With Ryan's ua-cam.com/users/postUgkxy_pn55PK60wAV3X_C_RoLS_67mNonoCE plan I was like one taken by the hand and led step by step from start to finish. Thank you very much Ryan!
It's great to experiment as a new home owner. I really like this idea of container homes. A couple of points about constructability: (a) prepare road conditions for transport; (b) space temporary foundations blocks away from permanent foundations because this container needs more area at the footer and it needs to be mechanically fixed to concrete(hand mixed in this case); (c) consider space between the container (1) container width for a garden or common space. The affect on roof trussing is very small but you get this out of container feeling. Backfill with gravel to a cement screed to floor level of containers. (d) when you construct by yourself or with a contract demand for yourself Safety. One fall, one slip, one object to your eye can have financial consequences and delay. :o) Thanks for the nice video and good luck!!!!!
Michael Miller I do like the idea of spacing them alittle farther apart and them making that part of the house, you get more square feet and maybe a more open concept.
I love how this guy works in dress slacks and a dress shirt lol. Banker by day, homebuilder at night. great work though. I want to construct a shopping container home as well.
Nice build, here in Australia, you have to have the higher containers. Building regulations will not accept the 8' high containers. Some people use the old refrigerated containers as they are already insulated.
Very nice job, I would like to make a house from containers my self, the only thing I'm a little skeptical of is the support blocks, they are not very strong if you didn't fill them with concrete inside. Thanks for sharing.
The I-beam down the center is a nice way to bridge the gap but it will only lay vertical if your containers are matched in side height. There is some variation between container manufacturers. Mismatched container roof joints can be bridged with 2" x 1/8" steel strip (I had half a 4x8 sheared into strip which was cheaper than buying flat bar but YMMV). I tacked then welded the seam with E71T-11 flux core wire in a suitcase wire feeder.
That's what I want!!! How did you get the conexes up onto the blocks? Did you install an I beam on the floor at the box junctions too or just weld the halves together? What about the joints where the boxes came together on the ends?Mr . Carpenter, these boxes are typhoon and hurricane proof. That's why people use them. Bravo, sir!
A couple of suggestions for others, or "next time." I REALLY like longer eves overhang, it's cool for a number of reasons, keeping blowing rain/ snow off the windows. "Up here" folks have even used the rear "long overhang" to stack firewood, etc.
so you had the drop ship trucks just drop the containers side by side as close as possible. then used the backhoe to lift up the ends and squeeze the 2 containers up against each other? Then lift up one end of a container and put cement blocks in the corners. drop end and do the same on the other end? I'm amazed you have the thing just sitting on cement blocks. I was thinking to make concrete pads for each corner before ordering the containers.
This was a great idea 7-10 years ago. To many people trying to make money on the containers now, you can stick frame for less than 1/5 the price of the container and deliver
looking forward on your part 2. i am planning to build a few 20 footer cabins for our next year's "visit my hometown" here in tambunan sabah. just wonder about the lightning arrester if you did think about it.
My wife and I originally set aside $25,000 in savings to build this project. We do live in it now but progress has slowed since we only add things as we get extra money or I am able to find materials. There are a few new things, so I will try to produce another video to show how far we have gotten. Thank you so much for your interest and response.
I want to make one of one container in the near future, but it's just beautiful to see how you can make wonderfull things with containers :) if you would build this with normal materials. stone, wood etc.. it would be much more expensive. You already live in it, than a lot has changed since this video :)
I personally wanned to see how you put the door, and windows in, and I'd like to know about the insulation process... where do you insulate, inside, or outside?
1st off, nice work. I am considering a shipping container home myself so your place gave me some good ideas. I really liked the I-Beam down the center of the top. I also liked the U - Channel on the inside center. Especially for structural security. But I have a couple of questions. 1) Why didn't you put it on a better foundation? 2) I didn't see any kind of drainage in place. What did you do for that? 3) Was there any reason for not adding 2 additional I-Beams on each edge of the home? 4) Did you, or consider, putting a protective "sealer" on the roof before adding the trusses? 5) Why did you weld each bracket on the container while the truss was upright? There were burn marks which means that the structural integrity of the truss was then comprised. You knew the dimensions of the wood, you knew the spacing of each truss, why would you do that? Especially with the investment that you are making into it. I'm not trying to be mean or criticize your project (mostly with #5), I'd just like to know and find out. Looking forward to Part 2. I hope that I can find it.
Zoch, Thank you for your comments. All I can say is, we took it one day at a time. I really appreciate your watching and your comments. Bon the Builder.
hi guys, the greatest results that I have had was by following the Magic Container Plans (just google it) without a doubt the no.1 course that I have ever tried.
I cut a 40' container apart for metal scrap once.. cutting those walls out with a torch or saw was tough. hardest part was removing the wooden floor. great video
wow. I have not heard this tune since I was about twelve years old on my mom's old Windows XP computer...in 2002! Now in two months...(June 2020) I will be turning thirty!
I really like how this man works in dress slacks and a get dressed blouse lol. Banker by using day, homebuilder at night time. Notable work although. I want to construct a buying field home as well.
Good idea to place that i-beam on the top. It will give structural strength when removing the inner walls and does not lower the ceiling. Why did you not remove the floors?They are normally impregnated with pesticides that leach out over time. Would not want to have that in a closed room where you stay (sleep) for a long time. It will accumulate and can cause serious illness. It is the first thing i am doing in my container build.
Tzadvantage BKK, Thank you for your input, it is greatly appreciated. On the subject of pesticides in the floor; in my research I found that there is a debate that rages between those that feel you should remove the wood in the floor and those that believe you are exposed to worse chemicals such as formaldehyde in standard materials used in new construction. Another school of thought says that containers as old as mine no longer have dangerous levels of pesticides. In any event, my wife and I decided to seal the floor with polyurethane and then put plywood on top of that.
I agree, regarding the I-Beam, with your thoughts... I am going to put 3 side by side and the I-Beam on top is a good idea due to 2 reasons; not lowering the ceiling and putting in support pole's. Not to mention, that beam will be covered anyway with the roof.... glad I saw this video, I have been racking my brain on how or where to place the support post's in the house..lol
My oak floor was soaked and blackened under the carpet from the previous owners pets, so we sealed with oil based kilz prior to new pad and relaying of the carpet. You can't even tell there were pets now. So my thought is a sealer would seal in any pesticide residue.
I think "most" cargo containers that are sold to people such as we - are old containers - they cost a lot so they wouldn't be selling them at such a low price if they still met shipping standards. I had an immune disorder for 5 year - I couldn't even go shopping - and I've had absolutely no trouble with our cargo container. Our floors are oak, so I assume ours is a fairly old container.
Trucking those in can't be cheap... one man can frame up four walls in just a few hours, studs are cheap. Not sure you are saving much messing with this... Finishing your house is where the money pit is; not the four walls.
Thank you for taking the time to share your project. This is very encouraging and simple in some ways. However, I did learn a few things during your journey. Please advise on how you manage the power supply. Is your structure off grid? Is it plumbed into a septic or community sewer system? Did you insulate the roof and walls? The last picture showed the floor being sealed. Were walls constructed with outlets etc.HVAC Unit?..Just curious.....Once again, Thank you...
All this activity and not one of the humans involved has a voice...Brilliant...If I could send my wife there would she come back playing crappy music and NO voice..bliss
One time a guy was setting up a mobile home and he also didn't know you cannot set cinder blocks without wood between them. Somehow when they broke his head was under the home. A guy a mile away said it sounded like a shotgun.
I get the possible advantages of this kind of construction if you've got to haul it out to some out-of-the-way location, but otherwise I'm not so sure what the advantage really would be. After all, you've still got to hang everything(drywall or external siding, insulation, electrical, plumbing, vapour-barriar, etc.) you would on a regular wood-construction home, that you would with a container. Now you have a banged up looking outside or a banged up looking inside, depending on whether you use the container as an inside skin or an outside skin. :-)
Shacky Rustleford Not a chance that has any structural advantage over a real house. Cool idea, but it has no foundation and those trusses have no load bearing integrity. I hope he doesn't live somewhere where they get snow. I'm not against building your own house or even trusses, but you gotta do your homework and make sure you do it right. First snow= flat roof. And it's gotta be anchored to the ground for cryin out loud.
That sir is not true I live in QUEBEC CAN. we get a lot of snow here ..he has a good pitch and the with is not that much...and is rafters are well braced....don't scare that man for no reason that is a great roof.
Just an idea......What if he creates a way to heat the roof during the winter( less weight on the roof, a means of collecting water and keeping it ice free plus maybe an internal heating solution) ......think about all the possibilities , i really cant say because i live in the caribbean but i think u guys can run with the idea.....
How wide are these containers? Have been looking into very similar to what you're doing. 2 40' high cubes together. Just one level. Estimating it would be approx. 800 sq ft.
I thought this was a joke. This guy is wearing blue khaki pants and a white dress shirt. I guess he didn't have time to change after working the day job. Interesting concept! Appreciate the progression videos.
Random question but were you a welder by trade? I want to do this in the near future and I'm lucky enough to have my dad, who was a welder at GM for almost 40 years! He can build anything from steel LOL. Just wondering if you were, lots of respect for people that do that job! I would love to learn sometime, and I'm sure my dad would teach me but I thought it would be really cool to do something like this together 😄👍🏻
Very good video with great information. What is it that is applied to the floor at the end of the video? And how did you finish and insulate floors and walls?
Agnoses, thanks for your comments and questions. We coated the original floor boards with polyurethane to seal them to address the issue brought up by partyflockske below. We then screwed down 3/4" tongue & groove plywood on top of that and will put carpet and/or tile as the finished product. As we get more money, we'll produce another video. Hope this helps. Bon
You can also use railroad ties across the corner fittings and spend very little. They don't crush, they spread load nicely and take minutes to place. If you need elevation you can use whatever is handy. I ran 12" heavy steel I-beams across the ends of my 2x 40-foot High Cube machine/welding shop but the beams were free. If you like round pillars for more elevation Sonotube and similar are easy to place then fill with concrete. I drew my containers together manually using pipe rollers and Wyeth-Scott hand winches (those outside the US may have better access to the excellent Tirfor units) with little fuss.
Maybe it's my OCD but cinder blocks drive me nuts. and a close 2nd would be railroad ties (Ban for home use in my city) They do rot in time and chances are if your able to get them the lifespan on them are mostly used up and why they are not being used for what they are made for Sonotube and firm base are the cheapest (That still hold more then needed weight loads) And are whats needed for unseen problems in the future : Flash flooding, Earthquakes, Tyhpoon/Hurricane/Tornado, High winds. And if you add a side bracket your able to tie in wood trim to close off your bottom part of the home from pest But still able to get access to Plumbing or anything else Can't do that with a formed foundation without breaking it or cuting into the floor ...Plus your going to need sonotubes anyways if your making a deck My dad was a bricklayer for 30+ years many times he had to replace cinder blocks that been soaking in water over years and had ground contact and just fell apart You dont see people setting up blocks with plastic or rubber to keep them dry or setting them on top of crushed stone to let the water drain.. Also everyone does not live in 1 type of climate a Container home idea in Phillippines does not work in Canada... Sonotubes works in both
I had breakfast this morning next to a construction site where they were building a large storage facility using a approximately one hundred containers stacked about four or five high and they were sitting on heavy duty concrete footings and a stone ledge with rebar sticking up to attach the stone's mortar. Containers are not tornado or hurricane proof if they aren't firmly attached to a foundation or footing that is bell-bottomed into the ground. I saw a video of a tornado near Dallas where a large container was flying at two hundred feet in the air.
I'd like to see the final result. ..also, if they would've installed bullet proof windows and doors it'd make them ready to take on the Corleone family.
O sea, QUE RAVIA!! Me comí las 2 partes del vídeo y al fin no nos enseña la casa por dentro decorada y terminada. Vaya chasco de vídeo, perdí mi tiempo viéndolo. Tanto trabajo y al fim solo nos hemos quedado con maderas y desorden Vaya, vaya!!
With Ryan's ua-cam.com/users/postUgkxy_pn55PK60wAV3X_C_RoLS_67mNonoCE plan I was like one taken by the hand and led step by step from start to finish. Thank you very much Ryan!
The joy of arriving at a house you built with your own bare hands !!! not even a mansion beats it
Fedor Amuricano
I've been researching into constructing shipping container houses and discovered an awesome resource at Rohon Home Build (check it out on google)
I have spent months studying constructing shipping container houses and found an awesome website at Rohon Home Build (check it out on google)
Fedor Amuricano I've been studying constructing shipping container houses and found an awesome website at Rohon home build (check it out on google)
magic conteainer plans
It's great to experiment as a new home owner. I really like this idea of container homes. A couple of points about constructability: (a) prepare road conditions for transport; (b) space temporary foundations blocks away from permanent foundations because this container needs more area at the footer and it needs to be mechanically fixed to concrete(hand mixed in this case); (c) consider space between the container (1) container width for a garden or common space. The affect on roof trussing is very small but you get this out of container feeling. Backfill with gravel to a cement screed to floor level of containers. (d) when you construct by yourself or with a contract demand for yourself Safety. One fall, one slip, one object to your eye can have financial consequences and delay. :o) Thanks for the nice video and good luck!!!!!
Michael Miller I do like the idea of spacing them alittle farther apart and them making that part of the house, you get more square feet and maybe a more open concept.
I love how this guy works in dress slacks and a dress shirt lol. Banker by day, homebuilder at night. great work though. I want to construct a shopping container home as well.
Joel Becker j
lol
With the lack of a proper foundation, yeah, banker by day is likely bang on.
@@efrainflores6083 ли
v
Nice build, here in Australia, you have to have the higher containers. Building regulations will not accept the 8' high containers. Some people use the old refrigerated containers as they are already insulated.
There's pre insulated ones? Damn I'm down another rabbit hole of research now.
Thank you for taking and sharing those fine photos. What great work.
Awesome. I want to make a stacked Hi Cube two story house out of shipping containers. Yours looks amazing!
Thank you for your comments. Be sure to document it and put it on UA-cam so that we can see your progress. I wish you well.
Very nice job, I would like to make a house from containers my self, the only thing I'm a little skeptical of is the support blocks, they are not very strong if you didn't fill them with concrete inside.
Thanks for sharing.
j jones gfy
I have thought about doing that since I was a kid, great job! I look forward to seeing it completed..
Love the simplicity of your design! We are currently building a container home in the Pacific Northwest. Keep up the great work!
Very good job, nice little house 👍from France.
Рабочий, который занимается сваркой в белой рубашке и наглаженных брюках - это шедевр😁👍))
Да ещё с болгаркой))😄
Да наши бы уже давно чумазые были бы ))) а туг гений своего дела в белом
Когда то на объект сварщик на замеры пришел в костюме с галстуком, ржали все)...
@@АнатолийГлуховский-т3р English!
Меня тоже чистый форму вдали и снимали на камеры
The I-beam down the center is a nice way to bridge the gap but it will only lay vertical if your containers are matched in side height. There is some variation between container manufacturers. Mismatched container roof joints can be bridged with 2" x 1/8" steel strip (I had half a 4x8 sheared into strip which was cheaper than buying flat bar but YMMV). I tacked then welded the seam with E71T-11 flux core wire in a suitcase wire feeder.
Using the rails.to weld the 2 containers is a brilliant idea.
Wow supper beautiful in the house container solid a house 🏘️🏘️🏘️🏘️ wishes of house container wow supper solid good job
Good work with cool music.
That's what I want!!! How did you get the conexes up onto the blocks? Did you install an I beam on the floor at the box junctions too or just weld the halves together? What about the joints where the boxes came together on the ends?Mr . Carpenter, these boxes are typhoon and hurricane proof. That's why people use them. Bravo, sir!
A couple of suggestions for others, or "next time." I REALLY like longer eves overhang, it's cool for a number of reasons, keeping blowing rain/ snow off the windows. "Up here" folks have even used the rear "long overhang" to stack firewood, etc.
so you had the drop ship trucks just drop the containers side by side as close as possible. then used the backhoe to lift up the ends and squeeze the 2 containers up against each other?
Then lift up one end of a container and put cement blocks in the corners. drop end and do the same on the other end? I'm amazed you have the thing just sitting on cement blocks. I was thinking to make concrete pads for each corner before ordering the containers.
Nolan Ritchie yes your absolutely right! At least build a proper footing or grade beam this will not stand up against time!
First and foremost, I would want a solid foundation to securely place the containers on before anything else.
This was a great idea 7-10 years ago. To many people trying to make money on the containers now, you can stick frame for less than 1/5 the price of the container and deliver
definitely enjoyed watching this thank you for sharing 😉😃
good job man but so many ways to do this project. The sky is the limit to what you can do with shipping containers. New or used.
THIS IS SO COOL DKFJGKD!!!
Outstanding! 🤯💛⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
looking forward on your part 2. i am planning to build a few 20 footer cabins for our next year's "visit my hometown" here in tambunan sabah.
just wonder about the lightning arrester if you did think about it.
It is a brilliant cost effective way of building and very versatile
Awesome! Thanks for sharing details!
Waiting in suspense for part II :)
My wife and I originally set aside $25,000 in savings to build this project. We do live in it now but progress has slowed since we only add things as we get extra money or I am able to find materials. There are a few new things, so I will try to produce another video to show how far we have gotten. Thank you so much for your interest and response.
I want to make one of one container in the near future, but it's just beautiful to see how you can make wonderfull things with containers :) if you would build this with normal materials. stone, wood etc.. it would be much more expensive. You already live in it, than a lot has changed since this video :)
I have spent months researching into building container homes and discovered a fantastic website at Magic Container Plans (check it out on google)
I personally wanned to see how you put the door, and windows in, and I'd like to know about the insulation process... where do you insulate, inside, or outside?
never the less I loved ur project
1st off, nice work.
I am considering a shipping container home myself so your place gave me some good ideas. I really liked the I-Beam down the center of the top. I also liked the U - Channel on the inside center. Especially for structural security.
But I have a couple of questions.
1) Why didn't you put it on a better foundation?
2) I didn't see any kind of drainage in place. What did you do for that?
3) Was there any reason for not adding 2 additional I-Beams on each edge of the home?
4) Did you, or consider, putting a protective "sealer" on the roof before adding the trusses?
5) Why did you weld each bracket on the container while the truss was upright? There were burn marks which means that the structural integrity of the truss was then comprised. You knew the dimensions of the wood, you knew the spacing of each truss, why would you do that? Especially with the investment that you are making into it.
I'm not trying to be mean or criticize your project (mostly with #5), I'd just like to know and find out.
Looking forward to Part 2. I hope that I can find it.
Simple and beautiful !
I'm impressed by anyone who can nail together two 2x4s much less someone who can build a house all by themselves. Totally jealous of these people
Zoch, Thank you for your comments. All I can say is, we took it one day at a time. I really appreciate your watching and your comments. Bon the Builder.
Zoch Buppet
hi guys, the greatest results that I have had was by following the Magic Container Plans (just google it) without a doubt the no.1 course that I have ever tried.
Zoch Buppet Ok .
Stefan Stevkovski thanks gonna check it out!
beautiful shipping container house viedo
I cut a 40' container apart for metal scrap once.. cutting those walls out with a torch or saw was tough. hardest part was removing the wooden floor. great video
George Koch II
;
Those floors are treated with all kinds of nasty crap.
Lol for scrap hahaha what did u get for it?
George Koch II
Great video, we used a foot of mud on the outside for insulting, which we also discovered that it also resisted RPG direct fire.
wow. I have not heard this tune since I was about twelve years old on my mom's old Windows XP computer...in 2002!
Now in two months...(June 2020) I will be turning thirty!
You can tune a piano but you can't tuna fish.
I liked the work it's a good job and perfect i which visiting Germany and usa cos i like a good working people
I really like how this man works in dress slacks and a get dressed blouse lol. Banker by using day, homebuilder at night time. Notable work although. I want to construct a buying field home as well.
Great. Inside the container, we need to do a lot of work on electric insulation.
Genial, fenomenal. maneco - Port Alegre-RS - Brasil.
Vraiment du bon travail
France
I like the single wide behind it... Not much difference in size, but the 16'×40' container will last much longer!!!
Good idea to place that i-beam on the top. It will give structural strength when removing the inner walls and does not lower the ceiling. Why did you not remove the floors?They are normally impregnated with pesticides that leach out over time. Would not want to have that in a closed room where you stay (sleep) for a long time. It will accumulate and can cause serious illness. It is the first thing i am doing in my container build.
Tzadvantage BKK, Thank you for your input, it is greatly appreciated. On the subject of pesticides in the floor; in my research I found that there is a debate that rages between those that feel you should remove the wood in the floor and those that believe you are exposed to worse chemicals such as formaldehyde in standard materials used in new construction. Another school of thought says that containers as old as mine no longer have dangerous levels of pesticides. In any event, my wife and I decided to seal the floor with polyurethane and then put plywood on top of that.
I agree, regarding the I-Beam, with your thoughts... I am going to put 3 side by side and the I-Beam on top is a good idea due to 2 reasons; not lowering the ceiling and putting in support pole's. Not to mention, that beam will be covered anyway with the roof.... glad I saw this video, I have been racking my brain on how or where to place the support post's in the house..lol
My oak floor was soaked and blackened under the carpet from the previous owners pets, so we sealed with oil based kilz prior to new pad and relaying of the carpet. You can't even tell there were pets now. So my thought is a sealer would seal in any pesticide residue.
I think "most" cargo containers that are sold to people such as we - are old containers - they cost a lot so they wouldn't be selling them at such a low price if they still met shipping standards. I had an immune disorder for 5 year - I couldn't even go shopping - and I've had absolutely no trouble with our cargo container. Our floors are oak, so I assume ours is a fairly old container.
This is so cool
Das ist.. das ist....... das ist FANTASTISCHHHHHH
Nice job
i see skills and I'm a skilled builder. nice work my friend
The idea is great! But I question the no footings, or foundation? Other than that, great!
Its a steel box.How hot will it get in the summer? Frame the inside.Insulate,and dry wall,and you likely could live in it.
Great . Thanks for sharing!
very nice, thanks
nice job, well done .
looking good sir..nice work.
Trucking those in can't be cheap... one man can frame up four walls in just a few hours, studs are cheap. Not sure you are saving much messing with this... Finishing your house is where the money pit is; not the four walls.
I think these homes would stand high winds I never recall a train blown away
greats. you made me inspiration built my own home.. thanks..
Thank you for taking the time to share your project. This is very encouraging and simple in some ways. However, I did learn a few things during your journey. Please advise on how you manage the power supply. Is your structure off grid? Is it plumbed into a septic or community sewer system? Did you insulate the roof and walls? The last picture showed the floor being sealed. Were walls constructed with outlets etc.HVAC Unit?..Just curious.....Once again, Thank you...
I'm interested in answers to these question too!
Nice video working Hard Together to Make a Big Blue Home House.😐👨👩👧👦👫🏠🏢📲🌎🎼❤️
Wife and I are investigating this type of thing using six boxes. four side by side and two as a second story. Did you use one-way boxes?
maestro muy lindo !!!! consulta q altura tienen los container . ??
nice roof! but i would prefer a rooftop living area.. great job....
quentinho no verão e fresquinho no inverno, não há igual, assim como o sr. engº que faz tudo, só lhe faltava a gravata.
Great information
I saw the I beam to join the two on the roof, what was used to join the the two inside ceiling?
All this activity and not one of the humans involved has a voice...Brilliant...If I could send my wife there would she come back playing crappy music and NO voice..bliss
My only thought on using containers is heat retention and cold retention in winter.
Se ve muy bueno,y cto sadra incuyendo envio.
Тоже ищешь комментарии на русском?
Да
Very impressive. Thank you for sharing.
Awesome & love the music what is it.... Ill get there with the home....sooooooooooon Gracias
I like it job
great idea awesome love it
One time a guy was setting up a mobile home and he also didn't know you cannot set cinder blocks without wood between them. Somehow when they broke his head was under the home. A guy a mile away said it sounded like a shotgun.
Попробуй у нас с таким контейнером 1 день прожить 😂
This guy is a badass building it in a dress shirt and slacks lol
I get the possible advantages of this kind of construction if you've got to haul it out to some out-of-the-way location, but otherwise I'm not so sure what the advantage really would be. After all, you've still got to hang everything(drywall or external siding, insulation, electrical, plumbing, vapour-barriar, etc.) you would on a regular wood-construction home, that you would with a container. Now you have a banged up looking outside or a banged up looking inside, depending on whether you use the container as an inside skin or an outside skin. :-)
do you think it might be able to withstand a hurricane, tornado, or flood better
Shacky Rustleford Not a chance that has any structural advantage over a real house. Cool idea, but it has no foundation and those trusses have no load bearing integrity. I hope he doesn't live somewhere where they get snow. I'm not against building your own house or even trusses, but you gotta do your homework and make sure you do it right. First snow= flat roof. And it's gotta be anchored to the ground for cryin out loud.
That sir is not true I live in QUEBEC CAN. we get a lot of snow here ..he has a good pitch and the with is not that much...and is rafters are well braced....don't scare that man for no reason that is a great roof.
Just an idea......What if he creates a way to heat the roof during the winter( less weight on the roof, a means of collecting water and keeping it ice free plus maybe an internal heating solution) ......think about all the possibilities , i really cant say because i live in the caribbean but i think u guys can run with the idea.....
How wide are these containers? Have been looking into very similar to what you're doing.
2 40' high cubes together. Just one level. Estimating it would be approx. 800 sq ft.
Hi you look like great person
I thought you were going to show us the final work!!
Oscar Camacho look for part 2
good job
that's just great, but did you anchor It down anywhere
I thought this was a joke. This guy is wearing blue khaki pants and a white dress shirt. I guess he didn't have time to change after working the day job. Interesting concept! Appreciate the progression videos.
Random question but were you a welder by trade? I want to do this in the near future and I'm lucky enough to have my dad, who was a welder at GM for almost 40 years! He can build anything from steel LOL. Just wondering if you were, lots of respect for people that do that job! I would love to learn sometime, and I'm sure my dad would teach me but I thought it would be really cool to do something like this together 😄👍🏻
Very good video with great information. What is it that is applied to the floor at the end of the video? And how did you finish and insulate floors and walls?
Agnoses, thanks for your comments and questions. We coated the original floor boards with polyurethane to seal them to address the issue brought up by partyflockske below. We then screwed down 3/4" tongue & groove plywood on top of that and will put carpet and/or tile as the finished product. As we get more money, we'll produce another video. Hope this helps. Bon
+Bon the Builder nice work !!! can't wait the 2nd part... good luck
Intersting points, search on google Renkarter container report
Jeez this guy dresses up for the job doesn't he
this is good
how much all expenses?
Good question!
U
Hi we are building special desined tiny houses. Please e-mail for detail and pricing. Kingkontcustoms@gmail.com
looks neat and all but i dont think laying it on bricks as a foundation is a good idea. however i see the point of it. well done bud!
Nice!
If more than one was to be built or just because, invest in a plasma cutter really nice to have if electricity or power plant available.
You put a beam on the outside of the roof. Was that also a beam on the inside or any bracing added to the inside?
spend a few dollars, put in concrete posts, not cement blocks, not enough strength
and what is with the suit?
bbruce995 aask
bbruce995 8
You can also use railroad ties across the corner fittings and spend very little. They don't crush, they spread load nicely and take minutes to place. If you need elevation you can use whatever is handy. I ran 12" heavy steel I-beams across the ends of my 2x 40-foot High Cube machine/welding shop but the beams were free. If you like round pillars for more elevation Sonotube and similar are easy to place then fill with concrete. I drew my containers together manually using pipe rollers and Wyeth-Scott hand winches (those outside the US may have better access to the excellent Tirfor units) with little fuss.
I think if it was so awesome you wouldn't have to leave youtube to google
Maybe it's my OCD but cinder blocks drive me nuts. and a close 2nd would be railroad ties (Ban for home use in my city) They do rot in time and chances are if your able to get them the lifespan on them are mostly used up and why they are not being used for what they are made for
Sonotube and firm base are the cheapest (That still hold more then needed weight loads) And are whats needed for unseen problems in the future : Flash flooding, Earthquakes, Tyhpoon/Hurricane/Tornado, High winds. And if you add a side bracket your able to tie in wood trim to close off your bottom part of the home from pest But still able to get access to Plumbing or anything else
Can't do that with a formed foundation without breaking it or cuting into the floor ...Plus your going to need sonotubes anyways if your making a deck My dad was a bricklayer for 30+ years many times he had to replace cinder blocks that been soaking in water over years and had ground contact and just fell apart
You dont see people setting up blocks with plastic or rubber to keep them dry or setting them on top of crushed stone to let the water drain.. Also everyone does not live in 1 type of climate a Container home idea in Phillippines does not work in Canada... Sonotubes works in both
This is sooo much work It would quite possibly be simpler and cheaper to pour a foundation and stick frame on top of that. containers get too involved
I had breakfast this morning next to a construction site where they were building a large storage facility using a approximately one hundred containers stacked about four or five high and they were sitting on heavy duty concrete footings and a stone ledge with rebar sticking up to attach the stone's mortar. Containers are not tornado or hurricane proof if they aren't firmly attached to a foundation or footing that is bell-bottomed into the ground. I saw a video of a tornado near Dallas where a large container was flying at two hundred feet in the air.
Yes....building a container house in a dress shirt. #Classy
I'd like to see the final result. ..also, if they would've installed bullet proof windows and doors it'd make them ready to take on the Corleone family.
wow you need more middle support for the roof than you ve got here....you need a strong header down the middle of these two storage containers ....
O sea, QUE RAVIA!! Me comí las 2 partes del vídeo y al fin no nos enseña la casa por dentro decorada y terminada. Vaya chasco de vídeo, perdí mi tiempo viéndolo. Tanto trabajo y al fim solo nos hemos quedado con maderas y desorden Vaya, vaya!!
OMG I love that 🎶! Please share the name and artist, group, band.....you know what I mean. Thanks! Love your video!
kalimba by Mr scruff
thats pretty jammin.
What song is this in the background? Awesome build also! Thx
I'm in Manila Philippines I just saw a 4-5 story building they are constructing using containers