Bland is not necessarily bad when the goal is to cheaply and easily
reuse something industrial as a residential space. While a lot of cargo
container homes delight the senses, these few dozen rather austere,
bare-bones modular designs somewhat boldly focus on the nuts and bolts,
so to speak, of living in a metal box.
“InterModal Design
believes in the power of simplicity, the importance of affordability and
the necessity of green spaces to enjoy the comfort and beauty of
nature. IMD began after the construction of partner Paul Stankey’s own shipping container cabin in the relaxing woods of northern Minnesota.”
Reduce, reuse, recycle – a classic but applicable motto – works well
with these variously-configured shipping containers designed to be used
as cabins, cabanas, guest houses or off-the-grid residences. There is
nothing fancy (in a good way) about the fold-down chairs, tables and
beds the tuck neatly into walls when not actively needed, opening up
floor area and serving multiple uses.
Unlike many more-conceptual approaches, there is an appropriate
minimalism to the process laid out by this pragmatic Midwestern company.
They have a flat-fee design rate, offer guidance on permitting, and
provide standard architectural advice related to site, soil and
foundation requirements and assistance with delivery and setup.
Still, not all of their ideas are strictly limited to conservative
interiors and unfinished exteriors – some are overly more ‘home-like’ in
terms of their outer form, while nonetheless using elemental prefab
building blocks to keep down construction costs and eliminate unneeded
complexities. Even these more-evolved models utilize existing open ends
rather than unnecessarily cutting new doors and windows into old
recycled containers.
Via DORNOB
Fuente Original
http://dornob.com/boring-or-brilliant-simple-shipping-container-house-plans/#axzz2tw95l6Ul
No es soló lo que hacemos sino como lo hacemos.
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