Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Shipping crates have found new life ... in developing communitie­s.

Old shipping containers can find new life, write Craig and Marc Kielburger.

- Kielburger­s,

Visiting Ghana a few years ago, some unusual kiosks caught the eye of Kevin Lee. Local vendors had cut windows and doors into abandoned shipping containers, and turned them into storefront­s.

“Clothiers, butchers, hairdresse­rs — each day families went into the container they rented to ply their trade,” recalls Lee, executive director of Scadding Court Community Centre in Toronto.

Lee returned home to the huge, deserted sidewalks surroundin­g his downtown community centre and had an epiphany. He called up Storstac, a company that upcycles shipping containers, and had two retrofitte­d containers plonked down outside the centre on Dundas Street. He invited neighbourh­ood entreprene­urs — who couldn’t afford the astronomic­al cost for a brickand-mortar Toronto storefront — to set up shop in the containers for less than $25 a day.

Seven years and 15 containers later, Scadding Court’s Market 707 is home to 23 businesses, many owned by new Canadians and refugees, in a thriving neighbourh­ood hub. Market 707 is a creative new lease on life for these ubiquitous giants that would otherwise have gone to waste.

There are more than 17 million shipping containers around the world bringing us avocados from Mexico and smartphone­s from China. Unfortunat­ely, these prodigal crates rarely return home. It’s cheaper for manufactur­ers to build new containers for their goods than to send back old ones. Like the vendors of Ghana, entreprene­urs are using shipping containers like huge Lego blocks — they can become anything.

Retired from the sea, these shipping crates have found new life as libraries and computer labs in developing communitie­s, and classrooms in refugee camps.

After hurricane Harvey ravaged Houston, Texas, one local farmer’s crop withstood the blow. His storm-resistant hydroponic farm-in-a-box, made by Bostonbase­d Freight Farms, provided fresh veggies for area residents.

Container homes have been a fad for years now, and not just for eccentric hipsters. Community organizati­ons like Vancouver’s Atira Women’s Resource Society have found them a less-expensive option for social housing for marginaliz­ed and abused women.

Clinic In A Can, in Wichita, Kan., turns old containers into mobile doctors’ offices, medical labs, and even fully equipped surgical units. The pods can be quickly deployed to natural disaster zones. Stick a bunch together and you have an instant hospital.

Now, aspiring container entreprene­urs beware: it’s not as easy as buying one and moving in.

Many containers have been treated with lead paint or harmful chemicals and must be cleaned. You’ll need doors, windows, insulation, and special equipment for certain uses.

Turning containers into stores, such as those in Market 707, can cost $20,000 to $30,000, says Storstac founder Anthony Ruggiero. But it’s worth the investment.

Charging incredibly low rent, the Market 707 containers still paid for themselves in just three years, Lee says. And they’re creating economic opportunit­y in the community while generating revenue that funds Scadding Court’s recreation and afterschoo­l programs.

Mountains of old shipping containers are a monument to our insatiable desire for consumer goods and food from abroad. Reincarnat­ion means these metal boxes don’t go to waste.

 ?? SCADDING COURT COMMUNITY CENTRE ?? At Toronto’s Market 707, upcycled shipping containers-turned-shops line a once barren stretch of downtown sidewalk. It’s now a bustling marketplac­e.
SCADDING COURT COMMUNITY CENTRE At Toronto’s Market 707, upcycled shipping containers-turned-shops line a once barren stretch of downtown sidewalk. It’s now a bustling marketplac­e.

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