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So I just bought a prefab container house

Comments

29 comments

  • shootuadeal

    9
  • Lady Rae

    Wow. Why not. If it's clean and new.

    6
  • Toolman286

    The photos of the 13' x20' look the same as the 19' x 20'. Does the 13' just have one side that folds out?

    3
  • shootuadeal
    Toolman286: 29437192210331/comments/29437237272091

    The photos of the 13' x20' look the same as the 19' x 20'. Does the 13' just have one side that folds out?

    I didn't catch that, could be. The one i bought has both sides that fold out. I may have linked the wrong one. Anyways I was moreso just wondering if anyone had an experience with them, of any size or brand? If you google "expandable container house" there are many different makers and price points.

    3
  • jimdeere

    That looks great.

    0
  • He Dog

    For 6 or 8 weekends a year a Tough Shed would work. This will likely be more of a palace by comparison.

    6
  • montanajoe
    • Community moderator

    Heck yeah, why not. Looks good.

    3
  • William81

    I like the looks of that. Should be a great getaway place !!!

    0
  • Ditch-Runner

    Nice and i think you will love it

    also, you could rent it out, LOL

    To immigrants and have the government pay for it

    5
  • KL

    Looks good to me. I'd live in one of those.

    0
  • yoshmyster

    I'm with He Dog. At $21K, I'd get a pain Jane cargo box with a bucket to poop in. Then use some of the $18K/$19K to buy a solar system with battery bank to run the electronics. Make it portable so you can put everything in the cargo container when not there.

    0
  • Mobuck

    The biggest plus for shipping containers is rodent proof(ish) and fairly storm proof. When you start cutting holes in them, POOF goes the rodent proof part. When you start connecting multiple units, things begin to fall apart(literally not figuratively) as the base where the units set has to be far more solid/stable or the connections between units can/will fail due to settling and such. Then the seals begin to leak and POOF leaky-leaky.

    We use 3 shipping containers for rodent/theft proof storage of seed & chemicals and Grouch Attack uses one for storing her inventory of Tupperware. They're GREAT for those uses. My Cousin just bought one to store his household in while he demolishes his old house and builds a new replacement. I even converted one into a huge culvert for field access across a large drainage ditch. Some tricky engineering required there.

    Containers are good for all these purposes but I don't see great advantages for living space after one defeats the rodent proof aspect. Those businesses performing these conversions can be really good or just barely adequate. Hope you picked a good one.

    3
  • austin20

    I like the looks of it.

    3
  • shootuadeal

    Well, the other side of the story is I didn't pay $21,000. An acquaintance of mine bought it on an auction but was to big for where he wanted to put it so after a few months he just decided to sell it. I ended up paying $8100. It is still new, never unfolded.

    18
  • shootuadeal
    yoshmyster: 29437192210331/comments/29437176170651

    I'm with He Dog. At $21K, I'd get a pain Jane cargo box with a bucket to poop in. Then use some of the $18K/$19K to buy a solar system with battery bank to run the electronics. Make it portable so you can put everything in the cargo container when not there.

    It's a lake cabin, not an apocalypse survival shelter lol. I'm sure my wife, kids, and frequent visitors will enjoy a windowless shipping container with a poop bucket. I plan on also buying a 10-14x20 shed to make up for the lack of storage we will lose when the trailer house is gone.

    15
  • Warbirds

    Looks like a great solution for what you described.keep us posted on how you like it!

    3
  • Ruger4me

    You did very well on that purchase!

    9
  • scooterdriver

    No experience with these, but I think you got a great deal and will enjoy your time away.

    0
  • Lady Rae

    I saw a video about this model.... I thought it was just perfect.

    0
  • Mobuck

    "I ended up paying $8100. It is still new, never unfolded"

    That's a plus. So here's something you should or may consider: those containers are designed to support their weight on the corners where the primary structural pillars are located.

    One 40' container I've been using for storage for over 20 years has treated timber cross supports every 8' along it's length laid dead level and has worked great. The 20 footer Grouch Attack is using only has pedestal supports under the corners (it's much lighter than the heavily loaded 40 footer) and it works fine. It might be important to know how the designer of this unit intended for the supports to be located.

    3
  • drobs

    Looks nice. I've lived in worse.

    Will you fold it back up when you leave?

    0
  • Frogdog

    Sounds like a great deal, and a perfect use for what you intend to do with it.

    Will it hook up to the plumbing you have for the trailer, or will you have to set up something new for it? I didn’t see a shower in the linked diagram. Outside shower setup?

    0
  • shootuadeal
    Mobuck: 29437192210331/comments/29437176486939

    "I ended up paying $8100. It is still new, never unfolded"

    That's a plus. So here's something you should or may consider: those containers are designed to support their weight on the corners where the primary structural pillars are located.

    One 40' container I've been using for storage for over 20 years has treated timber cross supports every 8' along it's length laid dead level and has worked great. The 20 footer Grouch Attack is using only has pedestal supports under the corners (it's much lighter than the heavily loaded 40 footer) and it works fine. It might be important to know how the designer of this unit intended for the supports to be located.

    I will be pouring a concrete slab to set it on, I believe I saw it has adjustable supports at various distances around the perimeter bought I wont really know until I go to set it up.

    9
  • shootuadeal

    Depending on the ease of setting it up/taking down and how I feel about its overall structural strength unfolded it is an option. Without knowing, right now, I'm leaning towards folding it up for the winter.

    3
  • drobs

    I would sink some hurricane straps (mobile home tie down straps) into the ground for it so it doesn't blow over.

    6
  • shootuadeal

    Mine is different than the one I linked to, it has a full bathroom including shower. It has water, sewer and electrical hook up locations on the back. It is already plumbed but an unknown is there is a way to a kitchen sink once unfolded but not sure how it is plumbed in. I will line this up with my existing septic tank. The electrical and water hookups are very nearby that as well.

    6
  • Ruger4me

    If you are putting in a slab, set some anchor bolts in slab instead of mobile home stuff if possible. Your place do what you think is best for your situation, again I think you got a great deal!

    9
  • KL
    yoshmyster: 29437192210331/comments/29437176170651

    I'm with He Dog. At $21K, I'd get a pain Jane cargo box with a bucket to poop in. Then use some of the $18K/$19K to buy a solar system with battery bank to run the electronics. Make it portable so you can put everything in the cargo container when not there.

    At $21k in Cali where you live, you'd be lucky to get a cardboard box, Yosh! 😂

    12
  • Grasshopper

    Can you anchor it down? If not I would figure a way- You got a smoking deal!

    0

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