Thursday, January 1, 2009

CONNEX Box homes

Mayberry over at Keep It Simple Survival has been talking about homesteading, and some other folks have been talking about living out of a motorhomes and motorcoaches. Incidentally, here's a page on how you can deal with floods while living out of a motorhome. See the article here.

My friends and I who are involved in tech, and construction have kicked around a ideas about using CONNEX Boxes for instant shelters, to jump start bomb shelter construction and also for sleeving abandoned mines.

In short, the idea for a bomb shelter or retreat is basically excavate an area large enough to pour a concrete pad capable of accommodating the number of boxes you want to link/stack together. All of your power/communications conduits would be run on the exterior of the boxes. The same for air exchange, water and waste pipes. A framework of rebar would be constructed over those pipes/conduits to surround the boxes. Then the entire thing would be encased in concrete, and then the area backfilled.

To sleeve an abandoned mine, you would need a horizontal mine opening. There are a number near where I live just west of the Sierra Nevada Gold Country. The entrance would need to be large enough to accommodate the CONNEX box, or be enlarged to do so. The box would be slid into the opening. Forms would be constructed at the front and rear of the CONNEX box and concrete pumped in to fill the void between the box and the rock wall of the mine.

We talked to a mining engineer about this idea, and he was somewhat dubious of the idea. He said that it would probably be okay in a hardrock situation, but he would actually have to survey the existing mine and its opening to determine how stable it would actually be. He said that calculating the forces that would actually be exerted on the sleeve was critical to determine if it was safe. He went on to say that this was definitely not an option in areas where the ground was soft like near coal mines. Then he warned about radioactive gasses like radon and potential methane accumulations around mines.

Here are some links to homes built from CONNEX Boxes:

Container House

Shipping Container Homes

And a blog from Afghanistan

Afghanistan JAG

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

I have been considering a conex or two for the compund. they are cheap and tough.

Shipping Container Homes said...

Firstly I wanted to introduce myself, I am perhaps the biggest fan of Shipping Container Construction in the World.

I am also a general contractor with several years of working in ISBU based construction and today I teach people to build with ISBU's so I have NOTHING against using shipping containers for fast, affordable construction.

I have made a 20 minute video explaining the counter point to this thread - the reasons that you should not bury a shipping container.

The video is here.

http://www.containerhome.info/tutorial-9.html

Thank you for your consideration.

Victor