Shipping container ...
 

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[Closed] Shipping container (big metal thing)

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Thinking of getting one for outside the house as a man cave. Anyone got/ use/had one?


 
Posted : 25/03/2013 8:59 pm
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My dad had two of the smaller ones and was very happy with them. His neighbours less so.


 
Posted : 25/03/2013 9:00 pm
 ffej
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Used them plenty of times. We have a few at work for additional storage about the campus.. mate lived in one for a month (in Iraq) a few years ago..

Not sure I'd want one at home though.. ugly as..

J


 
Posted : 25/03/2013 9:23 pm
 kevj
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A pub near South Shields and right on the coast used one of these as an outside kitchen.

They clad the outside with halved logs to give a log cabin effect. It worked rather well.


 
Posted : 25/03/2013 9:26 pm
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Most of em Not as secure as you think .


 
Posted : 25/03/2013 9:28 pm
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They can look pretty good...

http://www.reestore.com/product-reetainer.html

But lie up there, I've lived in one for many a month while away on works trips..


 
Posted : 25/03/2013 9:28 pm
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had to buy a few in last job

a brand new one was around £1500 kitted out with breakers, lighting and decent security. This was around 2005 when metal prices were through the roof


 
Posted : 25/03/2013 9:29 pm
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My brother rents one, the landowner's rather cunningly buried some of them and planted grass over them, they're hobbit-shipping-containers. Stops them getting so hot in summer, though probably promotes rust.

<edit- forgot>

They all have extra locks welded/bolted to the outside as they had some break-ins with the original ones, I think they're just designed to be secure enough for ships/secure storage yards.


 
Posted : 25/03/2013 9:35 pm
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My hoarder neighbour has one in the drive, looks bloody awful tbh. Thankfully we can't see it!


 
Posted : 25/03/2013 10:10 pm
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We have 2 joined together and underground as a cave. For maturing cheese.


 
Posted : 25/03/2013 10:14 pm
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Interesting..... I'm sorely tempted, theyre a bargain too, I'm gonna have to pretty it up a bit. I think I'm going to add some extra security too.


 
Posted : 25/03/2013 10:22 pm
 sbob
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I think I paid £800 for mine.
Be aware that no matter what locks you have in place, a thief can always just cut through the sides.


 
Posted : 25/03/2013 10:27 pm
 core
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Thread resurrection!

I currently rent a small unit/workshop to store my (motorised) trials bike, rally car and associated tools/spares, but it's £1200 a year, and long term I need to save some money, plus it's 10-15 minutes from home. Oh, and I'm selling the trials bike.

So I'm looking for an alternative, live in a cottage on girlfriend's parents farm, but no really suitable buildings available.

So, considering a shipping container, as would be secure enough (though I could upgrade it easily), could stick it around the back easily (pending permission....) and I reckon a 205 plus work bench would fit ok. Could modify it for ventilation & use generator for electric.

So any thoughts? Not really expecting to work on car in there to be honest.


 
Posted : 20/01/2014 7:39 pm
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I am very tempted to get one instead of shed so when we move we can just have it picked up and moved.

I am wondering how we go about getting someone to transport one and how much though!


 
Posted : 20/01/2014 11:24 pm
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I would like to make a house out of them 🙂


 
Posted : 21/01/2014 1:05 am
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We used to buy 10ft long ones, for work.

Basically one standard 20ft long one buy that had been damaged so had its middle cut out.

Proper cut and shut job.

I think they were £1000 delivered but that was over 10 years ago.


 
Posted : 21/01/2014 5:37 am
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We sent out an email to the Scout group parents, asking if anyone had access to one we could site at a sailing complex, for our canoes etc, & were given a brand new one. (£3-4k for a new one). 😕

They used to have one for bike storage, at Torrent Walk campsite, near CyB.


 
Posted : 21/01/2014 5:59 am
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They are useful and not that hard to get delivered (as they are a standard load) but do watch the security side, they are very easy to get into if you know what you are doing.


 
Posted : 21/01/2014 6:52 am
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I slept in one recently when working at Silverstone. Each 40 ft container had 4 rooms each with a double bed a transverse single bunk and a wet room. They keep one set there permanently and bring in more for the Grand Prix.


 
Posted : 21/01/2014 7:00 am
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anybody been to Wahaca on the South Bank? thats made of em.

http://www.wahaca.co.uk/2012/05/the-wahaca-southbank-experiment/


 
Posted : 21/01/2014 7:34 am
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BenjiM - Member 
We have 2 joined together and underground as a cave. For maturing cheese.

😀


 
Posted : 21/01/2014 7:39 am
 hora
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They clad the outside with halved logs to give a log cabin effect. It worked rather well.

I was thinking just that.

It'd fit REALLY well in the space where I've chopped down our huge old greenhouse and current shed stands.

Thing is- theres NO chance you'd get it down the side of the house towards the back 🙁


 
Posted : 21/01/2014 7:59 am
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Freezing cold in winter and sweltering in summer.

You can pick them up cheap in Africa:

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 21/01/2014 8:20 am
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A friend was working on a shipping container business and told me they cost around $1000 each, were worth about $800 in scrap and the rented them out for $1 a day on ships.

They are amazing inventions really.


 
Posted : 21/01/2014 8:26 am
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[i] theres NO chance you'd get it down the side of the house towards the back[/i]

There was a program on the telly where they cut one apart to fit down the side of a house and then had it welded back together on site.

Crane over the house is the other option 🙂


 
Posted : 21/01/2014 8:29 am
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They are commonly used by sailing teams as workshops, easy to move around as / when the team visits different places for events. Generally kitted out with electricity, long workbench and storage racks. As above they are very cheap these days. A mate used two to store all his furniture in when his house was being rebuilt.


 
Posted : 21/01/2014 8:32 am
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wwaswas - that container is on Teetosugars link which is actually that guy's designer shite... I mean site. 😉


 
Posted : 21/01/2014 8:40 am
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Cool, eh? I have an idea as to how to make them not

Freezing cold in winter and sweltering in summer.

🙂


 
Posted : 21/01/2014 8:59 am
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ah, that link didn't work for me Milkie just get a page error.


 
Posted : 21/01/2014 9:02 am
 scud
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If you are thinking of staying or working in one much, you'd need to insulate properly, v.cold and real problems wih condensation. FIL has them for workshops at his quarry.


 
Posted : 21/01/2014 9:25 am
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Yep condensation is the biggy. Security, cutting through the sides, probably more difficult than cutting through a brick wall. Locks may be more of an issue. Ours has a shielded lock which would make attacking it a pain. There's not much that is properly secure if the thieves have tools and time. I remember a builders merchants getting done next to a place I worked years ago, they just drove a JCB through the rear brickwork and then took their time to empty the placer.


 
Posted : 21/01/2014 1:07 pm

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