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Can you live in a Shipping Container?

By
Real Estate Agent with Keller Williams Realty Mountain Partners

Can you live in a Shipping Container?

Hendersonville residents have been hearing about unbelievably tight housing situations in some U.S. cities for many years, but last week there was one report that would have challenged any Luke Iseman's Home Sweet Homeimagination. This was about a Wharton School graduate who is spawning a new way to afford rents in the San Francisco Bay area. His solution: live in a shipping container.

The article appeared (with pictures) in BloombergBusiness. (See the Entire Article Here) The photos weren’t exactly flattering of Luke Iseman’s 160-square-foot “box”—in fact, the bright blue painted walls seemed definitely in need of a decorator’s input (not to mention the cords and ducts strapped from ceiling to floor). With a shower constructed from discarded boat hulls and a camp stove set atop what appears to be a deconstructed wooden crate, the overall look might be described as post post post modern urban chic.

Others have been doing the very same thing, creating a less expensive way to make a home sweet home without breaking the back. A simple search of shipping containers as homes will yield many, many pages of results.

But Mr. Iseman is making progress turning his container housing option into a business. In fact, he is already presiding over 11 of the “miniature residences,” where his tenants live inside a warehouse he leases across the Bay from San Francisco.

In case local real estate watchers suspect this is a less-than-serious attempt to forge a new kind of rentable living arrangement, a quick review of housing costs in the City by the Bay will have them thinking twice. According to Bloomberg, the median rents in June jumped 16% from a year earlier (15% in the wider metro area). Median sales price is over $1.1 million in the City.

The chief market analyst for one S.F. real estate outfit put the housing situation in perspective. “People have to get creative,” he said. Bloomberg put its perspective another way: “The market…is crazy…”

Iseman’s “new model for urban development” does have some serious hurdles to clear before the “more sustainable, affordable and enjoyable” urban development model gets much further. One of the hurdles is that it’s illegal—he’s already been rousted from two other sites. But with Bay Area building inspectors busy dealing with converted garages, offices, living room conversions and other unlicensed structures (like rental tents), his startup concept may last a while longer.

What seems somewhat comical to observers is actually a creative answer to a very real problem. Iseman had been paying $4,200 a month for a badly maintained two-bedroom apartment before he thought up the container idea. He bought his first container, which had been classified as industrial waste, for $2,300 (delivered), spent $12,000 converting it, and voila!—suddenly he had himself some affordable East Bay housing. In and around and area where 10 jobs are added for every new residence, who’s to say this stop-gap solution might not prove to have some staying power?

One thing is for certain—our Hendersonville area real estate scene is going to continue to offer a choice variety of affordable housing offerings, even without the benefit of shipping containers. Give me a call whenever you’d like to go over the wide range of opportunities today’s market is providing.

Can you live in a Shipping Container?

Rob D. Shepherd
RETIRED - Florence, OR
RETIRED

Interesting idea, Are these containers kept inside? I was not clear on that.

Aug 21, 2015 10:06 PM
Sandy Padula & Norm Padula, JD, GRI
HomeSmart Realty West & Florida Realty Investments - , CA
Presence, Persistence & Perseverance

Rhonda Hollifield, REALTOR® I have seen these container homes and they are not for everyone, but when land costs and rental rates peak; they are a sound alternative. Good Post!

Aug 21, 2015 10:07 PM
Rhonda Hollifield, REALTOR®
Keller Williams Realty Mountain Partners - Hendersonville, NC
Broker REALTOR CRS, GRI, ABR

Hi Rob, The article was not clear so I am not sure. But interesting fix to a real problem for some folks.

Aug 21, 2015 10:14 PM
Sheila Anderson
Referral Group Incorporated - East Brunswick, NJ
The Real Estate Whisperer Who Listens 732-715-1133

Good morning Rhonda. I think that with creativity and affordability all things are possible.

Aug 21, 2015 10:21 PM
Chris and Dick Dovorany
Homes for Sale in Naples, Bonita Springs and Estero, Florida - Naples, FL
Broker/Associate at Premiere Plus Realty

On HGTV last weekend they did acouple of shows on the mini houses.  Interesting way of living for someone who is not a cook or a clothes horse.

Aug 21, 2015 10:49 PM
David Gibson CNE, 719-304-4684 ~ Colorado Springs Relocation
Colorado Real Estate Advisers LLC - Colorado Springs, CO
Relocation, Luxury & Lifestyle residential

Rhonda,

 

We just had a “tiny house” jamboree here in Colorado Springs that was attended by thousands of people. A lot of ingenuity but I didn’t get the feel many people would actually downsize to a tiny house.

Aug 21, 2015 11:56 PM
Richie Alan Naggar
people first...then business Ran Right Realty - Riverside, CA
agent & author

How much space do you really need? This reminds me of hotels that we book when on vacation. We pay for them yet the idea is to get out and see the sights. We need to rest, eat and then...life is out there not within four walls?

Aug 22, 2015 12:03 AM
Rhonda Hollifield, REALTOR®
Keller Williams Realty Mountain Partners - Hendersonville, NC
Broker REALTOR CRS, GRI, ABR

Thanks for all of the comments!

When times shift we have to shift with them. I think it is great that so many people are getting creative in whatever new idea they come up with to solve their housing issues. I think some people can be more flexible than others, and that is not bad. We all have our own needs and tolerances as to how we can live.

Aug 24, 2015 08:44 PM