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  1. #1
    Join Date
    May 2023
    Location
    Bungonia, NSW
    Posts
    74

    Default Southern Tablelands Shipping Container Build

    Thought I'd kick off this section with a new thread about my Owner Build saga which has been going on for years!

    I am building a shipping container house in the Southern Tablelands in a small place called Bungonia (some may know of it through the Gorge and caves.)

    I bought 25 acres 10 years ago and started building after getting council approval around mid 2015.

    This is a 'Pay As You Go' build, meaning I need to earn the money in order to build. It has been a fine juggling act balancing working enough to buy materials, but not too much so that I have energy to do the actual build.

    I have been doing everything I can by myself. Apart from electrical and plumbing, I paid to have the steel roof put on, the concrete pumped into the foundations I prepared, the dam dug, the water tank built, the drive gravelled, the solar panels installed (on the frame I made) and I needed help to lift the (208kg each) big windows at the front of the house. Everything else I've done by myself.

    It's been a huge adventure as I'd previously never built anything more than an Ikea bookcase. But I finally feel like I am getting close to being able to move in and give up being a renter forever!!

    Here is a quick recap of the journey so far in 10 pics for those who are new to this build:

    Aac.jpg

    Aai.jpg

    Aap.jpg

    Aar.jpg

    Aaw.jpg

    Aaz.jpg

    Abg.jpg

    Abh.jpg

    Abj.jpg

    Abk.jpg

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Nov 2021
    Location
    Sunshine Coast, QLD
    Posts
    69

    Default

    Very impressive views from those windows and now it's clad you wouldn't guess there were shipping containers behind there, well done

  3. #3
    Join Date
    May 2023
    Location
    Bungonia, NSW
    Posts
    74

    Default

    Currently at the gyprocking stage.

    Here's a few pics of different areas that I have sheeted. Haven't begun the arduous task of plastering yet - just a few trials in the bathroom and 2nd bed.

    2nd bedroom:
    20230520_130145.jpg

    Bathroom:
    20230506_151508aaa.jpg

    Kitchen with cabinets temp. placed to check spacing:
    20230516_114811.jpg

    Main bed west wall:
    20230528_131429.jpg

    Lounge/dining south wall:
    20230529_140414.jpg

    West end of lounge:
    20230603_140943.jpg

    Main bed - corner bead and shadowline bead placement:
    20230604_125643aaa.jpg

    Currently waiting on ceiling batten clips - waited 3 weeks for them to arrive only to then find they had sent the wrong type So now another 2 - 3 week wait.
    The 2nd bed and bathroom do not have battens, only the lounge/dining, kitchen, and main bed.

    Also have been mucked about by the tiler. After accepting his quote and declining the others I pressed ahead and lined the bathroom walls ready for him to start. (I am not allowed to waterproof myself so to make it worth a tilers while, i asked for them to also do the screed and tile the floor and I would do the walls.)

    Once ready, I contacted him and he has since ignored my calls. So now I am in a position of having to find another tiler - awkward as I already rejected two others. I don't feel comfortable re-approaching them.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    May 2023
    Location
    Bungonia, NSW
    Posts
    74

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Camelot View Post
    Very impressive views from those windows and now it's clad you wouldn't guess there were shipping containers behind there, well done
    Yes I am really fortunate with the views - and better still, the windows are north facing so theys not only encompass the view, they capture the winter sun for passive solar heating.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Nov 2007
    Location
    melbourne australia
    Posts
    287

    Default

    Impressive job. Well done.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    May 2023
    Location
    Bungonia, NSW
    Posts
    74

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by jack620 View Post
    Impressive job. Well done.
    Thanks Jack!

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Nov 2004
    Location
    Millmerran,QLD
    Age
    74
    Posts
    1,761

    Default

    turnstiles

    That is looking good. I am not really familiar with the climate in your area, but I can appreciate the value of those windows for the winter sun. Do you anticipate any further structure to prevent the summer sun heating the house as I see there are no eaves?

    What is the exterior cladding: It looks a bit like a tilt up concrete wall but I doubt it is. It is striking. If I ever built another house, which is unlikely, I think I would go down the container path. I did dabble with a container for a studio a few years back.

    Regards
    Paul
    Bushmiller;

    "Power tends to corrupt. Absolute power corrupts, absolutely!"

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Location
    Darkest NSW
    Posts
    93

    Default

    Awesome job, and a spectacular location too !

    Is the cladding that Hardie Architectural fibre cement boards? We used their Hardiedeck planking system for outside deck on our rebuild after bushfires, very happy with it.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    May 2023
    Location
    Nimmitabel, Canberra
    Age
    73
    Posts
    299

    Default

    Just wondering - I presume you had a crane to lift the containers onto the foundations. The containers don't look new. I imagine they might have received a few knocks during their life and may have bent a little. Did the containers wobble when placed? If so how did you fix that? Are you relying on their weight to keep them in place or have you fixed them in position somehow?

  10. #10
    Join Date
    May 2023
    Location
    Bungonia, NSW
    Posts
    74

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Bushmiller View Post
    turnstiles
    Do you anticipate any further structure to prevent the summer sun heating the house as I see there are no eaves?

    What is the exterior cladding: It looks a bit like a tilt up concrete wall but I doubt it is.

    Regards
    Paul
    Hi Paul - the exterior cladding on three sides is a fibre cement product called (Hardie) Easylap which has an expressed shiplap join.

    It was tricky to manoeuvre them by myself as they are 3600 x 1200 and weigh 52kgs each. Not only did I have to get them from horizontal to vertical - I also had to lift them by hand up around 400mm off the ground and then screw to the external studs. Not a job for a windy day!
    39796_1607633054.jpg 39796_1608358938.jpg

    The panels on the front are a similar material - 1200 x 1200:
    39796_1630216411.jpg
    They also have a 10mm expressed joint.

    39796_1632562925.jpg

    39796_1633595044.jpg

    There is a small eave on the front which cuts out mid summer sun. Down here in the Southern Tablelands it is the cold that is the main concern not the heat. But the house has double insulation on every side including under and over the containers. All the windows and glass doors are double glazed. This is a schematic of the container walls:
    39796_1635673950.jpg
    I haven't finished all of the internal insulation or draft excluding on the doors and today we hit a maximum of 12 deg and I was working all day in the house with shorts and a singlet!

  11. #11
    Join Date
    May 2023
    Location
    Bungonia, NSW
    Posts
    74

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by ErrolFlynn View Post
    Just wondering - I presume you had a crane to lift the containers onto the foundations. The containers don't look new. I imagine they might have received a few knocks during their life and may have bent a little. Did the containers wobble when placed? If so how did you fix that? Are you relying on their weight to keep them in place or have you fixed them in position somehow?
    Hi ErrolFlynn - Yes - I hired a Franna crane to lift the containers = when it arrived I didn't think it was big enough for the job but it made light work of it!
    39796_1521101520.jpg 39796_1521101492.jpg 39796_1521101601.jpg

    The concrete piers had metal plates set into them on which the containers were welded when in place:
    39796_1520927367.jpg 39796_1521100938.jpg 39796_1521100966.jpg

    The containers were at the end of their life so there were a few dings in them but nothing severe.

  12. #12
    Join Date
    May 2012
    Location
    Woodstock (Cowra)
    Age
    75
    Posts
    832

    Default

    Very impressive!!! You insulation is gold standard. Look forward to more WIP photos
    The person who never made a mistake never made anything

    Cheers
    Ray

  13. #13
    Join Date
    Nov 2004
    Location
    Millmerran,QLD
    Age
    74
    Posts
    1,761

    Default

    turnstiles

    Thanks for the extra information. You have certainly done your homework and I had not appreciated how cold it is down that way. You did well to manhandle those Easylap sheets.

    Regards
    Paul
    Bushmiller;

    "Power tends to corrupt. Absolute power corrupts, absolutely!"

  14. #14
    Join Date
    May 2023
    Location
    Bungonia, NSW
    Posts
    74

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Mr Brush View Post
    Awesome job, and a spectacular location too !

    Is the cladding that Hardie Architectural fibre cement boards? We used their Hardiedeck planking system for outside deck on our rebuild after bushfires, very happy with it.
    Thanks Basil! Yes Hardie Easylap. I'm really happy with it.

  15. #15
    Join Date
    May 2023
    Location
    Bungonia, NSW
    Posts
    74

    Default

    With the long weekend over I realised that I have now been working 7 days a week for 2 years straight except for 3 days off for Christmas (the one before last!) No wonder some mornings are hard to get out of bed!!


    Here's a few update pix - most of the walls are now gyprocked and all the metal beading too.

    Main bed window:
    20230606_130812.jpg

    Lounge-room windows:
    20230611_132828.jpg

    Here you can see the original reveal, reveal extension and the shadowline bead in place.
    20230613_124924.jpg

    battens up for the kitchen ceiling:
    20230613_080003.jpg

    I need to 'box in' the kitchen ceiling beam before I can start putting up the gyprock. This is still a WIP.
    The large gap between the white timber form-work is because I have to somehow fit a 600mm wide 3 bar down-light in there.
    20230613_112912.jpg

    Here's a pic of my poor old workbench (Looking tidy for once!) and its surface - so battle scarred! (The hole is where, in a fit of anger, I attacked a staple gun with a hammer because it wouldn't staple!!) I found this table outside the neighbours on the grass verge 2 weeks after moving into my rental and just as I was about to start the build. Was meant to be.
    20230605_124230aaa.jpg

    Lovely clear winters day today - early this morning:
    20230613_074327.jpg

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