mardi 17 décembre 2013

Shipping Containers Make for an Unusual Home

Recycling hits the big time as a general contractor turns 4 metal boxes into a decidedly different living space

Mitchell Parker
Houzz Editorial Staff; writer, musician, father and husband.

Les Collections Dubreuil
General Contractors
Maison Conteneur - Container House
URL http://www.collectionsdubreuil.com
Building traditional wood townhouses and condos is good work for a general contractor. It provides a steady income for Claudie Dubreuil, a general contractor in Mirabel, Quebec, who owns Les Collections Dubreduil. But she says this type of work isn’t a great creative outlet, due to its limited budgets and safe, middle-of-the-road designs. So when it came to designing her own house, Dubreuil was determined to do something extraordinary and fun. Building a home out of four metal shipping containers fit the bill.

Houzz at a Glance
Location: Sainte-Adèle, Quebec, Canada
Who lives here: Claudie Dubreuil
Size: 1,920 square feet; 3 bedrooms, 2½ bathrooms
Cost: $350,000 to $400,000 Canadian (about U.S.$330,000 to $377,000), including lot, excavation, labor and materials
Team: TLA architectes; engineer: NCK



Dubreuil’s excitement slowed as the realities of the project set in. She had to find an engineering firm to cut the shipping containers to her specifications, adding windows and more. Four firms rejected her, saying that the project was too complicated. She eventually found a firm, NCK, and they began the two-year process.
Purchasing the containers turned out to be quite simple. With a large port in nearby Montreal, Dubreuil found half a dozen companies selling shipping containers for $2,800 to $3,200 Canadian (U.S.$2,600 to $3,000) each. Not a bad price.





It took about two weeks just to cut the containers — it’s a smelly and toxic process that has to be done offsite — and to add metal support beams and weld everything together. “After that it’s not cheap anymore,” she says.
Construction crews put the containers together in one day. Dubreuil, who acted as general contractor, stands in front of her new house here.



They clad the exterior in unstained hemlock spruce, because Dubreuil didn’t want to paint her house every year.



Each shipping container is each 8 feet by 40 feet. Two are connected on the first floor, and two on the second are as well, forming a cross shape.



Since the floors of the shipping containers have big beams in them, Dubreuil flipped the containers and added even more beams to create more support for the second floor. The shipping container doors became two large windows. The ceiling of the containers became wall paneling in the basement.
The floor (the old ceiling) was basically just a thin piece of galvanized steel that moved up and down when Dubreuil walked on it. She added 5 inches of polished concrete with radiant heating on the floors on every level.



Dubreuil really wanted the container metal exposed on the interior. But that created a dilemma about where to put the insulation. The solution was to add it to the exterior of the structure, beneath the exterior wood siding. This method also left more interior space. Dubreuil then used white metal paint over the rusty red color of the original containers.
Metal tables and ammo boxes add to the industrial appeal, while reclaimed barn wood warms the look.
Tables, sofa: Maison Corbeil



If you think being wrapped in cold, hard steel sounds like a recipe for a chilly interior, just take a look: Dubreuil covered entire walls in warm recycled barn wood and recycled brick.
Bookcase: Maison Corbeill



An artist created the stairway wall with small pieces of reclaimed wood; they reach 18 feet high.





Because running electrical in and out of the metal walls would have been too time consuming, metal commercial tubing was left exposed.
Dubreuil bought the Kohler sink at a garage sale for $150.
Cabinets: Cuisine MT; lights: Multi Luminaire





A barn wood door leads to a food storage closet, while reclaimed wood completely wraps a powder room, where a metal sink and shelves anchor the industrial look.



For the main bedroom, Dubreuil wanted a bohemian-meets-luxury-hotel vibe. The room completely opens to the bathroom and shower.



A garage door opens to a patio, an outdoor shower and views of the surrounding forest.



All the vanities in the house are repainted vintage pieces. The room beyond is a reading room with pallet furniture.



The outdoor shower drains onto hemlock spruce wood.



The original colors of the shipping containers can be seen in the basement TV room, where leftover metal sheets cover the ceiling …



… and the walls.

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