An emergancy shelter out of shipping containers with the comforts of home.

Started by Henry W, December 16, 2009, 05:57:39 AM

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Henry W

With everything going on in the U.S. I was thinking of emergancy shelter made out of a shipping container that is mobile and can house three to four comfortably with all the comforts of home. I was thinking that a microcogen unit can be mounted on the front top wall like Carrier units.

This might sound extreem some might think its funny to bring this up but I think it might be a good thing to think about.

If anyone else is intrested I would like to see what we can come up with on layout and plans.

Again, it might be a crazy idea I guess. ::)

Henry

rcavictim

Not crazy at all.  Call it a Canadian Bush Box.  Paint arrow on side saying ship his way and label it North.  Be sure to include a mosquito and black fly sterilizing air lock as part of the entrance door.

Design it so it can become earth sheltered if desired with a few hours and a bulldozer.
"There are more worlds than the one you can hold in your hand."   Albert Hosteen, Navajo spiritual elder and code-breaker,  X-Files TV Series.

rcavictim

Quote from: Jens on December 16, 2009, 06:38:47 AM


On the practical side, I have wondered if a standard shipping container is strong enough to bury like that and if corrosion will become an issue. This would be a great way to provide a sound proof engine room with fuel storage.

Jens

Those shipping containers have rib corrugated sides which give huge strenth in compression from above.  You see them stacked 6 high or more on ships.  That's a lot of weight on the bottom one.  The same sidewalls would have a lot of strength against sideways push from earthen berm.  Best way to rust proof?  I dunno.  I know you can purchase large rubber bladders to put on the outside of a buried concrete earth sheltered homes prior to adding the backfilled earth.
"There are more worlds than the one you can hold in your hand."   Albert Hosteen, Navajo spiritual elder and code-breaker,  X-Files TV Series.

AdeV

I was already planning one as a "mobile" workshop, with the lathe, milling machine, etc. all hooked up & powered by a Lister. This will be especially useful when I move abroad; as I'll just be able to drive it from here to there, drop it on the ground & presto, instant machine shop.

For living quarters, I think I'd prefer a portakabin type arrangement, rather than steel shipping containers; but I guess it depends on how likely you are to get shot at... ;D
Cheers!
Ade.
--------------
Lister CS 6/1 with ST5
Lister JP4 looking for a purpose...
Looking for a Changfa in my life...

mobile_bob

most shipping containers are made of corten steel, its abililty to standup to the effects of corrosion are greatly enhanced over
standard steels,

many large steel tower power poles around here are made of corten as are bridge components, they don't even paint the towers
here, just let them get a nice brown patina and let em go.

a good corten container would likely outlive any of us, although i suppose one could spray it down with that asphalt bases sealer they
put on basement walls before backfilling?

now my question?

how do you get a loaded container back up off the ground and onto a rolling chassis?  from what i have heard there
is a limit to how heavy they can be and still be picked up by the roll off trucks that deliver them.

bob g


AdeV

Quote from: mobile_bob on December 16, 2009, 08:30:08 AM

how do you get a loaded container back up off the ground and onto a rolling chassis?  from what i have heard there
is a limit to how heavy they can be and still be picked up by the roll off trucks that deliver them.


You can hire or buy a truck with a suitable hiab crane on it, which, if properly specified, will easily lift a shipping container (2.2 tons for a 20x8 container) + 3-5 tons of equipment. So you need a hiab capable of lifting, say 8 tons minimum, 11 tons preferred. Obviously, the machines would have to be bolted firmly to the container floor to prevent them from moving/falling over, and the container would ideally be balanced.

This truck, for example: http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/LEYLAND-DAF-6-WHEELER-CRANE-LORRY-HIAB-PALFINGER-LOADER_W0QQitemZ140367579058QQcmdZViewItemQQptZUK_Commercial_Trucks?hash=item20ae8f47b2

The on-board Hiab will lift 7.9 tonnes (officially - unofficially it'd probably manage 8 to 8.5, provided H&S weren't watching) at the side of the vehicle. £5k is a lot, however, for a 15-year-old Leyland, eBay seems to have plenty of other options.
Cheers!
Ade.
--------------
Lister CS 6/1 with ST5
Lister JP4 looking for a purpose...
Looking for a Changfa in my life...

dubbleUJay

Is Mr. Bodell on this forum or was it the old one???
http://rbodell.com/housing.aspx
Look further down the page with pics from the inside, not to shabby IMHO!

AND he has a Listeroid! ;)
http://rbodell.com/listeroids.aspx

dubbleUJay
dubbleUJay
Lister  - AK - CS6/1 - D - G1 - LR1 -
http://tinyurl.com/My-Listers

BioDBilly

Two weeks ago, I purchased a 40' High Cube.  It will be loaded to the legal limit with tools after it is set on my 40' car haul trailer for the 1400 mile trip to Montana from California.  Initially, it will house a 27' military water bladder and a multi-function set up based on the Redstone.  Coupled with a second similar unit set about 30' feet parallel, on vapor barrier and base material, the units will be covered with Clearspan (fabric covered) trusses.  This will be the work area and base camp at my ranch until my rather ambitious shop is built.  The containers will then become the basement (same configuration) for a strawbale home.

A friend of mine has built underground homes with containers in Northern California.  Foam insulation, water proofing, soils engineering, solar tube lighting vapor barriers below And above with curtain drain perimeters,  I get.  My friend did not solve the indoor humidity/ventilation issues completely.

Southwest Windpower has an interesting application of their small wind turbines to do with cathodic protection that I intend to look into further.  It seems that making accomodation for the maintenance of sacrificial zinc would be prudent.

As to the electrical generation being incorporated into a shelter, I think that sound, fume and EMI would be a little close..  In my case, I intend to bury a 20 footer for energy related equipment.

As to loading and unloading the containers on the gooseneck car hauler, I have been collecting heavy mechanical jacks and castors.  I'll make something interesting pretty soon I expect. The trailer has an electric winch with a heavy snatch block.  I haven't determined some of the design of the tie down, mainly because I'm still looking for useful goodies.  The commercial trailers have a system that pins the corners of the containers.  I'm leaning towards setting the unit down on pressure treated 4X4's, securing it to the bulkhead and deck with straps and cross chains.

WC
Redstone & 12 KW ST, Jkson 6/1 & 5 KW ST, R175 Changfa, 4 HP China diesel, 193X Hercules Diesel out of an old Cletrac, '46 Ford 2N, '61 Galion 160 motor grader, '64 Chev C-60, '68 Early Bronco waiting for a Cummins 4BT and some newer stuff that isn't nearly so exciting!

AdeV

BioDBilly, that's quite some project!

I'd planned a much smaller-scale movement using 20' containers (normal height); probably one with my workshop & one with all my other stuff. But I don't think I'd like to live in one, in all honesty...

But anyway - please make sure you take plenty of photos of the whole rig, etc. I'd love to see it.
Cheers!
Ade.
--------------
Lister CS 6/1 with ST5
Lister JP4 looking for a purpose...
Looking for a Changfa in my life...

vdubnut62

It has come to my attention that this sure is a hard core bunch.
My wife tells me I'm paranoid, and compared to most of you fellers, I'm a wuss!
Ron
When governments fear the people, there is liberty. When the people fear the government, there is tyranny -- Thomas Jefferson

"Remember, every time a child is responsibly introduced to the best tools for the protection of freedoms, a liberal weeps for the safety of a criminal." Anonymous

cognos

I thought the same thing...

I figured if you filled the container with tools, lumber, insulation, drywall, paint, windows, etc., you could build a nice conventional shelter once you got the container on site! Then you'd have both!

rcavictim

Quote from: cognos on December 16, 2009, 06:29:42 PM
I thought the same thing...

I figured if you filled the container with tools, lumber, insulation, drywall, paint, windows, etc., you could build a nice conventional shelter once you got the container on site! Then you'd have both!

Yes but....your wooden shelter wouldn't be largely EMP proof!
"There are more worlds than the one you can hold in your hand."   Albert Hosteen, Navajo spiritual elder and code-breaker,  X-Files TV Series.

dubbleUJay

Some guys here in ZA has been doing it for years. We've got 10k's of these just doing nothing.
If you Google for them in ZA only, you'll find a lot of sites, here's one:
http://www.acontainer.co.za/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=3&Itemid=28

and another:
http://www.joshuaconrad.co.za/wordpress/?p=63

This is just to get ideas though!
dubbleUJay
Lister  - AK - CS6/1 - D - G1 - LR1 -
http://tinyurl.com/My-Listers

cognos

Quote from: rcavictim on December 16, 2009, 09:54:45 PM
Quote from: cognos on December 16, 2009, 06:29:42 PM
I thought the same thing...

I figured if you filled the container with tools, lumber, insulation, drywall, paint, windows, etc., you could build a nice conventional shelter once you got the container on site! Then you'd have both!

Yes but....your wooden shelter wouldn't be largely EMP proof!

No requirement. Nothing gets through the tin foil hat.