We had it delivered to our new
place in the middle of a field, rented a moving van to haul all of our stuff
from our modest 700 sq. ft. apartment to our new 384 sq. ft. home, and with the
help of some neighbors, we spent our first night there on a mattress on the
floor, surrounded by all of our stuff.
Our new home looked like the inside
of the moving van we had just packed and unpacked. It had tall metal walls, a
wooden floor, and visible rivets and steel frame. We’d brought our garage sale
couch, inherited kitchen table, donated queen bed, and a bunch of packrat-style
boxes from our previous dwelling, and that made things seem a bit more like a
home, but I have to say it looked a whole lot like we were now living inside
somebody’s storage unit!
We could enter and exit our new
place through the large double doors on one side. But once we got indoors, we
could not fully close the big doors from the inside. I started the first cold
January night in our box with a new bedtime prayer. “Please Lord, don’t let a snake, skunk, raccoon, ’possum, bat, or other
stray animal waltz into our new home while we are asleep!”
Within the next few months my
husband installed a few storm windows, and put up an interior wall with a big hinged
dutch door. He built this five feet past the container’s opening so that we
could have a normal sized door to open and close (to keep critters out), and
have a small porch area we could store our tools and mud boots in. We call this
room the mudroom.
Next was another interior wall that
portioned off the back half of the container for a bedroom. Once the bedroom
was completed it really did feel just like a home! (And it still does. ;))
Over time we also installed basic solar electricity and lights, an off-grid sink, propane stove, wood stove, basic cabinetry, and many, many, many shelves!
Fast forward over five years and we
decided to move. What do container homeowners do when it’s time to leave? Take
our home with us! After some careful planning and packing, we moved the
container to our new location and moved all of our things back inside (no, we
didn’t have the option of using our house as the moving van!).
And now that we’ve settled in a
bit, it is time to show people the story we should have been sharing all along!
We have made container home living WORK as a no-mortgage way to live
comfortably. We haven’t stacked four
containers or put on an addition (yet!). We didn’t hire an architect or do an
expensive designer remodeling job just to make it livable. We only added simple
elements to the original design of the container to make it a home. It is
possible to transform a shipping container into a functional home with very few
modifications.
We have lived in this shipping
container as newlyweds, and as parents of 1, 2, 3, and 4 children. We've lived
in the dry plains region, and in the lush piney woods. We've been off-grid
community members, and family farm tenants. We don’t plan to live in it our
entire lives, but “The Box” is our home, and so far it has served us well.
Thanks for taking a look at our journey. I hope you’ll follow us.
-Carol
The Shipping Container Family
Oh, how I love your story! Reading what you've done on your own that allowed you to live rent/mortgage free is totally awesome. Well done!
ReplyDeletep.s. I love the scent of hay bales.
Thanks Rose! Thanks Magnolia! I appreciate you stopping by. :) God has blessed us richly. Hay bales DO smell great!
ReplyDeleteFascinating! I love your story! -Marci @ Stone Cottage Adventures
ReplyDeleteVisiting from the Great Blog Train. What an amazing story!
ReplyDeleteI'm so glad I found your blog! I wish I had seen the inside of your home when we lived nearby!
ReplyDelete