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Minggu, 23 Februari 2020

4 Bedroom Shipping Container Modular House, New York






This four-bedroom, 1800 sf, shipping container modular house was completed in March 2019. Its a breakthrough project for MB Architecture and they hope it will provide a template for many future homeowners who may want to bypass the typical process of custom-designing and building homes.


Drawings
About MB Architecture
About Gallanti Inc

Project: Amagansett Modular
Architect: MB Architecture
Builder/General Contractor: Gallanti Inc
Structural Engineer: Keith Ewing
Containers: 6
Area: 1800 sf
Location: Amagansett, Long Island, New York
Year: 2019




Wrapped around a mature oak tree, a light-filled 4 bedroom shipping container modular house embraces the outdoors in more ways than one.

In the East Hampton village of Amagansett, Manhattan-based MB Architecture has completed their largest—and most complex—prefab project to date: a 1,800-square-foot shipping container home that emphasizes indoor/outdoor living.

"It’s the culmination of 10 years of research prototyping," says Maziar Behrooz, founder of MB Architecture. His award-winning cargotecture work drew the attention of the clients, a couple with three young children, who had been looking for an alternative to the ubiquitous wood-shingled homes in the Amagansett area.

"The fact that our prefab projects are less expensive and take less time to build was an additional incentive," adds Behrooz.

The home, dubbed the Amagansett Modular House, is modeled after MB Architecture’s insta_house — a scalable, prefab structure made of four 40-foot-long shipping containers that can be stacked together and installed in just one day.

To meet the clients’ requirements for a four-bedroom, three-bath retreat, the architects expanded upon the insta_house blueprint with an additional 40-foot container on the north side—connected to the main double-height volume via a glassed-in walkway—as well as a 10-foot container that hangs off the second floor.

These modifications also respond to the sloping site, which informed the placement and orientation of the west-facing building. The external corrugated metal walls were painted black to help the building recede into the landscape, while multiple floor-to-ceiling windows and glazed doors create seamless connections between the interiors and the outdoors.

"We wanted to create a comfortable, playful, and fun interior for both kids and parents," explains Behrooz of the open layout and dramatic, geometric facade. "And to illustrate how a small house may feel very spacious."

The containers were prefabricated off site before being trucked to the site and installed in two days. The kitchen cabinets, bathroom tiles and fixtures, glassed-in walkway, landscape elements, and pool were added in the weeks after installation.

The speed and efficiency of construction also helped reduce costs, which, excluding the landscape elements and pool, were "in the low to mid $300s per square foot," says Behrooz. "While this is a very high number in, say, upstate New York, it’s significantly lower than average for its location on the east end of Long Island, where construction can cost $500 to $800 per square foot. Our cost of construction is region dependent."




Perhaps the most surprising aspect of the project was how infrequently Behrooz met face-to-face with the clients. The busy couple chose to meet the architects a handful of times, and only twice on site—once when they first purchased the land, and the second time when the house was nearly complete. This arrangement that was somewhat unusual for the practice, which is accustomed to recurrent client meetings.

"So, we were a little worried about how they would feel when coming, with their children, to see the finished house for the first time," says Behrooz. "Their reaction was super joyous, and each kid just ran into a room and found their space. Later that day, we received an email from them saying that the house ‘felt like a temple.’"






The architects applied BM marine-grade paint to the containers’ corrugated metal walls. The home is deliberately compact to match the scale of the neighborhood homes


"The structural design of the 10' pop-out on the second floor is unique. There are no beams under it—it looks afloat," explains Behrooz, who notes that the pop-out was originally cut down from a 20-foot container. "Technically it is not a cantilever—but it is structured from the top (roof) and held back in tension, down to the foundation on the opposite side. It’s kind of a structural breakthrough—we used the inherent structural strength of the containers to our advantage."


The architecture follows the natural contours of the wedge-shaped site: the building is placed on higher ground on the site’s wider east end, while exterior decking steps down to the pool to the west.


The separated bedroom wing includes one shared bathroom. Large windows and glazed doors fitted into either end of the container create an indoor/outdoor living environment.


Taking advantage of the double-height space, the architects created a wall of windows to flood the living area with natural light and frame west-facing views. "At sunset, rays of light literally go all the way through the house," note the architects.


The sun-soaked living area is furnished with a vintage reed mat made by the Tuareg tribe of North Africa (purchased at a flea market), a Toga sofa from Ligne Roset, and a Saarinen table with Tolix red stools.


A 20-foot container cut down to half its length was attached to the second floor to house the master suite.


Large windows in the upstairs bedrooms create the illusion of being immersed in the treetops. The custom furniture is by Santiago Campomar.


The minimalist kitchen is outfitted with Corian countertops. The floors throughout are bleached oak.




Two signature features of MB Architecture–designed prefabs are a double-height space and a wide staircase. "We love the wide staircase—it becomes a place to sit, and watch sunsets," says Behrooz.

Drawings








About MB Architecture




We are a multi-disciplinary, award winning studio of design, architecture, & planning with offices in the Chelsea area of Manhattan & in East Hampton. Our East Hampton office was established in 1996.

Over the past 30 years, we have helped envision, design and build a diverse range of structures and spaces from affordable pre-fabricated micro-homes to private residences, we've built installations, commercial and cultural spaces at the overlap of technology and art, places of worship, affordable multi-unit housing, specialty museums and public spaces.

Our built work is dotted in numerous locations on the East End of Long Island (Hamptons), in New York, and Germany; and we have envisioned projects for New Orleans, China, Austria, Kenya, Papua New Guinea, and Chile.

Working on the East End of Long Island between the Long Island Sound and the Atlantic Ocean, amongst estuaries, wetlands, and farmland, and above two aquifers from which we pump our drinking water, as well as in the highly dense environment of New York City, gives us a critical opportunity and challenge to carefully observe the relationship between human settlement and nature, and the long-term impact of buildings on the environment. The study of localized patterns of living, human interaction with buildings and nature, material exploration, the understanding of localized construction processes, limitations, and techniques, and an appreciation of the common, visible but unseen aspects of architecture all guide us in our research.

Whether working in the city or in rural areas, our work is informed by the contrasting interdependence of Nature and City; making the built (or the building) in our work a mere component, albeit a vital one, of a total environment.

Maziar Behrooz

Maziar is a graduate of Tulane, and Cornell Schools of Architecture and the Institute for Architecture and Urban Studies.

He is an Advisory Board Member at the Tulane School of Architecture, a guest curator at the Parrish Museum of Art, and a member of the AIA Peconic where he served as a past president.

Maziar's work has been exhibited at the Salomon Contemporary Gallery, the Parrish Museum of Art Road Show, the Outsider Art Fair, and the Australian National Maritime Museum.

A Note on Sustainability

Working on the East End of Long Island between the Long Island Sound and the Atlantic Ocean, amongst estuaries, wetlands, and farmland, and above two aquifers from which we pump our drinking water, gives us a critical opportunity and challenge to carefully observe the relationship between human settlement and nature, and the long-term impact of buildings on the environment. More recently, with the opening of our satellite office in the heart of New York City, the highest density large city in the country, we closely observe the distinctions of high-density living in multifamily high-rises and low-density living in single family homes. We experience first hand the real and measurable effect of buildings on our drinking water, wetlands, natural barriers, plant life, and air quality and the critical importance of making real improvements. We strive to tread our grounds with care while recognizing the inherent challenge of building sustainably in an area dominated by single family residences.

We don't just design buildings; we create integrated environments. In fact, the built (or the building) in our work, in particular in our recent design projects, is a mere component, albeit a vital one, of a total environment. In the case of our short-listed proposal for a 600 person Baha'i Temple at the foot of the Andes, for example, the experience of the complete cycle of nature and nature-based uses led to an architectural design that relies on the geological features of the site for its spatial definition and completion. This fundamental shift in attitude, a reversal of the conventional relationship between buildings and nature whereby buildings are a component of much larger Architecture of the Environment, characterizes our approach to design.

In 2008, we built the first green-roof in Montauk. This minimized storm water runoff, added additional insulation, and made the roof an inviting and livable space. For our next project, the Arc House, we went beyond planting sedum on the roof and buried much of the structure within the landscape. This took advantage of the naturally temperate ground temperature and substantially decreased the house’s energy consumption. In addition to the naturally regulated subterranean part of the house, the rounded shape of the above-ground portion of the structure created a natural convection in the space and stabilized the temperature of the room. Most recently, for the the Sayres House and Hanging Gardens, we created multiple landscaped terraces adding more green-space to the property than we removed by building the structure. As architects, our specific role is to demonstrate alternative methods of planning and construction that promote our total ecological philosophy while helping preserve, sustain and regenerate the environment.

As practitioners, our challenge is to apply this attitude to every project, large or small, affordable or luxurious. While the physical results vary, we consistently aim for the maximization, wherever possible, of contiguous natural habitats. By clustering buildings and increasing managed landscapes, we leave nature to perform its self-healing, self-cleaning processes. We like to explore site layouts that reduce or otherwise draw attention to the impact of buildings on the environment. In our proposal for 90 units of affordable housing in Norwalk, Connecticut, for example, alternative building technologies are integrated with a site plan that reverses suburban and wasteful development while creating a model for the regeneration of a neighborhood. The use of passive systems which take advantage of solar orientation, wind direction, and landscaping are fundamental to our decision making process while the examination of efficient and alternative materials and building technologies is a fulfillment of that promise.

Chelsea, Manhattan, New York, NY

Address529 W 20th St #6w, New York, NY 10011, United States
Phone+1 631-329-2983
Emailinfo@mbarchitecture.com
Websitehttps://www.mbarchitecture.com/

East Hampton

Address7 Newtown Lane, East Hampton, NY 11937, USA

About Gallanti Inc




Address83 Wainscott NW Road, Wainscott, NY 11975, United States
Emailinfo@cgallantiinc.com
Websitehttps://www.charlesgallantiinc.com/

Links

Dwell https://www.dwell.com/article/amagansett-modular-house-mb-architecture-a9a04e07


More shipping container homes in New York:

Bard Media Lab Shipping Container Classroom, New York

Carroll House - 5000 sq ft Shipping Container Home, Brooklyn, NYC, USA

Shipping Container Homes by Steele House and Bigprototype, New York

2000 sq ft Modular Shipping Container Home, East Hampton, New York

Shipping Container Art Studio, Long Island, New York




4 Bedroom Shipping Container Modular House, New York

Senin, 15 Januari 2018

Sustainable Modular Container House with Roof Terrace and Garden for Rooftop Organic Farming

6x20ft containers home






Available for 42,500 USD + delivery cost

Any customization is possible.

Contact email: info@prefabcontainerhomes.org

Interview with Owner
Photos
Construction Process
Floor Plans / Drawings / Diagrams


Project Lettuce House, Sustainable Living Laboratory
Area 88.5 sqm (952 sq ft)
Containers 6
Location Shunyi, Beijing, China
Year 2014
ArchitectsHE Ding, KONG Lingchen, WANG Wei
Sustainable Design LIU Xin, CHEN Weiran, HU Yechang, SU Yurong, YANG Xu, XU Zhetong, YOU Wanrong
Client Niu Jian
Project Cost218,000 yuan (34,000 USD)
Photography LI Minfei



Sustainable Modular Container House with Roof Terrace and Garden for Rooftop Organic Farming

Description from the architects.

Sustainable Lifestyle Lab established by the Sustainable Design Institute of Arts and Science research center, Tsinghua University and Participatory Community Development Center. The sustainable modular container house with roof terrace and garden for rooftop organic farming composed of six containers, which applied low-carbon, healthy and green philosophy to real life, so as to let more people to understand and participate in it.

Material

Due to some restrictions, the construction time frame must be very short, and the house design should be efficient and recyclable. So the design team chose modular container house with roof terrace and garden for rooftop organic farming. The box structure, windows, doors, roofs, walls and floors are prefabricated in the factory.

Space and Function

The house composed of six containers (6055mm*2435mm*2790mm), using ‘modular design’ idea: Each box inside is a standard space unit with different functions. Different combination patterns form various function space. The container house includes three bedrooms, exhibition space, a storage room, a kitchen and a bathroom. The entrance container is located at an angle of 90 degrees to other five containers, forming a courtyard.

Environmental Friendliness

The production cost of this sustainable modular container house with roof terrace and garden for rooftop organic farming, is low, and the container is energy saving, low-carbon and reusable. It can be transported conveniently and the transportation cost is very low. The container house construction process is easy, quick, and resource-saving, with less noise and dust pollution.




Eco-circle system includes:

  • sewage collection, treatment, re-use: the reclaimed water system;
  • kitchen waste, excreta collection, treatment, re-use: biogas digester;
  • solar energy, wind energy and rainwater utilization;
  • organic farming.



Interview with owner




Here is Fengtai District Nanyuan Village Beijing International Camping Park. In 2015, Niu Jian set up this container house in a camping park. End of the year-end, a large number of visitors come to visit here to Niu Jian. "What you're seeing is a set of sustainable living labs that, from a hardware perspective, include clean energy use, household waste management, water and biogas systems, home organic farming, etc. And in fact, we want In the future, this experiment will be extended to build new and sustainable communities. "

In short, this is a set of urban pastoral system, Niu Jian plays an urban farmer's role. This system will ensure that even in the cold winter in the north, Niujian, who has spent the rest of his life horticulture, planting and flowers, can still cultivate his dream of garden.

Today's Sustainable Living Laboratory, also known as the "Lettuce House," is a joint effort of institutions such as the Tsinghua University Center for Art and Science (Sustainable Design Institute).

Garbage in the house is useful, kitchen waste grinder installed below the kitchen sink, crushed kitchen waste will enter the biogas fermentation system. Washing, bathing, washing vegetables, washing gray water formed, after treatment can be used as water reuse.




In the spring and summer, the Lettuce House's walls are covered with flowers. Even in winter, the constant temperature and humidity allow the vegetable garden also to have organic hydroponic lettuce. "There's a lot of lettuce here, and it's estimated that many have not been seen on the market." The lettuce's nutrients come from organic fertilizers, which are planted in foam-planted holes. Organic hydroponics is very suitable for novice operation, lettuce even if not watering for half a month will not affect the growth. In the pool under the shelf of lettuce, the fish are raised, the fish feed is the residue from the fermentation of the garbage, and the excrement of the fish can be fertilizer for the plant. "It is not as small as it looks, there are big fish here."

The Lettuce House now uses containers as a material because it is in line with Beijing's current land use and management features. "If it is in the desert, it may be a tent; in Xishuangbanna, bamboo is used; on the loess plateau, there is no need to stick to the container."

In Shunyi, a laboratory, because of procedural flaws, and had to relocate. Now in the second phase of camping park laboratory, all programs are legal. But in the future, when the laboratory will encounter "trouble" in land use?

"These are in fact not for us to consider, and my procedure here is Camping Park. All the real estate developers in China are now profound restructuring, I hope consumers tell them what kind of house they want. In the future, we, like the pastoral consumers, can tell developers, we need sustainable living house, and developers will take a template for sustainable project."


International camping park in the winter has almost no one, unoccupied white wooden hut embellished in the woods. Only occasional low-flying aircraft only remind people of industrial civilization in fact close at hand. "There are a lot of people here camping in summer, there are very few in winter and it is especially quiet."

At first glance, Niu Jian lived an isolated life, only a kilometer radius of him, a small helper and guarding the park gate guards. In fact, he is very busy, busy receiving a variety of visitors. More than a year ago, he set up a similar container house at his friend's factory in Shunyi, "it was a laboratory." After it was reported by the media, it attracted a great many visitors. However, because of minor defects in formalities, Liu Jian had to change his plans in 2015 and instead set up his Phase II laboratory at Camping Park. "Now, there are people who go to Mapo to find my house." Why do you work tirelessly? "In fact, we Chinese people are naturally interested in this, and our ancestors lived for thousands of years sustainably and only nearly 200 years after being affected by industrial civilization, changed the way of life."

Niu Jian's dedication to pastoral dreams comes not only from the pastoral complex of the Chinese people in his native tradition but also from his childhood experience. "I was very fortunate to have lived in a large garden in my childhood."





In 1962, Niu Jian was born in a courtyard in Qingdao, where several ordinary people lived. "Later I realized that it was a big yard of capitalists, there was a big garden in the yard, and there was nothing for flowers, birds and insects." When their parents went to work, Niu Jian went to work with their friends in the garden, people and nature Harmonious symbiosis, in that small environment is the perfect preservation.

In the big garden experience is not long, the impact is throughout. It did not take long before the "Three Lines Construction" kicked off. Niu Jian moved with his parents from Qingdao to a small city in southwestern Shandong. In 1979, Niu Jian, aged 17, began working as a textile worker in a textile factory just like his parents did. High-speed operation of the textile machine did not completely take away deep pastoral imprint. "At that time, just after the reform and opening up, we began to have access to foreign things. When I read newspapers and magazines, I saw flowers planted by foreigners on the balcony of their own home and saw the dense ornamental plants along the street. I think this was what I want."


"I am actually not interested in industrial civilization from the very beginning, and I was 17 years old and still a child. First of all I must first think of having enough to eat, and the inertia of state-owned enterprises is too large, unlike the common sense that civil servants resign now."

From a worker to a manager, Niu Jian spent more than a decade in the factory until he was 34 years old and he began to "think about life." "When people are over, they begin to think about it and want to understand what they want. They will not be confused by the age of forty, so some time has begun to make some changes."





Niu Jian felt fourth-tier cities are not enough to support his dreams, he decided to come to Beijing. In 2001, Niu Jian began working with the Agricultural Exhibition Hall. In 2005 he worked in the Academy of Vegetable and Vegetable Research Institute of afforestation greening. "Over the years, I've grown from selling flowers and balconies to planting vegetables on the rooftops and getting involved in the promotion of lifestyles. It is now the Sustainable Living Laboratory."


Laboratories that have entered the "2.0 Era" are now able to accommodate more than 10 people in 3 families. From time to time, Oxfam invites nonprofit volunteers to come to the lab for experience.

Phase II labs are characterized by a transition to smaller communities where the design of the home almost minimizes private space and promotes space sharing. Private space is very small, only 12 square meters, only contains bedroom and bathroom, other spaces, like dining, kitchen, living room are three families to share. "We have a total of 100 square meters in the beginning, but can accommodate three families."

Because of space sharing, experimental families have a lot more interaction. "Now many people miss the courtyard. In fact, it is a memory of relationship between people. At that time, we all grab a tap, you have to communicate with others. Now, each has several taps, get up, communication is gone. "





Nowadays, many social problems - such as environmental protection, energy, old-age care, public order can now be resolved through changes in lifestyles. "In fact, if we live a good life, we can solve these problems without even having help from government" .

Talk about pastoral dreams, already 54-year-old Niu Jian endless. He disclosed that in Phase III he plans in five years to build more standardized and shared communities.


Photos
















































Construction Process


Construction process

Sustainable modular container house with roof terrace and garden for rooftop organic farming has formed a complete production mode. The presets and the construction can be completed by the manufacturer. Each container needs about half an hour to be lifted. Then waterproof rubber was installed at the joint between containers. In the last, indoor doors and stairs were installed. Planting, energy equipment installation and internal design were completed by the owner. The six containers are 180,000 yuan, and the fee of modification, transportation and installation is 38,000 yuan, totally 218,000 yuan.










Floor Plans / Drawings / Diagrams







Sustainable Modular Container House with Roof Terrace and Garden for Rooftop Organic Farming