Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

AT HOME IN A BOX

Shipping containers get new — and eco-friendly — life as Airbnb rentals, housing and offices

- By Johnny Diaz Staff writer

The white, two-story house looks like a rustic steel cabin.

It measures 1,200 square feet and has four bedrooms and two bathrooms in Jupiter Farms in Palm Beach County.

But this isn’t just any house. It’s an “upcycled eco retreat,” created out of three large shipping containers and offered to the public as an Airbnb rental.

“I call it ‘upcycled’ because we are taking a container and repurposin­g it by bringing new life to it,” said Jupiter real estate agent Rick Clegg.

He is among those thinking inside and outside the box — and finding new uses for shipyard containers as homes and businesses throughout South Florida.

The structures are gaining a following as part of the tiny home movement, where people live in smaller spaces that are typically more affordable than traditiona­l houses. There’s even a show on HGTV called “Container Homes,” which pairs potential homebuyers with builders who can create the boxy home of their dreams.

Hollywood-based builder The Container House recently built such a home in unincorpor­ated MiamiDade County, outside Miami Shores, for an out-oftown client. It was the company’s first custombuil­t cargo home.

“It looks like a regular house. You won’t see the containers. You can’t tell,” said the company’s owner, Rodrigo Bernstein, as he stood outside the home off Northwest 95th Street. “It’s different, something that is not convention­al.”

Constructe­d from three shipping containers, the two-bedroom, two-bathroom house has 1,000 square feet. Stucco and gray paint bedeck the exterior. The interior flooring features beige tile.

He said the average cost for these modular homes runs between $80 and $120 per square foot, in addition to costs for items such as permits and planning. He said he builds homes only in Broward and MiamiDade counties.

“It has to be built locally. I cannot build and ship it. It has to pass all the inspection­s on-site. It’s the same process as a traditiona­l house,” said Bernstein, who built the house for a client who wanted it as an investment property. It’s listed for $230,000, he said.

In North Miami Beach, real estate agent Mariano Bogani has two container home duplexes under constructi­on, made out of former ocean cargo holders.

In Miami, Little River Box Co. specialize­s in converting shipping containers into temporary or permanent businesses such as barbershop­s and bars.

One of the company’s projects involves using 10 containers to build a proposed mixed-use developmen­t in the 1400 block of Northeast Fourth Street in Fort Lauderdale. Restaurant­s and retail would be on the ground floor, with offices above.

The company also is behind the new restaurant in Wynwood Yard called Charcoal Garden Bar + Grill, which was made from six containers.

“Between the modularity and the shippabili­ty [of the containers], the sky is the limit,” said Little River Box Co. co-founder Gayle Zalduondo.

Also in Wynwood, a company called Wyn-Box unveiled a container home as its showroom model last November. Constructe­d from two used cargo containers, the 640-square-foot, onebedroom showroom has porcelain gray tile, a stainless steel kitchen and one bathroom.

“There is a lot versatilit­y and possibilit­ies for creativity and innovation for using containers in the constructi­on industry,” said Ryan Anderson, a Fort Lauderdale business developer who co-founded the Wyn-Box with Miami architects Ruslanas Byckovas and Ethan Royal. Their company also offers the modular structures for businesses.

Visitors can find the gray home while exploring the artsy Wynwood district or by following the hashtag #containerh­ome or #containerh­ouse on social media.

“When you tell somebody that you want to build a home out of a shipping container, and you’ve never seen one, it can sound unappealin­g,” Anderson said. “When someone sees a well-done project, they open their minds to the possibilit­y ... This is for someone who wants to live in something more unique and creative. This makes a little more of a statement.”

Builders buy used shipping containers from local ports, wholesaler­s or online, paying anywhere from $1,000 to $4,500 each.

“Anywhere there is a port, whether it’s PortMiami, Port of Palm Beach or Jacksonvil­le, you can buy containers,” said Clegg, who built the eco-home along the Loxahatche­e River in Palm Beach County’s Jupiter Farms community.

Clegg said he has owned the property since 1997 but began exploring the cargo home idea about four years ago and bought three containers once used at PortMiami. He always wanted to do something with it that “accomplish­ed my goal of recycling, repurposin­g and building something sustainabl­e to go with my values,” he said.

It took about two years to get the county planning and zoning permits and to construct the structure, he added.

Each container is 40 feet long and about 9 feet wide. The first floor has two bedrooms, a kitchen and bathroom. The second floor has two bedrooms and a bathroom. The home has hurricane-impact windows, and the ground-floor containers are welded to a cement foundation.

“I always say that when the next hurricane comes through Palm Beach County, this is where I’m staying,” he said.

On the grounds are kayaks, canoes, and bicycles that are available to all guests. Clegg said about 100 families have stayed in the cargo home since it opened two years ago. He charges guests between $225 to $285 a night, depending on the time of year.

So far, the reviews have been positive. Wrote one guest: “Beautiful! The feeling of camping and wild nature with the benefits and commoditie­s of a house.”

Joyce Ryan, 77 of, Harvard, Ill., stayed at the ecohouse last Christmas with her granddaugh­ter and great-granddaugh­ter.

“It was unique that it was a former container, but once you’re inside, you don’t have that feeling,” said Ryan, a home care nurse. “It feels like any other convention­al accommodat­ion. I see these containers on the road, and to see what was done with it, I just thought it was very creative and innovative.”

Would she ever live in one?

“Yes, in a heartbeat!” she said. “They are very livable, they are very comfortabl­e, and they are just like being in any other home.”

“This is for someone who wants to live in something more unique and creative. This makes a little more of a statement.” Ryan Anderson, Wyn-Box co-founder

 ??  ??
 ?? PHOTOS BY JIM RASSOL/STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Real estate broker Rick Clegg built this three-container eco retreat in Jupiter Farms and rents it on Airbnb. It sleeps six.
PHOTOS BY JIM RASSOL/STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Real estate broker Rick Clegg built this three-container eco retreat in Jupiter Farms and rents it on Airbnb. It sleeps six.
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Rick Clegg’s eco-home, which includes kayaks, canoes and bicycles, is described in one review as: “The feeling of camping and wild nature with the benefits and commoditie­s of a house.”
Rick Clegg’s eco-home, which includes kayaks, canoes and bicycles, is described in one review as: “The feeling of camping and wild nature with the benefits and commoditie­s of a house.”
 ?? PHOTOS ABOVE, TOP LEFT: MIKE STOCKER/STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Using two used cargo containers, the founders of Wyn-Box built a one-bedroom home as a model in Wynwood.
PHOTOS ABOVE, TOP LEFT: MIKE STOCKER/STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Using two used cargo containers, the founders of Wyn-Box built a one-bedroom home as a model in Wynwood.
 ?? PHOTOS ABOVE, CENTER BY JIM RASSOL/STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ??
PHOTOS ABOVE, CENTER BY JIM RASSOL/STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States