Wednesday, January 2, 2008

The idea


We own a beautiful piece of rural land that we eventually plan to build our final home on. Since we will not be there full time for a couple of years, we wanted to have a structure that would provide some of the comforts to get through a nasty spell of weather when we are visiting but would not have to worry about fire or vandalism when we are gone. Our ideal cabin would be extremely durable and somewhat portable should we decide to redeploy it to another location should we choose. It must also serve as the cornerstone building block to our eventual home should we be happy with the location. A tall order for sure. A 20' ISBU container fits the bill as our starting point. We decided on a relatively new container that is in immaculate condition. While this may cost more as a starting point, it saves a lot of restoration effort. The conversion will use the highest quality components, be fully insulated and have an interior finished in light maple panels. The sofa seen in the diagram is a built in with a Murphy bed opening out from the wall behind it. There is a table that folds out from the wall when the bed is put away and allows for two people to sit on each end of the sofa and dine. Underneath the built in sofa will be some storage and our 3 x Group 31 AGM battery bank that will be fed by 320 watts of solar panels on the roof. Most of the electrical systems will be 12 vdc based and a 2000 watt inverter from Carmanah Technologies will be used for the intermittent 120 vac requirements. The "F" in the box next to the sofa is a Dickinson Marine propane fireplace that will provide heat. 3 small skylights will supplement daytime lighting. Night time lighting will be provided by dimmable LEDs with an RGB controller. Cooking will be taken care of with a 2 burner propane stove and 800 watt microwave. Refrigeration will be an Engel 45 liter Fridge/Freezer. A Sunmar Excel NE composting toilet will take care of sanitation duties. Water will be stored in a 50+ gallon tank mounted on the roof. Hot water will be provided by a propane fired on demand Omega heater. Gray water will be collected in a portable tank for use in irrigation on different parts of the property. The exterior will be finished with an olive gray color ceramic low emissivity paint. The container will be on I-beams welded to a pier foundation using Bigfoot Systems footings. The I-beams will be extended to the north of the drawing and another pair added to the west to provide the structure for a suspended deck. An A&E 20' x 8' retractable RV awning will be used to shade the deck in the summer.

2 comments:

Unknown said...

Neat idea. I may have missed this, but what are your plans on securing the side doors? You mentioned securing the cabin from vandals, I was curious on the hinges and latches.

You mentioned painting the connex olive green, will you be contrasting to break up the profile or is the final site below the horizon? Solar panels on the roof, if permanent may be a visual giveaway, but I am sure you will eliminate all shiny surfaces.

Great idea, post pics as you can of the project.

ContainerCabinCouple said...

Material cut out for the door will be re-used to create the security doors that cover the patio slider. Hinges will be weld on permanent pin with RH & LH that will prevent the door from being pried and lifted off.

Olive gray is a better definition of the color, no contrasting break up as the site is inside a circle of trees an not visible from access road.

PV panels will remain flat when CC is un-occupied and will be raised to 35 degrees by electric screw driven strut when inhabited.