But we'll of course he was.
      He was a genius helping save the planet with his cool unique home that everyone would be talking about.
      And you were the dumb luddite trying to ruin his ability to brag and mount his high horse 🤣

    • @berserkisdead357
      @berserkisdead357 2 года назад +45

      @@alexanderrahl7034 yoo I was literally saying this to myself, like that really the only reason they would still buy these things

    • @jay-em
      @jay-em 2 года назад +9

      @You are correct But spot on. As soon as you need to cut, it's not with doing.

    • @matthewjohnson6360
      @matthewjohnson6360 2 года назад +15

      There is a couple on YT that has shown them building their own by themselves

  • @kurzor0007
    @kurzor0007 2 года назад +2495

    My father is an engineer and I asked him for his take on using shipping containers as a building materials for home and office space, he told me that his engineering firm actually studied this and concluded that it's a niche solution because the added costs needed to make them viable would make them actually cost more than structures built with traditional materials

    • @prioris55555
      @prioris55555 2 года назад +32

      what about burying them in the ground

    • @ploppill34
      @ploppill34 2 года назад +7

      This

    • @JohnDoe-lp1ec
      @JohnDoe-lp1ec 2 года назад +102

      @@prioris55555
      Wouldn't it still need structural reinforcement so it doesn't cave in?

    • @DarkHero420
      @DarkHero420 2 года назад +20

      @@JohnDoe-lp1ec There are a few videos where people used them underground, and I think they sealed them in concrete.

    • @richardipsen
      @richardipsen 2 года назад +60

      @@prioris55555, They aren't built to sustain forces from the sides. And there is also Galvanic Corrosion to be worried about. Good for an underground junker emergency type thing.... But not as a home. Imo

  • @jesselore6374
    @jesselore6374 Год назад +7

    Great points. I started building a shipping container home and found it was a lot more expensive than building a wood framed house with a lot less room.

    • @deathlyrose7911
      @deathlyrose7911 Год назад

      shows me you FUCKED UP and did not PLAN very well at all period what so ever

    • @jesselore6374
      @jesselore6374 Год назад

      @@deathlyrose7911 Nahhh, Didn't mummy breast feed you? cheer up sunshine. You're still a winner. 🤣

  • @_P0tat07_
    @_P0tat07_ Год назад +2

    All solid points. I think the summary here is that the modifications required to make a shipping container livable aren’t worth the time, effort and money.

    • @rondie.x53
      @rondie.x53 8 месяцев назад

      Do your own research,,, its just an opinion.

  • @RegebroRepairs
    @RegebroRepairs 2 года назад +1262

    The most environmentally friendly way to deal with shipping containers is to recycle them. It's steel. It melts. It's super-easy to recycle.

    • @pacificxplorer
      @pacificxplorer 2 года назад +110

      @Ken Williams Volcanoes perhaps

    • @BubbleChicken3350
      @BubbleChicken3350 2 года назад +57

      @Ken Williams better than throwing tons of steal away each year

    • @whathaff
      @whathaff 2 года назад +30

      @Ken Williams Carbon that is being produced in the smelters can always be contained with technology, trees that are saved from not digging for iron ore can also play its part as lungs for the earth. So it is far more eco-friendly to recycle containers than to use it for making homes.

    • @alexspalding4945
      @alexspalding4945 2 года назад +11

      Yeah they aren’t the big waste items . Masks though they are

    • @RegebroRepairs
      @RegebroRepairs 2 года назад +37

      @Ken Williams You produce it the same way as you produce heat to melt iron ore. But you use a lot less of it. So yes, it's environmentally friendly.

  • @mariokarter13
    @mariokarter13 2 года назад +793

    "Shipping Container Skyscraper" sounds like the housing equivalent of covering a bucket of fried chicken in gold leaf.

    • @W0Ndr3y
      @W0Ndr3y 2 года назад +14

      Taking the worst from from both words

    • @Saint_Wolf_
      @Saint_Wolf_ 2 года назад +33

      It sounds like a front for an evil mega corporation in a cyberpunk story: "We at the Wright-Filstein corporation can't be evil, we made the Shipping Container Skyscraper (that's full of regulatory violations)"

    • @stalinsoulz7872
      @stalinsoulz7872 2 года назад +10

      You don't need an earthquake to topple the Damn thing just a weak breeze from a twister

    • @stalinsoulz7872
      @stalinsoulz7872 2 года назад +13

      @@Saint_Wolf_ * Coughs * Ready Player Number 1 Apartments * Coughs *

    • @joshuaadams1485
      @joshuaadams1485 2 года назад +7

      @@stalinsoulz7872 exactly what I thought. It’s THE STACKS

  • @cratecruncher6687
    @cratecruncher6687 Год назад +9

    I looked at containers as a weekend home on rural property but came to similar conclusions. I did purchase a container but use it for secure storage only. Some of my neighbors like to "borrow" stuff when I'm not around.

  • @AussieBlueDog87
    @AussieBlueDog87 5 месяцев назад +11

    You should use old refrigerated containers. They are only destined for the landfill once they’ve been condemned. They only (except in very specific cases) carry food grade materials. They are insulated. They sometimes have what’s called an airflow floor that you can run cable in instead of the walls. There’s usually hundreds of them spare since they usually only have the two walls and set of doors, since they remove the motor for scrap. Very good for a container home.

  • @EbeJay1
    @EbeJay1 2 года назад +1164

    "Homelessness is not a technology problem" - Amen Belinda!

    • @gomahklawm4446
      @gomahklawm4446 2 года назад +59

      It's correct, it's a priorities problem. Imagine "LOSING" OVER 1 TRILLION in a foreign country......yet claiming that your country cannot afford to make affordable housing.....wow....what a joke...

    • @TheMrVengeance
      @TheMrVengeance 2 года назад +46

      @@gomahklawm4446 Exactly, and in many countries that have "housing shortages" or a homelessness issue, there are millions of empty uninhabited homes. In cases there are more empty homes than there are homeless people. The problem there being investment banks and landlords buying up property as investments. Not to sell or rent it out. Just to have, keep empty, and sell when prices have gone up in future.
      This even further shows how it's not a technology problem, because if you build MORE houses, they're just gonna be instantly bought up by those same investment types. Since with their wealth they can outbid any 'normal' person that was looking to actually live in those homes.

    • @Geeler
      @Geeler 2 года назад +6

      @@TheMrVengeance ahem CHINA ahem

    • @gomahklawm4446
      @gomahklawm4446 2 года назад +1

      @@Geeler Indeed, but China does NOT allow greedy USELESS rent collecting capitalist pigs to dine in perpetuity. Thankfully they are cracking down like a freight train on these useless rent collecting/nation destroying trash. They are ordered to sell the properties at cost if the delay is too long. I love the "ghost cities" thing.....as if MOST of them aren't busy as f*ck now....AND...on the main transit lines like anyone in govt WITH A BRAIN.....would/where put them. It's almost like....planning works.
      The only reason to be against central planning is the inability to RIP OFF/STEAL from the govt/ THE PEOPLE.

    • @gomahklawm4446
      @gomahklawm4446 2 года назад +9

      @@TheMrVengeance Imagine possessing nuclear weapons and the BILLIONS.......yes, BILLIONS it takes to develop them.....and having the audacity to plea for aid for your citizens. So disgusting. Any nuclear power should be excluded from any and ALL foreign aid, including you know who....

  • @nihtgengalastnamegoeshere7526
    @nihtgengalastnamegoeshere7526 2 года назад +580

    It seems like a shipping container would make a terrible home. They would be ideal for use as storage on one's property, but at the price they sell for you'd be better off just buying a shed.

    • @jq7323
      @jq7323 2 года назад +8

      It really depends. 10' x 10' x 40' is pretty large. A normal wooden 10'x10'x10' shed is going to cost $1500+ unless you build it yourself

    • @fmfdocbotl4358
      @fmfdocbotl4358 2 года назад +31

      @@jq7323 add a grand to that shed and you're closer. I bought one 2 years ago for 800 and now that same one is 2 g's because the price of wood

    • @jumbowana
      @jumbowana 2 года назад +10

      They are good for bunkers. Bury one under your garage or house before the concrete goes in.

    • @vociferonheraldofthewinter2284
      @vociferonheraldofthewinter2284 2 года назад +12

      We live inland and a used shipping container delivered for us was $3,000 for a small one. Now, lord knows. I looked into them and the ones that were available were so rusted out and full of holes, that they weren't even useful for storage.
      Heck, the mice would have a field day if I even stored grain in one. Forget furniture or anything else.
      For one that wasn't swiss cheese, I had to immediately tack on another $2,000.
      At that point, a shed was the better option. So that's what we built.

    • @EmilyTestAccount
      @EmilyTestAccount 2 года назад +3

      A container can be a great home - the point is to not just work off flashy renderings on design blogs and think about what it really takes, and what living in it will be like, and the kinds of problems you might face.

  • @DonReality
    @DonReality Год назад +32

    Thank you for this great and detailed video Belinda.
    I've recently grown quite fond on the idea of using Shipping containers for certain projects. In my case I'm looking to create some kind of underground bunker with Gym facilities and general storage. This would require multiple containers stacked next to each other. I've taken note of the issues outlined, especially the structural integrity which could easily be overlooked. I am aware there are going to be added costs and that this isn't ideal in every situation. At least this is now food for thought and helps me to plan accordingly and address the points you made.

    • @deathlyrose7911
      @deathlyrose7911 Год назад

      they have ZERO STRUCTURAL issues and can be stacked as high as 25 high fully loaded so really if you were looking to this Quack for information look else where seriously her LACK of understanding is horrendous to me

  • @user-he7pw3iw6x
    @user-he7pw3iw6x 21 день назад

    As a builder in Australia, your comments and deductions are sound. It is cheaper to build from scratch, a small home to suit your needs rather than to convert a container and make compromises due to the restraints of the container. Well done ❤

  • @TheMidnightModder
    @TheMidnightModder 2 года назад +576

    So if you want a "shipping container" home, just build a tiny house then put metal siding on it.

    • @MisaelMatute76
      @MisaelMatute76 2 года назад +16

      @@drakoinx Converting maybe a grand? 🤨 Its going to cost alot more to run plumbing, electrical, add a wood frame, insulate it, floor it, and paint it...

    • @frankmarano1118
      @frankmarano1118 2 года назад +10

      @@drakoinx converting it only costing a grand? There's no way

    • @user-sf4fy8bq1h
      @user-sf4fy8bq1h 2 года назад +8

      @@drakoinx all of the material and labor costs you just mentioned also apply to shipping container homes...

    • @PutsOnSneakers
      @PutsOnSneakers 2 года назад +3

      lightning strikes will find you lol

    • @chrismc3744
      @chrismc3744 2 года назад +5

      Not only that, but you: 1.) You can make the rooms any size and shape that you want (7' ceilings are tight) and 2.) You don't have to accommodate an existing structure not meant for this type of conversion. I think one of the biggest takeaways I got from this is that as soon as you start cutting into and through a shipping container you have to reinforce the integrity of the structure. Essentially you are forcing an already conventional means of building into a limiting space, when instead you could just forgo the container and build the home in any way you see fit.

  • @GeorgeMonet
    @GeorgeMonet 2 года назад +1087

    "If it sounds too good to be true then it probably is."

    • @MaXXXXXXXXXXim
      @MaXXXXXXXXXXim 2 года назад +5

      Nobody, 2021

    • @tiopira5
      @tiopira5 2 года назад +12

      Doesn't sound good at all if you ask me

    • @iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii4222
      @iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii4222 2 года назад +7

      @@tiopira5 And it looks pretty ugly if you ask me.

    • @r33k24
      @r33k24 2 года назад +2

      Yeah because the world we live in is runned and controlled by Satanists so of course there’s nothing good.

    • @sickna-sty3244
      @sickna-sty3244 2 года назад +2

      @@r33k24 Hello! Fellow realist here, theres some good things... just a lot more bad ones unfortunately :( dont lose hope tho, if not for yourself then for those out there who care about you and you may or may not have met. Have a good one chief!

  • @chewy98ta28
    @chewy98ta28 10 месяцев назад +2

    You can get a 20'x 20' two car garage from Home Depot for under $11,000. Hit it with some spray foam insulation and I'm sure you could put a toilet and shower in it and it wouldn't be a bad deal. I'm thinking of something like that for my backyard but without plumbing.

  • @lakshmi4879
    @lakshmi4879 Год назад

    I'm eternally grateful for this.. informative, technical yet simplified to understand for a commoner... Glad I stumbled onto your channel 🙌

  • @QuikdethDeviantart
    @QuikdethDeviantart 2 года назад +657

    It’s true: if you just buy sheets of corrugated steel, and apply them to the exterior of a wood home, you’ve got the aesthetic without the cost, complications, and size/load bearing limitations… it’s kind of a no brainer, unless you just want to live in one instead of the back of your van, it doesn’t make sense.

    • @chaosgoettin
      @chaosgoettin 2 года назад +26

      Why would I want to have the look of a shipping container when all I care for is the box itself? No, really, I always thought of them as practical. Not for a permanent home, but for a small shed in a garden, where you can sit inside on rainy days, brew some coffee and just have a nap. and by using the "doors", you could create an area, protected from wheather to sit and avoid sun, rain and stuff.
      effing would 100% still buy one, set it up on some vacation property and just have a place to relax and chill in between gardening, then close it up again at some Sunday evening and go to my ACTUAL home.

    • @johnb2001jb
      @johnb2001jb 2 года назад +35

      @@chaosgoettin for a shed yeah they’re perfect, me and my dad have two in the backyard that we use to store all tools and yard work gear in one, and a mini wood shop in the other and they’re perfect for that! But if you want one as a home, like the video said there will be plenty of complications

    • @memespeech
      @memespeech 2 года назад +16

      I don't see the "aesthetic" in it, maybe it's like denim, was worker person's clothes then turned into an everyone's clothes, fashion is perversion of reality through pretense, virtue signalling and upper class perverse understanding of lower classes and their own relative position.

    • @freevideoservice
      @freevideoservice 2 года назад +9

      @@chaosgoettin still wooden shed will be cheaper and comfier than shipping container 😉

    • @freevideoservice
      @freevideoservice 2 года назад +3

      @@johnb2001jb yeah, just for storage or garage it's acceptable, and not for human beings ☺️

  • @ReeMeePlee
    @ReeMeePlee 2 года назад +3661

    I laughed at the drones carrying shipping containers

    • @HelmuthGerka
      @HelmuthGerka 2 года назад +42

      Its ridiculous that she is using those renders to "prove" her point, no one with a brain takes those images seriously. Its just like a kid drawing.

    • @Razumen
      @Razumen 2 года назад +301

      @@HelmuthGerka she wasnt taking then seriously either.

    • @FatFrog11
      @FatFrog11 2 года назад +37

      its not a problem to build an drone that can lift an container. i think what stopping it is the risk of all that comes with lifting the container in right spot. one wrong move on the controler and you send it all flying the wrong way or crashing instead

    • @Razumen
      @Razumen 2 года назад +75

      @@FatFrog11 And one failed drone means that you have a falling container on top of an already sketchy stacking of containers, not to mention the workers below. It's just not practical or safe.

    • @whatintarnation4983
      @whatintarnation4983 2 года назад +17

      Why...The problem is people view drones as these toys that kids use to play with. In actuality, the military drones used for airstrikes are the same size as small fighter jets...so drone helicopters used for lifting shipping containers are very likely.

  • @sooohum
    @sooohum 6 месяцев назад

    Really appreciate this! Thank you for thinking for yourself and pointing out the counterpoint.

  • @objektivone3209
    @objektivone3209 Год назад +1

    Thanks for your wise arguments against the greenwashing industry. The Green washers are insufferable and a terribly greedy people.

  • @kiprandom7208
    @kiprandom7208 2 года назад +705

    They're cool to look at but as a guy that moves em around goes in and out she's totally right.
    90 outside 120 inside -10 outside -10 inside.

    • @MrVvulf
      @MrVvulf 2 года назад +96

      Yeah, we worked out of these pretty often when I was in the military, and they're hot as hell in the summer. Everything she said rang true. I think all the downvotes on the video are from people who wanted to believe containers are a good option, or have some vested financial interest in the industry.

    • @PreCiseCope
      @PreCiseCope 2 года назад +24

      Lol you think they’re not going to insulate them? Cmon use your head, any traditional house would be the same without the use of some kind of insulation technique

    • @ShadeSlayer1911
      @ShadeSlayer1911 2 года назад +61

      @@PreCiseCope And she already brought up the issues with insulating them.

    • @agray7209
      @agray7209 2 года назад +5

      We had one that we used dead airspace and kept dirt and clay from touching the container more or less and it was that dead airspace with the wooden ends where the door opened up the only place that we really didn't have insulated much. It seems to do all right more or less

    • @ghj3950
      @ghj3950 2 года назад +8

      @@ShadeSlayer1911 It's not an issue if you don't mind a smaller living space. The point she made about that is completely moot seeing as there are people who already willfully live and enjoy spaces that small.

  • @elkien3
    @elkien3 2 года назад +482

    it seems to me shipping container houses are like stone soup:
    "I can make a hearty soup merely out of water and a stone, it just needs some carrots, lettuce, meat, and potatoes added to it."
    "I can make a house merely out of a shipping container, it just needs a new floor, studs added, reinforcement, insulation, etc."
    seems to me the best way to think of it is as a more permanent tent, otherwise you're just building a small, regular house around an often inconvenient metal shell.
    What would be interesting is to pit a storage container builder against a more conventional builder to see what each can build with the same budget/labor.

    • @cesaraguilar5405
      @cesaraguilar5405 2 года назад +6

      Haha I love this analogy

    • @plektosgaming
      @plektosgaming 2 года назад +15

      A same sized wooden frame structure is only about $1000 in lumber for the framing. And another $2000 for exterior plywall/interior sheetrock. That's the cost of the used unit just right there. Single story homes are very very inexpensive to make with wood and it's only when you add special features, rooms, or a second floor that it starts to get expensive. But a simple shotgun type house with a flat tar roof? There's a reason so many were built in the first place. Dirt cheap housing.

    • @missyflutter5562
      @missyflutter5562 2 года назад +3

      Stone soup I loved that story in primary school 🤣 great metaphor!!!

    • @Kurry34
      @Kurry34 2 года назад +8

      These containers get melted down as recycled Metal anyways. People who buy these are basically like fake TikTok "I'm a good person" clips. They're just doing to gain praise.

    • @Fickji
      @Fickji 2 года назад +6

      Ooh, faux shipping container homes. That would be interesting. They look like a shipping container but their built like a practical home.
      It might be cheaper to find a defunct train car and fix it up as a permanent house than buying a shipping container. Especially if it is a caboose or passenger car. Or building a tiny wood house to look like a train car.

  • @ahikernamedgq
    @ahikernamedgq 6 месяцев назад

    This was a great video essay on the shortcomings of container homes. Well thought out and insightful. Thank you!!

  • @RefactoringRyan
    @RefactoringRyan Год назад

    Informative and to the point. Thanks for sharing your thoughts and research Belinda!

  • @RoamiZane
    @RoamiZane 2 года назад +140

    I worked in shipping containers, if you ever drummed on when you’ll see how weak they are. The sun makes them an oven.

    • @CJ-wh7ik
      @CJ-wh7ik 2 года назад +14

      They are just thin metal boxes

    • @XanderProduction
      @XanderProduction 2 года назад +2

      ._.) Covered it with dust and soil, like in the Africa..
      It's so enviromental friendly that the rich wont use it at all..

    • @Druggy-Doggo
      @Druggy-Doggo 2 года назад +1

      You get to live in them and get a daily tan all at once

    • @ItzPubby
      @ItzPubby 2 года назад +1

      Insulation and proper building you can negate that.

    • @robloxguy192
      @robloxguy192 2 года назад +2

      @@ItzPubby at that point just make a normal house

  • @onomatopoeia7505
    @onomatopoeia7505 2 года назад +616

    I lived in a shipping container when I was studying. It was part of a structure, stacked three high and twenty wide. 30m2 for myself, with a toilet, sink and shower, cooking on electricity and a heating unit which also worked as a cooler. I had one window and one door. It was a great home and very affordable.
    The container homes discussed in the video are the ridiculously over-engineered ones, and go so far that they could've used anything instead of a container.

    • @DSSlocksmiths
      @DSSlocksmiths 2 года назад +20

      What was the door? Because it can't be the regular double doors on the end, which only work from outside. And fitting that window was probably a big task. The pipes for water and waste water would also have been tricky, though if you were up a floor it isn't so bad.

    • @johnhardin4358
      @johnhardin4358 2 года назад +8

      Yeah, studs inside? Spare me.

    • @nathanpeep4019
      @nathanpeep4019 2 года назад +32

      There are those that will do and others that sit and tell you how it can't be done when there is evidence it has been done many times. Studs frame the window. OR you can cut hole a little large and weld a piece of flat steel around the opening. Then the cased window will fit in. I hauled these things and they are tough as crap. You think hauling freight across oceans on high seas it is going to be flimsy? They are also corrugated and conduit could be ran. OR yes put in studs down the outside wall. Have to put together for 16 ft wide like....OH a single wide mobile home. Those are 16 wide. But go price a new single wide mobile home. They are now 60-80k. So a few k for each container. Some mods for those that have two brain cells to rub together....it can be done and has. Doors and windows can easily be framed. Harbor Freight sells welders cheap enough to make that a cheap investment. Spray foam insulation works well .

    • @ashzole
      @ashzole 2 года назад +32

      this video is to poison the well of those who are thinking not buying a single family residence . real estate agents probably funded this video.

    • @mk1st
      @mk1st 2 года назад +14

      @@nathanpeep4019 I appreciate your passion, however you seem to be comparing someone making a home for themselves out of a container (a fine ambition I agree) with a mobile home that's made in a factory then sold for a . It's not a good comparison. Personally I have been intrigued by converted containers because I've seen some really cool looking projects done with them but I would bet the amount of actual work and materials that are needed to build comparably performing homes would be a wash.

  • @hootowl6354
    @hootowl6354 Год назад +1

    Having had a few, I can tell you that when in the sun they bake like an oven. Cold as heck in winter too. They really need to be shaded in summer, and insulated in winter, if you're going to spend time in them.

  • @MattMuckleroy
    @MattMuckleroy 8 месяцев назад +2

    You are a genius! After I clicked on this I instantly realized. This has to be Belinda Carr! I looked and yes. I really enjoyed your insulation video with mineral wool.

  • @ernestbywater411
    @ernestbywater411 2 года назад +1682

    The only wise use of shipping containers as places to live that made sense to me was some specially made ones purpose built as easy transportable temporary buildings for short term use.

    • @jameslockyer9796
      @jameslockyer9796 2 года назад +32

      Do you mean a caravan?

    • @daemonace5910
      @daemonace5910 2 года назад +53

      @@jameslockyer9796
      Huh, I guess you're right. So then the only other advantage they "might" have over caravan, are that they're stackable
      Stackable caravans

    • @kasperkosminen2679
      @kasperkosminen2679 2 года назад +46

      They use those at construction sites in Finland. Sometimes workers live in them

    • @jameslockyer9796
      @jameslockyer9796 2 года назад +35

      @@kasperkosminen2679 in the UK thay can be used as an temporary office for people like the site manager so I gess its the same thing ish

    • @jameslockyer9796
      @jameslockyer9796 2 года назад +4

      @@daemonace5910 no No stackable but once you have stacked it the bottom one is still the only use able one unless you billd stars or put scaffolding up wich would contribute to the industry look but does also look weird

  • @myrddrral
    @myrddrral 2 года назад +255

    "It is easier to fool people than to convince them they have been fooled"
    Mark Twain
    People will continue buying container homes, sadly.

    • @GnarlyCharly
      @GnarlyCharly 2 года назад +3

      I mean, look at the dislikes. This is a genuinely good video!

    • @samtheskoolie
      @samtheskoolie 2 года назад +1

      It's 100% not foolish to buy a shipping container home and it proven to help the environment and save money. The dislikes prove this video is skewed towards trying to convince people that its bad practice to use materials destined for a landfill, instead of addressing that there are positives and negatives of every building application.

    • @BDDDDDDDD
      @BDDDDDDDD 2 года назад

      How much does it cost to buy a shipping container house

    • @j2323j
      @j2323j 2 года назад

      Its the new rich trend
      Wow
      Imagine having so much money and free time you feel bad for the earth .

    • @itsyourboyyy
      @itsyourboyyy 2 года назад

      @@samtheskoolie the bottom line is that it's not as efficient.

  • @neildcosta5932
    @neildcosta5932 3 дня назад

    Thank you very, very much for this eye-opener! Much appreciated!!

  • @sassylrhg
    @sassylrhg Год назад +2

    You are mostly spot ON with all your comments...and saved me lots of $$$ in my retirement on building one. Thanks.

  • @migfredcastillo3706
    @migfredcastillo3706 2 года назад +1478

    When this concept started, it was a great idea. As soon as self centered designers and greedy people got a hold of the idea it became a bad idea.

    • @ricardomoseley
      @ricardomoseley 2 года назад +20

      It Is unbelievable.

    • @Darth-Claw-Killflex
      @Darth-Claw-Killflex 2 года назад

      W.A.F.I.

    • @Rafungilo
      @Rafungilo 2 года назад +73

      Exactly, shipping containers cost 800$ when it started and last I checked it was 3500$

    • @addisonlanier4226
      @addisonlanier4226 2 года назад +30

      it's demise isn't because of designers, its because anyone call themselves a designer. The people who purported it was a good idea, very early on knew they were lying. Hunt them down now and see what they can say. But I remind you there is one singular way to wuse each one to produce 1 home. So don't write of ship-cons yet for something is coming you've never seen.

    • @migfredcastillo3706
      @migfredcastillo3706 2 года назад +4

      @@addisonlanier4226 well said... you're right. All those self proclaimed people have changed alot of stuff for the benefit of themselves.

  • @ImBucketNekkid
    @ImBucketNekkid 2 года назад +319

    It has always been highly conspicuous that people who live in these things almost never repurpose an old one

    • @triver7593
      @triver7593 2 года назад +38

      You have to use new containers. You wouldnt
      want to sleep in a container that was once used to haul toxic chemicals.

    • @joshuax7990
      @joshuax7990 2 года назад +8

      Many are 1 time uses and then sold for future repurposing. We have a shipping container on our property that we use for storage. It was around $3700 USD for a 20' inter-modal container. It has built in vents and never gets above 90 degrees. The doors have weatherproofing and seals. No water has gotten inside it, even after 80 mph winds in storms with driving rain and hail. The only thing that we can smell in it is the wood deck (floor) in it. Like new condition run for around 3-10k depending on total length.

    • @CommaGaming
      @CommaGaming 2 года назад

      @@joshuax7990 how many square foot/m2 of usable space?

    • @troublemcallister730
      @troublemcallister730 2 года назад +4

      Been watching a couple do just that. Took two old shipping containers and turn them into a house.. go watch Life Uncontained - they done a BEAUTIFUL job too. All by themselves.

    • @CommaGaming
      @CommaGaming 2 года назад

      @@troublemcallister730 I assume you replied that to me, so I will take a look!

  • @brianb-p6586
    @brianb-p6586 6 месяцев назад +1

    The only thing that perhaps you missed is in sustainability: even if a shipping container has reached the end of its useful life for shipping, using it for a house is not environmentally cost-free, since it would otherwise be recycled. Every container used to build a house represents tons of steel for either new containers or other products that needs to be produced new instead of just being recycled.

  • @normbograham
    @normbograham Год назад +1

    One guy put an AC in one. After years, one of the walls rotted out at the bottom. It was not long before the rot went all across the bottom. Of course, that was 20 years ago, so, hard to compare with todays. He tried unsuccessfully to sell it for about a year. Honestly, it might be scrap. The holes are big enough for cat to get in.

  • @restcure
    @restcure 2 года назад +1418

    If you just like the aesthetics, I guess you *could* bust buy the "raw" corrugated sheets and fasten them to an existing structure - Why limit them to the shed roof?

    • @snowmcsnow4732
      @snowmcsnow4732 2 года назад +54

      BOOM! All Problems solved!! You are so right about that! Can make it any size or shape you like as you are no longer constrained by the container's dimensions. Only reason I would consider a container is so I can haul it everywhere with a fold-up deck and awnings and expandable rooms perhaps telescoping roof and other mods but it will cost so much I might as well purchase a luxury mobile home.

    • @pugasaurusrex8253
      @pugasaurusrex8253 2 года назад +20

      Smh
      If you want aesthetic why not a plane in a open field?

    • @RASIII9
      @RASIII9 2 года назад +11

      @@pugasaurusrex8253 Bro what?

    • @pugasaurusrex8253
      @pugasaurusrex8253 2 года назад +46

      @@RASIII9
      You heard me
      Where’s my Boeing?

    • @oneproudbrowncoat
      @oneproudbrowncoat 2 года назад +1

      That is called a "Quonset hut".

  • @luigidreemurr6034
    @luigidreemurr6034 2 года назад +590

    I'd say it's best use is emergency housing as its easy to transport. But not really a permanent home.

    • @fitmotheyap
      @fitmotheyap 2 года назад +23

      True,it feels like it would be good as temporary housing for people with destroyed homes etc

    • @nozero1
      @nozero1 2 года назад +20

      I doubt it. Emergency housing often involves quickly repurposing a large public space like a stadium or a hall that is already liveable. Sending out hundreds or thousands of shipping containers to wherever, to act as single family homes, is far slower and inefficient. Imagine how many trucks or train cars that would take.

    • @achalaymanta
      @achalaymanta 2 года назад +16

      Probably a good quality tent may be a better option for emergency housing than a container.

    • @wpjohn91
      @wpjohn91 2 года назад +2

      Good as a man shed / man cave

    • @kantraxoikol6914
      @kantraxoikol6914 2 года назад +6

      it sure beats none at all...i don't get why people are crying about cheap housing

  • @Rachaelworld
    @Rachaelworld Год назад

    What a brilliant video, thank you so much for this. I had long suspected that there were issues with some of the things you raise so really helpful to have someone knowledgeable

  • @AgtP
    @AgtP Год назад

    Thank you for putting the 7 reasons on the description. Very considerate of you. Now I'm going to watch your video on the background as a courtesy.

  • @Lillith.
    @Lillith. 2 года назад +415

    A shipping container as a home sounds like a bad idea. As a shed to keep bikes, tools and other storage it sounds pretty good. It can take the weather, you don't need windows, and the door already there can be an advantage due to its size.

    • @Peanutsnot
      @Peanutsnot 2 года назад +2

      We use old transport truck trailers. $1000 for a shed, pretty much. Works great. Where the reefer went you can put a clear plastic, or what ever, it lets the light in.

    • @tiopira5
      @tiopira5 2 года назад +4

      Much better idea. These people are just trying to be creative but kind of failed

    • @FatJesusLive
      @FatJesusLive 2 года назад

      They are great for underground tunnels. If you put them from end to end you can have your own private tunnel. Or saferoom under the home.

    • @Siobhan-swanny
      @Siobhan-swanny 2 года назад +3

      Steal as been used for a very long time why now are they talking about it calling it a scam says it all really brickers having less homes to build making people out of business maybe is that shy she’s saying it’s a scam wonder honestly iv lived in containers for 10 years now it’s amazing no problems up to now so yeah

    • @sevenbluejellyfish7171
      @sevenbluejellyfish7171 2 года назад

      My old Highschool used them for storage! It was great and it kept the stuff clean!

  • @CoffeeStained
    @CoffeeStained 2 года назад +1361

    I was once in love with the idea of a shipping container home, as shipping containers are very cheap where I live. However, I discovered a few truths myself that she also outlines here and realized that the disadvantages outweigh the advantages. Cool idea, but usually impractical.

    • @dresheraton9276
      @dresheraton9276 2 года назад +40

      Because of your comment I will actually watch this.

    • @markearl7172
      @markearl7172 2 года назад +22

      ive done handballs in these things you will roast to death in the summer

    • @swtorjunkie6171
      @swtorjunkie6171 2 года назад +40

      @@dresheraton9276 do you regularly go to the comments of a video first to see what the video is about? That just seems backwards and prone to getting misinformation.. People will straight up lie in comments what a video is about.. Why not just watch it for yourself and form your own opinion?

    • @chillax319
      @chillax319 2 года назад +21

      Yeah it's one of these ideas that sound plausible but when you take your time and get a closer look at them, they don't look as good anymore.

    • @swtorjunkie6171
      @swtorjunkie6171 2 года назад +9

      @@chillax319 yeah I consider trying to build one after seeing the dozens articles and videos about how cheap it is..its definitely not cheaper in the long run. It's definitely just for the looks.

  • @michaelalfonso1070
    @michaelalfonso1070 4 месяца назад

    Thank you for your thorough analysis of the shipping container scam. I live in Hawaii and spoke to a retired structural engineer/contractor/businessman that made that statement. I am an Industrial Designer that worked for Architects and Engineers for 44 years and don't like design trends (I prefer Timeless Designs). I don't care for current buildings that look like shipping containers. Thanks again!

  • @John-uk1xv
    @John-uk1xv Год назад +1

    OK so here's the main issue if you use concrete as your insulation on the outside it's extremely cheap secondly for your inner I've seen people use the metal galvanize pipe to hide wire which is the most cost effective way of doing it thirdly you can always go and add on a shipping contain a bathroom That's already pre made and they're doing the same with shipping container kitchen so that way you just buy the one shipping container and just add on

  • @squid5301
    @squid5301 2 года назад +587

    If we ever built the shipping container skyscraper we would officially be living in the shitty future every movie predicted in the 90s and 2000s

    • @pontiacw7
      @pontiacw7 2 года назад +54

      Reminds me of the "stacks" from the movie Ready Player One. Which were just mobile homes stacked on each other.

    • @squid5301
      @squid5301 2 года назад +14

      @@pontiacw7 Yeah and the skyscraper i feel like would really fit in the dredd city

    • @Team_Banchamek
      @Team_Banchamek 2 года назад +6

      That’s the plan.

    • @WsciekleMleko
      @WsciekleMleko 2 года назад +4

      Wait, you actually believe, that our future will no be shitty? It's 2021 and we already see all the trash stuff like corpos doing whatever they want and pollution and climate is totally forgotten (for govs and corpos). There is literally not a single person, or movement that can lead us to good future.

    • @squid5301
      @squid5301 2 года назад +2

      @@WsciekleMleko Nah, I said that if we built those skyscrapers the shitty future would have already reached us instead of taking another few decades

  • @dave2.077
    @dave2.077 2 года назад +308

    almost like "living in a shipping container" is just as bad as it sounds

    • @oscar.p3214
      @oscar.p3214 2 года назад

      I often wondered exactly how it might suck ( I
      Have family obsessed with building one , though they haven’t . )
      I always wanted to know the hidden down side .

    • @mikldude9376
      @mikldude9376 2 года назад +1

      Yes , but it doesnt have to be , do you think anyone plans to just drop a container on the ground and just swing the doors open and move in ?
      There are a lot of assumptions made in this video .

    • @christopherrogers303
      @christopherrogers303 2 года назад

      @@mikldude9376 assumptions like what?

    • @Endgame7
      @Endgame7 2 года назад +1

      I live outside...

    • @xiscaw
      @xiscaw 2 года назад

      @@mikldude9376 no there aren't

  • @maggiesteen2049
    @maggiesteen2049 Месяц назад

    As a south Floridian wood = termites. Most people that build these are not necessarily concerned about cost. Another thing to consider in south Florida is hurricanes and when these are built with proper reinforcement, storm windows and doors, they make a great shelter. There are pros and cons in all structures and this type of structure has been both scrutinized and glorified as is with all things and people that gain popularity. It all comes down to the home owners preference. The big difference here is that more people are intrigued by tiny homes, tree houses and shipping container homes than the typical cookie cutter home with white picket fence.

  • @chi9060
    @chi9060 Год назад

    Thanks Velinda! All the information was helpful. I still want a container home but you looked out for us❤️

  • @semcroes3455
    @semcroes3455 3 года назад +2410

    I mean there are some downsides, but a scam is a big word.

    • @adoksym
      @adoksym 3 года назад +112

      They use it as clickbait. But of course you are right. I think this video is quite interesting and has multiple valid points.

    • @greenradiozone824
      @greenradiozone824 3 года назад +74

      @@PreservationEnthusiast Judging by her other content, she clearly has a solid understanding of the field. No idea to what scale, but certainly has had an education in the field easily.

    • @godhatesmath7781
      @godhatesmath7781 3 года назад +37

      Scam is a very small word

    • @Zen0NoMind1
      @Zen0NoMind1 3 года назад +12

      Scam is a four letter word. Duh!🤓

    • @marcushennings9513
      @marcushennings9513 3 года назад +34

      Video title is a scam.

  • @blackheart9068
    @blackheart9068 3 года назад +3104

    The title should be “things to consider before investing on a shipping container home”

    • @Hackanhacker
      @Hackanhacker 3 года назад +11

      its just something like 300$ 500$ lol

    • @Riltik
      @Riltik 3 года назад +27

      Not that catchy :D

    • @bilomz
      @bilomz 3 года назад +87

      Why would I click that? 😂

    • @yoavsnake
      @yoavsnake 3 года назад

      +

    • @miesosoup
      @miesosoup 3 года назад +75

      SCAM was a bit clickbaity

  • @adamstrother4377
    @adamstrother4377 Год назад +1

    So I’m in Perth,
    The average cost of a house is $470k to build a new one.
    The average cost of a container is $5k
    The cost to build in a country town can be up to 35% higher due to travel and lack of trades.
    To transport 1x container to a country plot can be between $700 and $3000.
    A person willing to undertake the majority of unlicenced works themselves can easily build for under $80k a multiple container home.
    I think the analysis on here could mislead people, they should do their own research on what costs would be incurred to do this in their region and with availability of trades

  • @whitepawrolls
    @whitepawrolls Год назад +2

    Personally I disagree with these being poor solutions for small houses and would LOVE to have one myself to build into one.

  • @TenereAMir
    @TenereAMir 2 года назад +60

    Soooo...they're literally shittier mobile homes at that point. That's pretty close to how the old style trailer homes were made.

    • @WorldWalker128
      @WorldWalker128 2 года назад +2

      Pretty much.

    • @atwajesper9434
      @atwajesper9434 2 года назад

      Yup. And still I think trailer homes are a little more suitable for the job than shipping containers.

  • @cedric3136
    @cedric3136 3 года назад +1781

    Video should be titled, Things to consider before purchasing a "container home". Using the word "scam" is over the top.

    • @keizercas6051
      @keizercas6051 3 года назад +29

      Cedric 313 its just the RUclips clickbait life

    • @USA2Brazil
      @USA2Brazil 3 года назад +13

      @@keizercas6051 Agreed, the biggest $cam of them all.

    • @brianm.armstrong70
      @brianm.armstrong70 3 года назад +13

      Yes I concur. She needs to get her "facts" straight and the SCAM is not a SCAM at all...

    • @Pharesm
      @Pharesm 3 года назад +14

      Scam could be the case in some occasions, but looks more like an attempt to get publicity. "Things to consider" on the other hand is just too weak for how bad Containers really are as the basis for a house of any kind - except emergency shelters.
      Containers rust, they don't breathe, they collect condensation like crazy, the metal walls radiate heat to a distance to 1.2 meters. Depending on your climate, you'll live alternately in an oven or a freezer, unless you spend more on mitigation than a structure with appropriate materials would have cost you. Building with earth bags is nearly free and as interior comfort goes, far superior.

    • @lizettebaez4213
      @lizettebaez4213 3 года назад +4

      I agree 100%.

  • @AyaInspiredTarot
    @AyaInspiredTarot 11 месяцев назад

    Very interesting! I saw my first container home in the 90s and always wanted one. This is very useful and good to know.

  • @ltkmerlini
    @ltkmerlini Год назад +1

    loved the video! very insightful indeed. I had a different point of view of container homes before I watched the video.
    thank you!

  • @Rhysman30
    @Rhysman30 2 года назад +382

    If you're framing out the inside AND the outside, you're using more wood than a wood home... but with metal sandwiched between.

    • @pixibelle3282
      @pixibelle3282 2 года назад +12

      Yes, you are & that is more cost then building a simple, small home that is larger then a container.

    • @wahahabuh
      @wahahabuh 2 года назад +19

      @John Doe where i live houses are made of brick and stone. I do know in some countries like the USA it's basically just a stick box that's quite flimsy

    • @AmmoPack
      @AmmoPack 2 года назад +10

      completely false, do you know how much wood goes into building a home?

    • @anti-ethniccleansing465
      @anti-ethniccleansing465 2 года назад

      @@wahahabuh
      Lol! 06:23 isn’t in the USA. Our houses are built just fine.

    • @anti-ethniccleansing465
      @anti-ethniccleansing465 2 года назад +3

      @John Doe
      Where do you live in the USA where building standards are poor??

  • @zebraneighbor6383
    @zebraneighbor6383 2 года назад +118

    I always was surprised how people think the roof of shipping containers is so strong and durable. My middle school had two big shipping containers on the schoolyard that held sports equipment and soccer goals, and we used to climb on top of it. If you jumped up and down the roof would bend and rattle and make all sorts of noise, just from the weight of a 6th grader on it.

    • @xplosionslite6439
      @xplosionslite6439 2 года назад +3

      Probably because you see them stacked 10 on top of each other in dockyards, with cargo inside.
      They could be good at load bearing (decent tensile strength), but terrible with shear forces (tearing and high impulse forces). This means if you apply gradual pressure over all of it, it can bear a lot more than a much smaller force jumping on a weaker part in the middle.
      Edit: I just realized this is because the metal itself is cheap and weak, but the corrugated structure is what makes it strong.

    • @zenithlyncadet8984
      @zenithlyncadet8984 2 года назад +1

      Key word jumping

    • @FarmhillStables
      @FarmhillStables 2 года назад +5

      @@xplosionslite6439 When they are stacked the weight is supported at the corners, which are heavier guage steel than the sides and roof which are just a thin sheet.

    • @edwardross6475
      @edwardross6475 Год назад

      Why is a kid allowed on the roof? :-(

  • @melisawill5954
    @melisawill5954 9 месяцев назад

    Spot on and good research and info sharing. Thanks Belinda.... Makes allot of sense. ♥️👍👍💯

  • @lisetteem588
    @lisetteem588 6 месяцев назад +4

    wont framing it out, strengthen it again? putting doors in the cut areas will strengthen them?

  • @ZeroFighter
    @ZeroFighter 2 года назад +412

    Modular multi-unit buildings have a major strike against them. The most prevalent example is the Nakagin Capsule Tower in Japan. It was specifically designed to be able to have individual units removed and replaced, or even just transplanted for the sake of modularity. No longer would the whole building have to be rebuilt from the ground up if the units were to be updated, and they could instead just rip out the old ones, and install the new ones in their slots.
    The only problem is that this never happened. The building is about 50 years old, and many of the units currently installed are the original units that were there back in the 1970's when the building was constructed. This is because in order to remove even a single unit from the building, the entire building needs to be cleared out. The units were designed to be replaced every 20 to 25 years, meaning the majority of the units currently there are overdue for being replaced twice over, and said replacements would currently be due for replacement. The process would take over a month, and those people and their things need to be put somewhere else for the time that would take. It only works on the small scale, where you can handle the units with your bare hands. Once you get to life size, and you need cranes and trucks to move anything, modular buildings become too dangerous and impractical.

    • @DrinzenDrawz
      @DrinzenDrawz 2 года назад +15

      Yeah I've heard about that building, kinda sad it will most likely get demolished :/

    • @DVankeuren
      @DVankeuren 2 года назад +34

      Seems like a bad design if you cannot replace one apartment without evacuating the whole building. Gimmick designs are just expensive gimmicks :) Might have been cool if it actually worked.

    • @DownLow0099
      @DownLow0099 2 года назад +3

      Well clearly simple magic is the answer here...

    • @ZeroFighter
      @ZeroFighter 2 года назад +14

      @@DVankeuren
      It works perfectly with the model that you can play around with, using your hands. Once you get up into the literal tons of steel, wood, electrical wiring, plumbing, and stuff like that, and you risk these multi-ton units swaying in the breeze and slamming into already-installed units, it becomes far too dangerous.

    • @mikloridden8276
      @mikloridden8276 2 года назад +1

      Hey I remember getting taught about this back in college. Im glad I found your comment. Do you remember what it was called again? I believe there was an example of a room in a Tokyo architecture Museum

  • @SocialBucks
    @SocialBucks 3 года назад +1658

    *scam is taking a 50 years mortgage*

    • @chrissysconvos
      @chrissysconvos 3 года назад +10

      Thank you!

    • @sometingwongwai9679
      @sometingwongwai9679 3 года назад +75

      The scam is you paying off the landlords 50 year mortgage in 25 years so he can have a 200% capital gain

    • @tychotransport5902
      @tychotransport5902 3 года назад +28

      modern slavery ~ bank loans

    • @tedros6917
      @tedros6917 3 года назад +50

      Well, you wouldn't need a 50 year mortgage for a wooden house the size of a shipping container

    • @borbes100
      @borbes100 3 года назад +41

      @@tedros6917 THIS! Literally the only part of the building process that a container replaces is the siding... and it's MUCH more expensive than wood panel or even concrete block. You still have to do LITERALLY EVERYTHING ELSE that you would need to do to build a traditional house. A container home is MORE EXPENSIVE you mathematically incompetent bafoons. The purpose that you trying to serve has already been addressed by manufactured homes, aka trailers.

  • @user-gy2cb2rt4y
    @user-gy2cb2rt4y 2 месяца назад

    Glad to see someone with a brain! They are not only limited in space, but cost a small fortune to make livable, and take a lot of time to make into anything worth living in.

  • @TheAlfonsogonzalez61
    @TheAlfonsogonzalez61 Год назад +1

    Very well put, I agree with all seven and you helped me make a decision for my new property I’m building out. Thanks 🙏

  • @neilbruce6091
    @neilbruce6091 2 года назад +142

    Honestly, I clicked on this video because I thought it would going to be a bunch of BS to laugh at. Instead, you opened my eyes and completely changed my mind on these things. Thank you!

  • @saltyuno
    @saltyuno 4 года назад +502

    I wouldnt say they are a scam, but anyone interested in purchasing one needs to do research before they decided to go through with it

    • @ebonypalmer8247
      @ebonypalmer8247 4 года назад +26

      Right! I plan on building a home but I'm doing ALL the research needed to make sure that I ALL my ducks in a row. I don't think that container homes are a scam though. She needs to change the name of this story. Lol nice try lady😂😂😂

    • @benw834
      @benw834 4 года назад +23

      Well said JK. "7 reasons why shipping container homes are a SCAM" is just sensationalism to attract viewers. Some topics that Belinda presents have merit, such as shipping containers are not "environmentally friendly" or shipping containers cannot solve to the "world housing shortage" but anyone who would think otherwise would be a twit. Shipping containers do have their place as an alternative building option. This can allow for creative, inspirational and interesting designs.
      All building methods/materials have their pros and cons. It all comes down to availability, location and doing your homework and planning before commencing construction.

    • @CbassPlaysGames
      @CbassPlaysGames 4 года назад +9

      Agreed you can go cheap or you can spend a little bit more and get it the way it should be. I hate her title though it's really so misleading all her video did was annoy me and show me how much more I want to build one of these just to spite her. The reason you don't see them everywhere is because the same reason you don't see electric vehicles everywhere it hasn't gone mainstream yet it's only a new product that takes time to get out there. Her whole logic with being limited to 8 ft wide only is absolutely bonkers because you can stack two containers side by side or even on top of each other cut out the inner wall build a support and boom now you've got a 14 foot wide place or 14ft ceilings let alone anywhere else you want to stack them up like Legos. Next you can cantilever shipping containersa prime example is a new-build that just got built in Toronto. Sure it may add to the cost but who really cares when you're getting what you want and it's safer and your saving more money overall in the long-term.

    • @supercool1419
      @supercool1419 4 года назад +1

      Scam word was used to just attract attention.. i suppose.. good idea id say

    • @queenraven1458
      @queenraven1458 4 года назад

      I agree

  • @ExoticDoll
    @ExoticDoll 8 месяцев назад +1

    I required a large storage unit, so built a pallet shed that cost £700 in UK, including timber, cheap pallets, fibreglass roof and the labour. So in comparison to the shipping container, I am glad I chose traditional timber as it was much cheaper and can be ventilated in summer.

    • @protospha
      @protospha 19 дней назад

      Good to know that - that's not bad at all!! Where I live though, used pallets cost NOTHING! Big warehouse stores just leave them outside for anyone to take them away

  • @sambocap
    @sambocap 6 месяцев назад +2

    Great video! Shipping container homes are becoming increasingly popular here in Vancouver as well, yet I've remained skeptical primarily due to the insulation and thermal issues. I'm sticking to woodframe/concrete.

    • @lisetteem588
      @lisetteem588 6 месяцев назад

      most of us dont live in canada.. i imagine that would be extremely challenging..

  • @Maddiedoggie
    @Maddiedoggie 2 года назад +153

    The only time these things would be feasible is if we were living in a post apocalyptic world where things like plumbing and electricity aren't exactly a priority for basic living.

    • @natemaskow4378
      @natemaskow4378 2 года назад +1

      That would look cool

    • @LuisHernandez-nu1es
      @LuisHernandez-nu1es 2 года назад +8

      They did this in the movie "Ready Player One" and it was indeed aesthetically pleasing

    • @JMcMillen
      @JMcMillen 2 года назад +1

      @@LuisHernandez-nu1es Most of those where either single wide trailer homes or tow-able RV's. I've had delivery jobs in the past that took me to more than a few trailer or RV parks so I can easily recognize them.

    • @hadiakmal9281
      @hadiakmal9281 2 года назад +1

      Not really. It has terrible insulation. U are better off living in a cave 🤣

    • @indigowhatever2005
      @indigowhatever2005 2 года назад +1

      That's what they're conditioning us for. Same goes for the whole vegan movement, they'll sell us food made from dirt and grime as long as they label it organic

  • @maize3239
    @maize3239 4 года назад +1675

    These are all important factors to consider when dealing with shipping container homes, but they hardly make it a "scam." Using that word is total click bait.

    • @theraineyboys
      @theraineyboys 4 года назад +16

      I agree.

    • @sapeca2
      @sapeca2 4 года назад +50

      Click Bait Yes! But it did get us all here. Not sure I would have watched it otherwise and I am happy I did because I am planning on building out an office and containers were a major part of the plan. Now I’m going to to do some more research and potentially move in another direction🤷🏾‍♂️

    • @TheBakers5
      @TheBakers5 4 года назад +24

      This woman is saying pour crap. Every house need reinforcements. She need to research her facts more. I think they paid her to post this video good job lady you will be pay well. I have seen my shipping container house cost me way less than building a house from wood or concrete. And my house took only 4 months to build beautiful luxury house two storage. You need to come spend at lease two days in it you would know how comfortable these containers house can be.

    • @fishedhook2697
      @fishedhook2697 4 года назад +5

      Maize clickbait means grabs your eye so it’s clickbait anyways learn the word

    • @normanviewer357
      @normanviewer357 4 года назад +6

      @@TheBakers5 I completely agree with you 100 percent. All the things she claims are unsubstantiated. Hence these people are actually the scammers and not the other way around. When your application is other than shipping goods, the best advice I got was to buy it new.

  • @lin90210
    @lin90210 2 месяца назад +1

    Housing companies dont want to build quickly as it would flood the market and make their homes lower in value. It is because of low housing stock that housing is expensive. Ridiculous. In the UK wood construction isn't the way forward for us. Especially after Grenfell Tower. Firespread is an issue.

  • @AtommHD
    @AtommHD Год назад

    Great insight and advice. This gives me things to look out for and the pitfalls..

  • @ccasa004
    @ccasa004 2 года назад +68

    As an Architect who has designed a container home I completely agree with you. I wanted to add a few more drawbacks.
    1. The plan reviewers most likely have never reviewed a container home plans. When they review something that is new they pick out things that don’t matter and overlook things that do.
    2. The people who are actually going to build them don’t have years of experience building them. Everything new takes time and manny iterations to perfect so you will probably have a lot of unforeseen issues come up.

    • @Movie2Documentary
      @Movie2Documentary 2 года назад +8

      Sir, this is a Mcdonalds.

    • @eggman1006
      @eggman1006 2 года назад +1

      @@Movie2Documentary Oh sorry i thought this was a Wendy´s

    • @cindy-mai
      @cindy-mai 2 года назад

      @@eggman1006 No, this is Patrick.

  • @leokimvideo
    @leokimvideo 3 года назад +3053

    The scam is a used shipping container is only really worth it's scrap value, but sell it as a 'modular home' and it's value multiplies by 20. Smart money sucks in dumb people. A fool and their money are easily parted.

    • @sankako6075
      @sankako6075 3 года назад +32

      you have to put it somewhere and if well done...its very solid on its base and put ciment to make it heavier. anti bullet...allready in a conform size...and by the way, this is not like people havent spends month inside one of those. you have your self the one last home you will ever need since you can move its anywhere. who is dummer now i leave somewhere else now but its still my mamas house...ah ah...dont worry, dumb people doest exit, only uninformed

    • @xander9460
      @xander9460 3 года назад +155

      @@sankako6075 Old shipping containers get sold to recycling plants. The iron is a valuable limited resource and VERY wanted. So, very easy to sell. I ship scrap metal all the time as a cargo barge helmsman. Day price as I type this in Belgium is 245.- EUR per a 1000kg. A container is 22000kg. So your average old container is worth 5400,- Euro.... My brother build tiny houses for a living. He can make you a complete one out of more eco friendly materials for ~2000.- same size... People that went container. Either just liked the look or didn't do the research...

    • @carlosgaspar8447
      @carlosgaspar8447 3 года назад +14

      too many empty containers end up in north america and it costs ($8000?) to ship them back.

    • @flightevolution8132
      @flightevolution8132 3 года назад +17

      @@xander9460 I'm genuinely interested in purchasing a tiny home. Is there any way I can get in contact with your brother and his construction business? Thank you

    • @larkhill2119
      @larkhill2119 3 года назад +51

      @@xander9460 Where did you get 22,000 kg from? assuming the truck and trailer weight you could carry more weight in a station wagon than a legal 40 ton truck? Stop making stuff up. Do the research. An empty 40 foot shipping container weighs 3.8 - 4.2 tonne. 3800kg x 0.24 less transport.

  • @user-mj6lap17
    @user-mj6lap17 Год назад +2

    I really enjoyed you telling us about the Shipping Containers, I would like for you to continue to let people know what they are getting into.Thanks

    • @deathlyrose7911
      @deathlyrose7911 Год назад

      she is only speaking from her ASS sorry to say as her many ISSUES are non issues period she only brings them up so she can POO POO on container homes so she can MAKE MORE MONEY building Traditional homes

  • @tomanth4981
    @tomanth4981 10 часов назад

    I agree! Folks need to include not only the ray materials cost, but service vehicles, cost per square foot, and lets not forget about labor, etc!

  • @Chlorate299
    @Chlorate299 2 года назад +586

    I like the point you made regarding the need to frame them out, insulate, and dry line them - if you're doing that, then the container is now just cladding for the building...

    • @TheCuriousGreyHare
      @TheCuriousGreyHare 2 года назад +25

      WYou need to do the exact same thing no matter what material you use for construction

    • @Unanuma
      @Unanuma 2 года назад +9

      Yes it's just a great start if you want a home like that, especially if you can get it for just scrap price.

    • @kevinpham7098
      @kevinpham7098 2 года назад +3

      @@Unanuma and better yet free

    • @toomanyaccounts
      @toomanyaccounts 2 года назад +8

      @@Unanuma the problem is the scrap or free containers are unusable for anything but outside exterior aesthetic.

    • @MrXbloodline
      @MrXbloodline 2 года назад +4

      Made my office out of a insulated container all I did was cut out the windows and door done and dusted

  • @wawahamdan1159
    @wawahamdan1159 2 года назад +2116

    For someone who's living in tropical country, I simply can't imagine living in that. It's like roasting yourself alive ahha

    • @Aim201
      @Aim201 2 года назад +7

      Malaysia ada orang buat chalet guna kontena macam The Kabin atau Uptown Kontena

    • @KimKim-mt2bb
      @KimKim-mt2bb 2 года назад +10

      there are people that live in a container in here thought. I dunno how they feel lmao.

    • @jhaderaymundo2666
      @jhaderaymundo2666 2 года назад +68

      Imagine living in a giant oven and wait to get cooked in philippines lol

    • @Alusnovalotus
      @Alusnovalotus 2 года назад +17

      I live in LA (tropical desert). If we have trailer parks here, we can live in these too.

    • @Alusnovalotus
      @Alusnovalotus 2 года назад +16

      @@jhaderaymundo2666 same thing with cinder block homes. I’ve seen ovens and fire pits made of those and it’s fine. people adapt.

  • @davereilly-sr3ck
    @davereilly-sr3ck 8 месяцев назад +1

    I built a 4 story container home using 19 20’&40’ one way containers. The thing I hear the most is people telling me “great idea, it’s cheaper, faster and easier” my response is that it is truly none of those 3 things. In fact, the opposite.

    • @chrisallen2005
      @chrisallen2005 3 месяца назад

      Thank you for your honesty. Would you do it again?

    • @davereilly-sr3ck
      @davereilly-sr3ck 3 месяца назад

      @@chrisallen2005definitely not on this scale. 1 or 2, maybe 3 containers max.

  • @Rejoice1631
    @Rejoice1631 Год назад +2

    Very well done, miss, many thanks for this comprehensive take on containers. =)

  • @catc.9821
    @catc.9821 2 года назад +1247

    "But if this is the magical solution to our problems, why don't we see shipping container homes everywhere?" -YES, I have been thinking this for a long time! I knew there was a catch. And apparently, there are a lot more than I imagined. Thank you for this very informative video, Ms. Belinda Carr!

    • @bravomike4734
      @bravomike4734 2 года назад

      A dog named a cat! :o

    • @XQzmeeMusic
      @XQzmeeMusic 2 года назад +1

      Not being popular equating not being good is a bad argument.
      Electric cars aren't popular right now because of price but the price will drop once big car makers finish their investments.
      Home containers are still shit though for other reasons.

    • @cujoedaman
      @cujoedaman 2 года назад +26

      It's the same issue with the banning of gas engines in California and the UK (and I think Canada). The cost and environmental impact of creating/disposing/charging of batteries for EV's is far worse than what they're leading people to believe. We need top stop thinking about batteries and start thinking of a new power source.

    • @MrDagren
      @MrDagren 2 года назад +18

      I think the biggest reason is that people don't want to live in a shipping container. It's not all the problems that come with living in a shipping container that scares them off, because they've already lost interest at it being a shipping container. It may seem hip in some circles, but I feel fairly confident that the average mom and dad don't want to live in a container.

    • @madattaktube
      @madattaktube 2 года назад +20

      @@cujoedaman Ehhh, batteries are still significantly better over their life cycle than gasoline/diesel engines. The problem is that your replacing the least sustainable possible method of transport - gas cars - with ones that are merely mostly unsustainable, rather than going for the real solution which is better public infrastructure.

  • @spoofer44
    @spoofer44 2 года назад +362

    Most people end up framing the inside anyways, like you would a house. Use local suppliers if you want an industrial look. You can frame a house and cover it in tin/steel. So much more practical, economical, and sustainable.

    • @richeyrich2203
      @richeyrich2203 2 года назад +10

      That has no feel-good factor

    • @FirstLast-nt5ui
      @FirstLast-nt5ui 2 года назад +4

      Not if you are living in cold or hot climates... You realize that steel will match the outside temperature right, maybe even be amplified by it... in the heat...

    • @richardkaz2336
      @richardkaz2336 2 года назад +4

      @@richeyrich2203 aka Wanker factor.

    • @meikahidenori
      @meikahidenori 2 года назад +1

      @@FirstLast-nt5ui don't see how different it is to a tin roofed/walled cattle station in the outback.

    • @FirstLast-nt5ui
      @FirstLast-nt5ui 2 года назад +3

      @@meikahidenori certain climates it would be fine.. just not extreme heat or cold, in my opinion...

  • @xavielbey2961
    @xavielbey2961 Год назад +16

    As a person who designs and build homes and other types of dwellings using shipping containers, in my experience, I have never come across most of what she spoke on. Keep in mind the following:
    1. Belinda Carr is an Architect not an engineer, which means she is great at drawing and designing but not building
    2. Steel will always be stronger and cheaper than the amount of wood on a tensile strength factor. meaning in order for wood to have the same strength as a steel beam the amount will be almost double what the steel beam would cost.
    3. The recycle factor of steel is that it can always be clean and clear of chemicals, you can have yours cleaned at the port before transport or just pay the xtra 500.00 to get one in top condition. Either way its more environmental than cutting half a forest down.
    4. It can be added onto or expanded upon with ease due to its shape (Like legos), and yes they can be stack over 20 units high. you can't build any building with wood that is safe to stack half of that.
    5. Last point, there is a reason why the places we spend the majority of our lives are not made of wood but of steel. grocery stores, strip malls, schools, offices.

    • @Asmielle
      @Asmielle 2 месяца назад

      Thank you!
      I already thought that nobody would speak it out!
      Building with wood is damn expensive!
      How ANYONE could say 'Building with wood is the cheapest option' is beyond me!!!
      I already feel like I'd have to sell a kidney to renovate my bedroom and build a wooden platform for my bed...

    • @michaeljoncour4903
      @michaeljoncour4903 2 месяца назад

      i watched a house being built from shipping containers, what a joke, basically paying for expensive cladding, you don't need to cut half a forest down to build a house of shipping container size. part of my house is ferro cement a couple of corner posts half rotten bamboo, end result was extremely strong wall that should last hundreds of years, put colour in cement and will never need painting. most concrete fails due to cheap skates skimping on cement powder and having steel too close to surface.

    • @protospha
      @protospha 19 дней назад

      Yeah, well - I just watched a recent RUclips video where a whole bunch of stacked containers on a ship came tumbling down in the midst of a storm, and ended up in the ocean.