Great video! For all those complaining about permit costs.... I opened a bar in downtown Los Angeles and it cost nearly $75000 in permits alone (to include the price of a "glorified" permit expediter - $25K). Look, California is not cheap, but videos like this are invaluable because it demonstrates the importance of being financially prepared to start any new construction and/or buildout in California. Be prepared for hidden costs by at least 25%. Once again, great video Ben.
I live in Chicago, it's called responsible building. Cooper plumbing, electrical lines in metal conduit, hurricane roof clips, 2x6 structure... People wonder why homes cost 350k+ ... Safety
@bla blahblah you people miss out on how shitty your housing market becomes if you don't have proper regulations. Besides, I bet the required planning for this project helped him to avoid costly mistakes.
That is actually really expensive for land that has no real resources. Can’t grow anything or mine anything. Can’t even move dirt on your property without paying for even more permits and studies.
It has been a few decades, but farm land in central New York State was going for $100 an acre (or rather, 10,000 acres for $1,000,000). I remembered Michigan as being cheap a few years ago, and a quick search shows 1 acre lots for $45,000 but also 40 acre parcels for $200,000-$400,000. 200 acres for $1.4m, 400 acres for $12m, so it can vary widely. Rule of thumb: land gets cheaper in bulk. This is partly because large parcels are generally far from cities and schools, and being close to those things makes land worth more, and partly because large parcels will include some land that can't be built on (too swampy, no water, bad drainage, unstable soil, etc) and would thus be hard to sell. Bonus for you if the reason you wanted that land was to prevent someone from building something ugly in the middle of the pretty view. :)
I pour and finish concrete. Have worked with concrete for over two decades, growing up around the trade. You did a VERY neat and accurate description of all the processes involved. I hate the heat and the filth, and the dry skin. But I love seeing a finished slab I installed, perfectly measured and neatly troweled. I look forward to seeing the following episodes!
@@hardworkingsloth Californian: We got Earthquakes and Fires. Floridian: We got Tornadoes, Hurricanes, insane Florida men. You can't beat that! California: Well... your stupid!
This is some next level TH-cam. I feel like you could make the episodes a little longer. This way better than anything on TV. There is so much good stuff here. Great job Ben 😁
To each their own, but I enjoyed how concise yet detailed the video was. Too many vids on youtube are bloated and filled with useless fluff. Maybe a bit more info on the septic design though, eh? I'm just glad this isn't some kind of family vlog and we have 30min of pet and kid filler.
Finally an actual detailed video to help those interested in the nuts and bolts of the project. Well explained, good detail (don’t be afraid to show more). I think those who are watching this type of video are really interested in every step. Great work. Truly a good example for others when doing videos online
Ben, fantastic video! I do shipping container projects myself and I still learned a lot from your video - extreme helpful and informative. For of the people focused on how expensive and what a pain in the ass California is to when building: You are 100% correct with respect to both. That said though, do the quick numbers. Assuming you’re $100k all in on this house: -You can easily AirBNB it for $275 in Joshua Tree -It’s booked less than 1/3 of the time (120 days a year), again, no problem in Joshua Tree -You pay it off in 3 years -Starting year 4, you’re bringing in $30k+ per year with that property minimum; you can realistically book more nights and/or increase the rate and get closer to $50k+ Food for thought.
Licensed California architect here - Slab on grade was the way to go. Just bolt the container to a raised perimeter curb, and use the bolts to level it. You have to anchor it anyway. My concern is with having mild still / galvanized steel in direct contact with concrete. You should be fine up in the high desert, but this would pose corrosion issues in a damp environment. ...and I'm gonna go ahead and guess this ended up costing significantly more than traditional type 5 construction on a per-square foot basis. That's fine, but people should know what to expect from a cost standpoint.
William Hogan ...this was an exercise in millennial cuteness, in pursuit of repurposed utility. A conventional interior, built in a steel oven in the desert at enormous cost, relative to market value. The nature of the foundation type and reactive metals on concrete, not withstanding.
@@AS-mv7tm but you wouldnt be in california!!! I've been in most states of the U.S and cali is one of the best to live in...every state has its positives and negatives..
@@MUGGLE137: If I were offered to live in California in exchange for five million dollars, I'd spend minutes in serious consideration. Ultimately, I'd agree because I'd need the money, but I'd hesitate for a great deal of time. Anything less than five million and I'd probably counter-offer suicide.
Price was quite reasonable, actually. It included all of the engineering and design drawings and construction documents. Architectural and Engineering (A&E) services are typically 25 to 35 percent of the total construction value. If a "stock" design were used, the A&E team would have used already proven plans that can be site adapted. The cost would have been 40 to 50 percent lower for the package.
mglmouser I wouldn’t think so? Depends how much the containers cost and then compare that to the average cost to bet sq. Foot of a traditional build. Honestly I think some of those surveys are not necessary. But who knows, $25k might be a bargain compared to other parts of CA and traditional builds?
only thing I didn't like about the video was there wasn't another to watch right after!!!! ahhhh!!! now I'm waiting anxiously. keep up the great work. love your vids
The construction codes and rules in Nevada are trying to catch up with California. It's ridiculous. We wanted to put up a metal garage for storage on our 1.25 Acre lot and they forbid it because there was no house on the property.
I have a container shop here in Alaska. It's a 20 and a 40 jointed together side by side. I just have it sitting on rail road ties and it lived through a 6.0 earth quake last November. Only a few things fell over
@@squigglewacks it's bc he has it sitting up on railroad ties. U could do radiant heat in the floors. The guy in T.N. knows wat he's doing & his builds r 20k if u don't want granite & things like that.
@@squigglewacks ck. Out Incredible Tiny Homes out of T.N. owner Randy Jones. His video this week shows 7 new one & a container that he has the floor out of to be shown at a later date. He has a FB acct. Too, but I don't do fb. There's also Container Acre, just found them. Don't know when they did their build but r about to do another one. Wasn't alot of info out there when they did the first one. A new insulation made just for containers called insofast.com with a r-11 rating & cuts out condensation inside. Hope this helps!!
This is exactly what I was looking for but I want to double the size and go underground! I live in central LA where house prices are $1M minimum. In the next few years I would like to get a little more privacy and create an artist commune in the desert for musicians, producers, film makers, dancers, painters, photographers, designers, engineers, etc. Having enough spaces for people to come and go and create music and projects would be crucial. Thanks again! :D
i love micro housing, especially shipping container homes, but there are so few start-to-finish filmed documentaries about the process. this is exciting! i wouldn’t build one myself, but i love witnessing the elements of building that i’ve never considered, like the rebar grid for the concrete foundation, requirements for the container quality, etc. excited to see more of this series!
I am a geotechnical engineer. Considering the stiff soil conditions, I would simply excavate about 50 cm of soil and replace it with gravel followed by compaction. Nothing much, There are 2 main risk scenarios while laying a structure above a soil 1) Settlements 2) Bearing capacity. I do not think there are any risks since the soil conditions within the site are already too damn good and drainable. Sorry to say but the structure engineer fooled you to earn some cash.
Exactly what I was thinking, that foundation was way way way over the top, and they never even ran his popups through it, that ground is solid probably hasn't moved for thousands of years, he was taken for a ride indeed
Gravel was my first thought too, but I use to live in louisiana, where everyone was cheap, and all the ground was mushy and wet... so thick layers of gravel are used all over the place, foundations, roads, parking lots, walk paths, etc anything where you don't want it to be a puddle tomorrow.
Not at all. I come from the land of floods and there is gravel everywhere. If you are really worried about it you can make sure to set up barriers to route the water around the structure, and to stop the gravel from being carried off. Even just sandbags works for this, if you want something temporary you can store for less of an eye sore when you are using the structure.
imran zafar just gravel ? Earthquakes can / will shear off plumbing and electrical stubs , ground squirrels, prairie dogs , hedge hogs will burrow through edge of gravel creating a massive rodent network to live on , which brings snakes , you'd be dealing with rodents and snakes constantly
This is great. I particularly liked the detail in the foundation construction. I live on the east coast and when building on a sloped site, we struck a large continuous seam of rock. So we decided to anchor one corner of the house basement on this bedrock, poured the slab , built up the walls and used floating “I” beams to act as a dish type bearings to support the weight of the house on top, in case of earth quake. It was actually cheaper to build like this and people thought I was crazy. 2 earthquakes later, the house has settled nicely into the sloped site. In a container this would simply look like a single independent pedestal post under each corner with a cast iron dish and a corresponding twist lock with a cast iron ball. The whole structure “ floats “ on the four corners.
This is great. I’ve been listening to you talk about this for months and I’m so stoked to finally see it in detail. Bravo! I can’t wait for the next video.
Dude shipping containers are engineered to handle way more stress than this will ever take. I think you over-engineered the whole foundation. Also why would you try to create anything of value in California? You're not even near the beaches, just go to Nevada it'll be the same thing but cheaper.
Your perspective is understandable but fairly ignorant. Few questions for you... Were they designed to have large holes cut in the corrugated steel walls for doors an windows while still perform to the "engineered" stresses you state? No... Were they designed with certain deflection criteria in mind that will prevent windows from binding/cracking over time? No... Were they designed with higher factors of safety required when dealing with residential dwellings as opposed to industrial applications? No... Is there someone at the manufacture's company willing to stamp the permit documents accepting legal liability for the containers performance? No... I agree that other states let you "do it yourself" but the ones that do don't have significant earthquakes threats to worry about. This area on the other hand has the San Andreas fault running right through it. And there are countless people who dump these containers on their property in the desert and live in them without issue. You just can't permit them, meaning you cant insure them or sell them as a house to someone else.
@@travsb1984 1: No, but this won't affect their sturdiness as a single-story structure. The frame takes most of the load, even if the holes are in the corners it will still have more than enough shear strength for this. 2: They are designed not to deflect that much, as they need to be stacked incredibly high without tipping. Think about a normal wall. It's just a wooden frame with studs running vertically every few feet, some diagonal members, and drywall nailed over it. This is a welded steel frame with corrugated steel walls designed to support over 20 tons in stormy waters. The windows will be fine. 3: The standards they are designed to meet are far more intense than those of a residential house (as far as structural integrity goes) This is why they are made of corten steel, and houses are made out of wood. 4: Why would the company need to accept liability? Their product has been modified and isn't being used for it's intended purpose. 5: Many of the regulations he ran into had nothing to do with earthquakes (700 sqft minimum footprint, 18" minimum 'crawlspace' height, etc.). These containers are designed to be stacked and unstacked 10 levels high on boats for 10 years straight with essentially no maintenance, exposed to the elements and the waves, connected to one another only by four bolts. I think they can handle sitting on the ground and having people walk around in them.
@@bradenanderson6989 Your responses and assumptions confirm that you still know very little about engineering principles, or how the permitting process works in general... Thinking something will work, and proving it will work mathematically are two very different standards. FYI, all of my questions were rhetorical and had answers of no... I would agree that California has too much red tape, but most of the design considerations would apply anywhere, not just in CA. The only requirement that stuck out during the video that made me role my eyes was the 700 sq ft requirement. To my knowledge this is not a California requirement. Building codes in California are actually controlled at the local level, and they are free to amend the CBC however they see fit. I suspect the 700sq*ft requirement is a local requirement.
@@bradenanderson6989 Not to go to crazy in the comments, but I'll give you some insight. Shipping containers are not designed to be perfectly ridged bodies. They have some flex in them. This allows each container to conform to the support it's placed on so that all four sides will align with the pined restraints and full bearing will be maintained, preventing them from "teeter-tottering" on uneven ship decks, tractor trailers, or train cars. I had two of these containers on my property for storage and can attest first hand they are far from rigid. We leveled the ground the best we could with shovels but we were only within about and 1" of true flat. When the containers were dropped they flexed until all sides were fully bearing on the soil. This was perfectly adequate for my needs, but if this were differential settlement caused by inadequate footings in a "house", every window and door in the container would have binded or even broke. That's the difference between doing something yourself and having it designed by professionals in the permitting process.
You should look into Helical Piers. They are very easy to install and perform better than concrete under seismic loads because they allow movement. This would give you fast installation, adjustability, and a steel connection to your cargo containers.
I thought the whole idea of Shipping Container House is to minimize work, time and money for constructing a home... and I don't think you saved any of those for it to matter
@@davidjose2193 - hey David - did you know you can go into your original comment and edit it? Off to the right are 3 vertical dots. One will say 'edit'. Click that and you can fix anything you wrote.
To be fair, the actual construction of the home was far cheaper than a 'normal' home would be. The permits and taxes wouldn't be factored into the cost of materials and labor. Realistically, even with all the permits and taxes, its probably still cheaper than constructing a regular home in the same location.
this is going to be a great series. the project looks great, the site looks inviting, and the concept of the three separate buildings is cool. Not a new idea, but definitely one that makes a lot sense with a stable weather climate. cant wait to see this one unfold.
My son is stationed at 29 palms and just bought a beautiful home near the Joshua tree. We were able to come out there finally and visit. He took us to the Joshua tree. Amazing place.
@5:22 is the best part of the video. You've done an amazing job detailing and explaining the process of erecting a house on an empty property. Great video!!
CA: HEY STOP!! Builder:? What? CA: Do you have a permit? Builder: Sure right here. CA: No No No my friend I need the permit for this permit to be permitted.
sounds like California is even worse than Germany/most of Europe because we slapped a container on our property , needed no real building permit but a pointpermit like you need for a garage or a new driveway and it did not have to have any foundation, we put some welded railway rail frame and a few pieces of concrete tiles/bricks below we just needed to prove that it is removeable without any pollution and that the chimney and sewage dont leak - e just use it for storage and workroom but you could live in there you should have taken a coolingcontainer, they are already isolated and got some electronics installed you can repurpose get some old windows from a demolition site-just be there at the rigth time and ask if you can cut some windows with the framework out to repurpose them, here you get your windows almost for free As if a container would collapse from a earthquake, just ask those people if they are capable of breatheing and thinking at the same time what do they imagine? a landslide with the container skiing and rolling down a mountain
Seeing all these building related comments for California is killing me LOL! But more importantly, I think this is such an AMAZING resource for people considering building container homes. I for one am a very detail fascinated person, who also loves to learn in general. Excited to see the rest of this process
If you're gonna have multiple containers, it would make sense to lay them out as a perimiter to form a courtyard. You can then erect shade cloth over this courtyard to create a sort of greenhouse where you could have a nice garden which may even provide a haven from the dry heat of the environment. Also, I would have put cyclone bolts into the concrete slab and tied the containers to them.
I have 32 years in Concrete foundations experience and with ground that hard where you had to use metal stakes You don't need a monolithic foundation for that container!!! level and prep ground and set it and forget it. Pure greed and corruption!!!
@Joshua Mendoza screw that.. Just plonk it down. If it sinks overtime, just lift up the house, pour in some more dirt, pack it down, and put the house back.
Yeah Tall, I'm from Australia (35 yrs in the game) and I've designed quite a few container projects and I confess I'm completely mystified by this approach. I just run screw piles (to even bearing ground) at the 4 corners and lift the bastard up 600mm above ground. I run conecting timber decks between the containers and pre-cast 'Home Depot' (Bunnings in Aus) pad footings and timber posts to bearers and joists and standard decking flooring timber (internal and/or external). Cheap as shit and great for the bloke who is good with his hands but not a builder, so he can get on with his dream. All your plumbing is accessible under floor and if you do happen to suffer earthquake damage at least you can get to everything. As far as being level ??? get a fucking laser if you can't operate clear flexible hose and water.
@@geothr33 idk but usually sprinklers destroy almost as much of your inventory as a housefire would - the difference being that the sprinklers saves the house itself which the fire could easily burn to the ground. In this case, what is there really to save? The shipping container which is effectively the house? What do you really need sprinklers for here, I mean worst case you go and buy another shipping container lmao. Everything inside it will be ruined by the water anyways.
Hey Ben! My colleagues and I are actually making a container project based on all of your videos. You inspired us to make a difference, and now we are making a portable research station that will have multiple uses and be sent around the world. We fabricated the windows and doors out of steel and will set up the interior. It would be great to hear from you and show you some of our progress.
Now THAT'S a concrete project! I've been so excited for this to come out, Ben! I really like the format and how you explained why you landed on the slab on grade style foundation...that is the kind of information that almost all building shows seem to lack. Can't wait for episode 2!
Nice work! I’m also a designer in Los Angeles and I know exactly how rigorous the permit process is. I Just finished my detached new 1200sq. ft. ADU in the back of my house I had to go through additional requirements like Low Impact Development Design..It wasn’t easy but got the Final Inspection approval yesterday 🙌👍🤜. For the 18” min. Crawlspace I believe there is an exemption to that rule if you use a naturally durable or preservative-treated structural floor system. But going with a monolithic slab foundation is a good choice and Engineers prefer to use it when designing a new house for is structural reasons. I can’t wait for the next episode!
I see a lot of negativity around here, and I’ll just say you DID IT GREAT! It’s inspirational to see how some people actually come out and take the things even when it is challenging and many don’t dare to even think of it, mediocrity or fear, or just broke people. Claps to you and great documentary, subscribed and supporting ❤️❤️!!!
This was my dream I rented a house in Joshua Tree for three years with the plans on buying land and building my own shipping container house. After dealing with San Bernardino permit department and the state of California in general I said eff it. I’ve now bought a retired SnapOnTruck that I’m converting into a tiny home on wheels
Nomad News, can you give me your input about building in San Bernardino, I'm buying a house on one acre lot in Hesperia and hoping to have an ADU as a container house. Much appreciated if I can hear from you soon.
I'm building what I call a hybrid container home, in Upstate South Carolina. The basic permit was about $1100.00. I'm making 2 stacks of 2, 24' apart, on two end piers each stack, foundation wall on the inside facing sides, and 2 cylindrical piers, 12" diameter, starting with 2'wide x 1' thick footings all around. Add to that a foundation wall riser, 12" wide, 12" high, then narrowed to 7" wide, total rise 36". The entire foundation wall, with change in thickness was a monolithic pour. The inside has a 4" ledge, upon which the garage floor is poured. In each end of the end piers (18" wide by 81/2' x 40" high), are steel plates 1/2" thick x 12" x 14", with 5/8-11 threaded anchor "L" bolts in each plate, 4 each, embedded in the piers. Other plates are similarly embedded in the foundation walls and side piers. The bottom containers are to be welded to the plates. Top containers attached using standard shipping lockdowns to bottoms. Roof over entire structure, second floor uses I beams, bar joists, etc. This design does away with room width limitations between upper containers. Only openings in containers are for doors and windows. Rectangular tubing frames for all openings. Main living space is on upper floor, 1600sq/ft. Lower level is garage, workshop/ utility bottom left container, entrance hall and office/ den for right side. Stairway is alongside inner wall of right container. The ends are to be structural steel standard metal building design. With the rebar, I welded all risers, etc. This house will last for generations, weather storms, etc. Compared to the stick built on slab houses popping up around here, they are as a cheap car compared to a dump truck, structurally. BTW, I'm doing most of the work myself. I have an older Bobcat to be my workhorse. I would NEVER consider building in a high overhead, control freak state like Kleptifornicatia. And... I'm on 3 acres, with a creek running along the south boundary. The Smokies are 20 minutes north of here, Asheville 55 miles north. I will have water, no matter what happens in the desert out there. Water was one of my must haves. One more thing: this isn't meant to be cheap to build. It is meant to be solid shelter, not a temporary sticks and osb "tent."
I'm curious about what why you spaced out the containers the way you did, as opposed to connecting all of them to create one space. Wouldn't keeping them separate make it more complicated to heat and cool? I'm excited for the next episode!
For a shipping containers we usually go with pillar foundation design, depending on the environment and frost line depth we drill about 1,5m in depth and ~10-20cm in diameter, put in concrete and metal bases just like in your initial drawings. There is also full metal screw in type of pillars, some people use them because they are cheaper alternative, but I am not sure if they are better, those are basically big and long metal screws, they just go in the ground and thats all. These foundations are usually used for smaller constructions. The foundation you used here would be considered as too much in most of the countries, we usually use these foundations for a traditional houses, although we make them deeper, that probably depending on a frost line, usually we dig in ~1,5m depth here in Lithuania.
When your permits alone cost 5K MORE than you paid for the 10 acres of land - that should have been your clue to GTFO and build in another state. 20k for the land, 25k for the permits - Hence why they sold it so cheap.
@@TheEndingAbyss there are no active volcanoes in California, which is what the original commentor was talking about. So, although your comment was kind of off topic, and you look really silly with all that cake on your face, I can answer your question..yes you can definitely build on top of an active volcano. I think you should buy the plans this guy is selling and go nuts. Any volcano should do. Might I recommend the one that is currently spewing lava in Hawaii. Forget about the permits, just do it and report back here to share your results.
@@dustinsharber95 I didn't reply to the original comment, I replied a comment within with a joke about what he said. You look pretty silly with all that cake on your face completely missing that.
Regulation is not a bad thing. If you loosen regulations too much you get greedy people and companies disregarding essential safety precautions. Building codes are for example meant to protect you from fire death in your house. Things like Boeing 737 Max 8 crashing into the ground because of a lack of proper government oversight is just a recent example. Regulations is there to protect us. That being said, it needs to be sensible regulation which is actually justifiable and not more bureaucratic than necessary.
@@emperorshievpalpatine I think you miss the point. California overregulates, and has regulations that make no sense. In this case, the builder obviously has the money. But see this case: th-cam.com/video/n6h7fL22WCE/w-d-xo.html Where the California government PREFERRED that people remain homeless, even though the homes were build on private land. Why would they do this? Because California is more about power over people's lives than any real safety concern. Being homeless on the sidewalk is clearly less healthy than any kind of shelter.
the point of the regulation is to stop people from doing very thing; and just buy a house in the suburbs from a construction firm who contributed to the regulators election fund.
Scott Franco I don‘t really know all the details of California‘s building regulations and perhaps there is indeed overregulation. I just wanted to point out that the narrative particularly found in the US that all regulations is bad and prohibits „free enterprise“ is equally flawed as too much regulation. Regulation in general is a good thing as long as it is sensible and justified.
Heath Newland That indeed then is corruption. But this is a problems of campaign finance laws and anti-corruption enforcement. It is not a problem of the idea of regulation. Regulation is only as good as the people who make it.
Regulations and prices in parts of CA can definitely be a turn off. But I don't want to live in the south again. I've lived in CA twice. There's a reason people still move there.
Just saying ..... A wise man on the street said that : " ... GOD created every living thing to breathe free air because GOD cares for everyone and that is why the Air is free." In other words ...no permits to breathe the air ... "Everyone gets to breathe air..... Ask the trees !". Happy Days !
The corners of containers are strongest, all the weight up to 20+ tonn rests on those 4 points. I'd just have dug 4 corner holes in the ground, compacted them and poured in concrete, and made sure it was all leveled. Also put container-shoes (Twistlock) in/on the concrete to better keep the container in place during windy conditions, they do grab alot of wind these big boxes.
I would have hired a piling/foundation drill, then inserted used carpet roll tubes then fill with various size aggregate + compact at each stage + insert reinforce rods and pour concrete using air pokers to reduce air pockets, but it important to remember that the altering/cutting out of container walls does compromise its structure if not supported underneath, so I would have the container resting on 8 points ( 4 each side on 40 ft container to possible reduce flex),...the `Twistlock` is a great idea.
As a brit I think I would feel the need to riot if I had to pay $25000 for permits to build a simple shipping container house. I would definitely consider living in another state over something like that.
this isn't the norm. only in the shithole from hell known as leftist progressive california. trust me, people are migrating out of CA in droves. it's an absolute hellhole of marxist propaganda and unbelievably corrupt bureaucracy
@@MrClarkisgod It wasn't just permits in the 25k, it was surveys, drawings, etc. and it sounds like he had to have the drawings updated which is also expensive. This is why subdivisions are cookie cutter houses, it is way simpler to get going if you don't have a ton of variations.
Jarbear - Brawl stars yeah just buy a 3 room 1300 square foot house for $400k. That’s much better. Oh and don’t forget the taxes out the ass. Living in California sucks
27 for me in Joshua Tree.. Thing is the money is out here in Cali so paying bribes is a part of the numbers.. His place will easily do 100k a year in rental income..
What I found interesting to see, that the plastic foil that was used to cover the floor area before the pouring, was covered with sand. In Western European countries, the plastic barrier is used to prevent sand, or dirt being near, or at risk of getting in contact with the concrete, as it could comprise the concrete mixture. It is also common to put the plastic all the way underneath the concrete, and not just underneath the thinner floor area. The small prefabricated concrete blocks, are used to highten the rebar but serve to keep the plastic in place. Also it is mandatory in our area to use a vibrating surface or penetrating compactor, to increase concrete strength. Using the slab on grade seems a sensible compromise, I was wondering if insulation (HD graphite EPS e.g.) was considered placing underneath the slab. NIce vid!
I am so happy to have found your channel. I'm not sure I can go thru what you have gone thru. It is a lot of work for DIY, but I will try very soon. The house I am buying has more than 1 acre of flat land, it has a beautiful existing home and 4 car garage, circular driveway and fully landscaped with one shed and one 40ft container already there. I was going to have a huge workshop for my business but now I could do what you do to rent it out. Thanks for sharing this video.
The amount of paperwork (and its cost!) is crazy. In Poland, if the land is generally accepted to build there anything, you can build something up to 35m2 and 5m hight without any permit. And permits takes time but cost closer to $250 than $25000.
sdushdiu ...agreed! An insulated conventional interior...built in a steel oven...in a desert! Because “repurposed” is hip among millennials? Given time, they also will learn. Bless them for being creative at this base of their young lives.
montrealhas %50 taxes. Big reason a lot of hockey players dont want to play there. Water is paid to the house, delivery or some fee, the we pay for the water draining. We pay for gravity!!!. Good house to be in if there's a drive by.
I'm very surprised at the size of the foundations for such a small and considerably light dwelling. And of course you answered the question later in the video :) The raised piers are good for airflow and accessing pipework in the future. I also find you get a little less creepy crawlies.
What I learned: Shipping containers = $12850 Groundwork = ~$1400 (didn't say how many days the excavator worked) Concrete = $6000 Handwork+ Pipes+ Rebar+Beer= ??? Permits = $25000+
"California is a pretty regulation-intensive state". Winning the award for understatement of the day. Thank you for actually doing everything according to California's rules and documenting it all. It really illustrates the cost of those regulations, and saves the rest of us the aggravation and bankruptcy that would result from attempting to build anything there. Also interesting: They regulate how much of your own soil you can move around on your property. I wonder what the penalty is for over-flatening or creating an illegal berm.
So much California bashing, but it is an awesome place to live. Yes, California is not cheap. Yet, our weather and options of entertainment and outdoor adventures are the best in the US hands down. You get what you pay for. It is really cheap to live in tornado ally.
yes! California sucks. All of these commenters should stay far away. Please just stay where you are and keep doin' what you're doin' to make your town and lives so much better. Nothing to see here in Cali.
@@TheLegendaryFolklore I get that, I'm just wondering what the problem would be structurally if you did that. It seems like it would be perfectly fine in a saner state.
@@andrewmalone8709 it would be, but considering it's Cali, I think seismic waves would just kick the house into waves and shred the container one pillar at a time instead of a solid platform.
So glad you made this second channel! It really does feel like a legitimate television series is being born! Thank you Ben And I will see you next week in Atlanta. This time I won’t make you sign my hat.😂 Chris
The house plans i used are now available for sale here: gum.co/WLXVe Link to the company i bought my shipping containers from: www.containerdiscounts.com/shipping-containers-for-sale-home-made-modern Follow us on instagram for project updates: instagram.com/benjaminuyeda/ We are still working on getting the website for this project up and running so please be patient.
@@b-annm5571 you see people this is a GREAT idea in south Africa- it makes sense people to fill it with all supply's, a generator, beds, a scooter,tools, a gas grill, 4x4s to set it on and build a bug screen surround, a water reservoir,plumbing etc and etc. ship all this on a freighter and call it a cheap home but in America?? not as sensible of a choose in my book ;) but to each his own.
Hello there. I popped in your videos and I pretty enjoy them. Well done for your effort. I am an engineer myself having a background in Greek building code (very tough stuff due to intensive earthquakes over the continent) but also worked and still working on projects for California. I need to note at this point that the building codes all across California are way too overestimated to the point that are not cost effective at all. Owners just financially suffer to finish off their investment without actual "engineering reasons" I dare to say. In the meantime your engineers are afraid of undertaking the responsibility (due to the strict and sometimes unclear codes) so they come up with solutions that definitely cost a lot more than it should. I will give you an example on the "lateral movement" that you mentioned. Just let the self supported element "container" freely move on a leveled surface. It won't go anywhere..You could have implemented supported slabs that could be either screwed in the ground (technology used for PV projects in open spaces) or just deep hammered vertical steel slabs in the ground adding some self expanding concrete to fill up any gaps between the slabs and the soil. I hope I managed to give you an idea of how that could work according to my knowledge. Many Regards from Greece! Andreas.
@@alexfromoz thanks for the comment. I reckon that setting limiters around the support won't cause any problem. it's quite a popular method and I propose you could have a deeper look in it. It's like a restricted support instead of fixes like when calculate cantilevers.
Thank you of sharing your video. I been interested in building container home for years. There just wasnt much information out there. Im saving up money to build my dream container home now. Thank you again for sharing the important information.
Not in all cases especially in California but I think this guy just did it for the satisfaction and he probably sold it for even more because I was looking and I could get 10 acres in the California desert for 5k or less right now if I looked hard enough
If I do this, I'm going with the crawl space option; much easier to run and hide and access all the mechanical, electrical and plumbing; and much cheaper.
I was thinking the same. Plenty of room to run plumbing, electrical, etc. with a house of that size. Though I wonder how difficult it would be to change plumbing, electrical, etc. later on if done this way. I'm not very experienced in that so I don't know.
I have been interested in shipping container living for awhile now, but couldn’t find much info on the actual build. Thank you for this! So informative! What is your IG account called?
Me, too. I have no problems with railings if I want to build decking 18 inches above the ground. In fact, I plan on making the tops of the containers usable as decks so there will have to be railings on the containers, too.
Johnny Onthespot only benefit would be the amount you could charge for rent. But at $25000 for just paperwork plus whatever the costs for the rest of the project, it could still be years before you see any profit from it. However, once you’re out of the hole that’s a pretty nice pay day in my opinion.
Yeah auckland nz would be more like 75g before putting containers down if you let the government know lol ... and that would be on a 300g property not even close to the city .
So far I've seen one suggestion for a different foundation and about 200 gripes about California. I would agree with that one suggestion: use piers at each corner. To deal with the lateral stability issue, make the piers sit on massive footers. Or use the box itself as a structural element. The connection between the pier and the box would have to be totally rigid in all directions, which might call for some additional steel welded to the outside of the box. I could see I-beams welded vertically to each corner, and then extending downward and embedding in the piers. Or something. Can't wait to see how he insulates this thing.
@@toothlessgrin7540 That's right, he said that. And he wanted to keep the floor level with an outdoor deck, so that would have to be raised too. Hm. Not to argue with his priorities, but I think I would have gone with a raised house and deck. That might also have helped the house adapt to the site, which isn't totally flat, it appears. I don't recall why he rejected a perimeter wall foundation.
Great video! For all those complaining about permit costs.... I opened a bar in downtown Los Angeles and it cost nearly $75000 in permits alone (to include the price of a "glorified" permit expediter - $25K). Look, California is not cheap, but videos like this are invaluable because it demonstrates the importance of being financially prepared to start any new construction and/or buildout in California. Be prepared for hidden costs by at least 25%. Once again, great video Ben.
The liquor license alone is like $500,000 not to mention zoning permits etc...
I live in Chicago, it's called responsible building. Cooper plumbing, electrical lines in metal conduit, hurricane roof clips, 2x6 structure... People wonder why homes cost 350k+ ... Safety
You could also just not live in California lol
Can I work at your bar or have half ownership?
@@olegk11 350k is cheap, try 1.5m for a home in SF
This is the great thing about West Virginia:
"I want to build a house on my land."
"Okay."
End of process.
@bla blahblah New Mexico is the ghost town of the United States.
thats alot of states if the land is removed. the closer you get the city the more strict it gets.
@bla blahblah you people miss out on how shitty your housing market becomes if you don't have proper regulations. Besides, I bet the required planning for this project helped him to avoid costly mistakes.
That sounds pretty great until you get someone who doesn't know where they are doing. Now the city potentially has a lot of problems on it's hands.
bla blahblah Bernie 2020. A true populist for the people.
how is land so cheap? 10 acres for $20,000, that's crazy ~40,000m2
edit: holy fck the permits cost more than the land it's on? WTF
Welcome to the desert. You can get 5 acres of land near the Salton Sea for 5,000$
That is actually really expensive for land that has no real resources. Can’t grow anything or mine anything. Can’t even move dirt on your property without paying for even more permits and studies.
@@osomxl it's only real "resource" is that it's in California, barely
It has been a few decades, but farm land in central New York State was going for $100 an acre (or rather, 10,000 acres for $1,000,000).
I remembered Michigan as being cheap a few years ago, and a quick search shows 1 acre lots for $45,000 but also 40 acre parcels for $200,000-$400,000. 200 acres for $1.4m, 400 acres for $12m, so it can vary widely.
Rule of thumb: land gets cheaper in bulk. This is partly because large parcels are generally far from cities and schools, and being close to those things makes land worth more, and partly because large parcels will include some land that can't be built on (too swampy, no water, bad drainage, unstable soil, etc) and would thus be hard to sell. Bonus for you if the reason you wanted that land was to prevent someone from building something ugly in the middle of the pretty view. :)
I live 20 mins away from Joshua Tree, in some areas you purchase 10acres but you can only disturb 1/2 acre, do to zoning laws.....
I pour and finish concrete. Have worked with concrete for over two decades, growing up around the trade.
You did a VERY neat and accurate description of all the processes involved. I hate the heat and the filth, and the dry skin. But I love seeing a finished slab I installed, perfectly measured and neatly troweled.
I look forward to seeing the following episodes!
Heavens. All for sitting a steel box on the ground.
Try building a warehouse, 4500 psi concrete minimum, and I've been on a project that was well over 1000 cubic yards
Welcome to Commiefornia, worst state in the union.
These days governments will charge you just for sitting in a box.
*That human's live inside of.
@@KILLASAURUSFLEX that would be texas lol
First minute and I've heard the word "permit" like 85 times. California sounds ssoooooooo aweeeesssommmmeeee.
Try building a house in any state.
It's a hell of a lot more than just putting sticks together.
Yeah tell that to a city without strict building codes after an earthquake or any other natural disaster you dumb fuck
When I restored and lifted my AMC Jeep basically every mod had a disclaimer saying its illegal in California
The state of California has found that permits may cause cancer.
@@hardworkingsloth
Californian: We got Earthquakes and Fires.
Floridian: We got Tornadoes, Hurricanes, insane Florida men. You can't beat that!
California: Well... your stupid!
This is some next level TH-cam. I feel like you could make the episodes a little longer. This way better than anything on TV. There is so much good stuff here.
Great job Ben 😁
Crafter Maker I was thinking the same I want it longer 😂
I just saw 2 minutes and i'm horrified with the steel, 10 milimiters instead of the 10 mil (million) and more
@@Danirio96 What do you mean? What is wrong with the steel? Iam asking because I really want to learn more. Thanks
To each their own, but I enjoyed how concise yet detailed the video was. Too many vids on youtube are bloated and filled with useless fluff. Maybe a bit more info on the septic design though, eh? I'm just glad this isn't some kind of family vlog and we have 30min of pet and kid filler.
Finally an actual detailed video to help those interested in the nuts and bolts of the project. Well explained, good detail (don’t be afraid to show more). I think those who are watching this type of video are really interested in every step. Great work. Truly a good example for others when doing videos online
Ben, fantastic video! I do shipping container projects myself and I still learned a lot from your video - extreme helpful and informative. For of the people focused on how expensive and what a pain in the ass California is to when building:
You are 100% correct with respect to both. That said though, do the quick numbers. Assuming you’re $100k all in on this house:
-You can easily AirBNB it for $275 in Joshua Tree
-It’s booked less than 1/3 of the time (120 days a year), again, no problem in Joshua Tree
-You pay it off in 3 years
-Starting year 4, you’re bringing in $30k+ per year with that property minimum; you can realistically book more nights and/or increase the rate and get closer to $50k+
Food for thought.
What has been your experience with deterioration?
Licensed California architect here - Slab on grade was the way to go. Just bolt the container to a raised perimeter curb, and use the bolts to level it. You have to anchor it anyway. My concern is with having mild still / galvanized steel in direct contact with concrete. You should be fine up in the high desert, but this would pose corrosion issues in a damp environment.
...and I'm gonna go ahead and guess this ended up costing significantly more than traditional type 5 construction on a per-square foot basis. That's fine, but people should know what to expect from a cost standpoint.
Or you could pay half of that in a different, less ecologically-unstable state.
William Hogan ...this was an exercise in millennial cuteness, in pursuit of repurposed utility. A conventional interior, built in a steel oven in the desert at enormous cost, relative to market value. The nature of the foundation type and reactive metals on concrete, not withstanding.
@@AS-mv7tm but you wouldnt be in california!!! I've been in most states of the U.S and cali is one of the best to live in...every state has its positives and negatives..
@@MUGGLE137 - you are correct, it is the best state. If you don't mind bending over for CA law and being left with less money in your name.
@@MUGGLE137: If I were offered to live in California in exchange for five million dollars, I'd spend minutes in serious consideration. Ultimately, I'd agree because I'd need the money, but I'd hesitate for a great deal of time.
Anything less than five million and I'd probably counter-offer suicide.
CA: Do you have a permit to get a permit?
If you dont have a permit to get a permit. Go to the permit office and ask for a permit to permit you to be considerd for a permit for your permit.
@@sergiotheg13 "Ohhhh so you want to get a permit to get a permit? That will be $5000.00 please." :P
This is going to permit me to chose another state 😆
I live in Miami. You have to get a permit to replace a light switch.
did you get a permit to post this comment?
25,000 dollars for permits in the desert. Awesome.
Really sad isn't it?
25K for the shiny bums to keep their bums nice and shiny
Price you pay for trying to be productive in COMMIEfornia
Maybe he should have registered as a mobile home...and then he could have had 1bedroom +guest
Price was quite reasonable, actually. It included all of the engineering and design drawings and construction documents. Architectural and Engineering (A&E) services are typically 25 to 35 percent of the total construction value.
If a "stock" design were used, the A&E team would have used already proven plans that can be site adapted. The cost would have been 40 to 50 percent lower for the package.
Wow... You really explained everything in detail... especially the part about not building anything in California. Lol
👍🏾👍🏾
Exactly. We are a very regulated state
I found myself adding..." so we moved to Nevada"....
@@davidmurphy5571 facts lol
25k$ before even a shovel strike is made pretty much defeats the purpose of using containers at this point, no?
mglmouser I wouldn’t think so? Depends how much the containers cost and then compare that to the average cost to bet sq. Foot of a traditional build. Honestly I think some of those surveys are not necessary. But who knows, $25k might be a bargain compared to other parts of CA and traditional builds?
It's for people who are rich and want a "unique" design. They'd pay $100,000 in Beverly Hills if they had em
IDK, if anything having to pay $25k to put down anything makes me want to spend even less on what I'm putting down. Thank god I don't live in CA
I agree, and all the permits.
yea the permits and land negate the point of building your own cheap home.
only thing I didn't like about the video was there wasn't another to watch right after!!!! ahhhh!!! now I'm waiting anxiously. keep up the great work. love your vids
Your first mistake was trying to build anything in California.
omg lol, was going to post this.
Pro tip!
You mean Commiefornia
Caliberal
Worst state in the Union. We should pay them to leave.
I’ve been looking for an EXACT step by step process with pricing and I am so glad I found you!!! THANK YOU!
Those workers wondering why this guy wants to live in boxes in the middle of the desert
First comment after 100 likes
It’s a good location if a bunch a nukes drop no one will drop nukes in a empty desert
Gavanater 7 good place to test them though
First comment after 219 likes
@@shiezo Yeah but they don't do that anymore.
Man you're so close to Nevada. You were *this* close to greatness
The construction codes and rules in Nevada are trying to catch up with California. It's ridiculous. We wanted to put up a metal garage for storage on our 1.25 Acre lot and they forbid it because there was no house on the property.
My thoughts exactly.
I have a container shop here in Alaska. It's a 20 and a 40 jointed together side by side. I just have it sitting on rail road ties and it lived through a 6.0 earth quake last November. Only a few things fell over
Also good for California where a huge earthquake is imminent
@@squigglewacks the worst I see is -20 F .. yes it gets cold
@@squigglewacks it's bc he has it sitting up on railroad ties. U could do radiant heat in the floors. The guy in T.N. knows wat he's doing & his builds r 20k if u don't want granite & things like that.
@@squigglewacks ck. Out Incredible Tiny Homes out of T.N. owner Randy Jones. His video this week shows 7 new one & a container that he has the floor out of to be shown at a later date. He has a FB acct. Too, but I don't do fb. There's also Container Acre, just found them. Don't know when they did their build but r about to do another one. Wasn't alot of info out there when they did the first one. A new insulation made just for containers called insofast.com with a r-11 rating & cuts out condensation inside. Hope this helps!!
+John T Coleman THAT'S WHY YOUR STATE IT'S NOT GREAT AS CALIFORNIA DUMB ASS PUTA MAMAVERGAS!
This is exactly what I was looking for but I want to double the size and go underground! I live in central LA where house prices are $1M minimum. In the next few years I would like to get a little more privacy and create an artist commune in the desert for musicians, producers, film makers, dancers, painters, photographers, designers, engineers, etc. Having enough spaces for people to come and go and create music and projects would be crucial. Thanks again! :D
Please just stay in LA
Holy cow. 25,000 just in permits ! Starting to crush my hopes
Are you building in CA?
Yes I would like to
@@StacheCam Gotta move outta state to make it happen on a budget unfortunately =(
James Hansen sucks :(
I believe with those permits, a road or street is paid by the city from your residence for access to Cali.
i love micro housing, especially shipping container homes, but there are so few start-to-finish filmed documentaries about the process. this is exciting! i wouldn’t build one myself, but i love witnessing the elements of building that i’ve never considered, like the rebar grid for the concrete foundation, requirements for the container quality, etc. excited to see more of this series!
i felt the same way! so many tours and pictures but so little information on cost and process
I am a geotechnical engineer. Considering the stiff soil conditions, I would simply excavate about 50 cm of soil and replace it with gravel followed by compaction. Nothing much,
There are 2 main risk scenarios while laying a structure above a soil 1) Settlements 2) Bearing capacity. I do not think there are any risks since the soil conditions within the site are already too damn good and drainable.
Sorry to say but the structure engineer fooled you to earn some cash.
Exactly what I was thinking, that foundation was way way way over the top, and they never even ran his popups through it, that ground is solid probably hasn't moved for thousands of years, he was taken for a ride indeed
Gravel was my first thought too, but I use to live in louisiana, where everyone was cheap, and all the ground was mushy and wet... so thick layers of gravel are used all over the place, foundations, roads, parking lots, walk paths, etc anything where you don't want it to be a puddle tomorrow.
I know the area, it floods once every few years. Wouldn't this cause an issue with gravel?
Not at all. I come from the land of floods and there is gravel everywhere. If you are really worried about it you can make sure to set up barriers to route the water around the structure, and to stop the gravel from being carried off. Even just sandbags works for this, if you want something temporary you can store for less of an eye sore when you are using the structure.
imran zafar just gravel ? Earthquakes can / will shear off plumbing and electrical stubs , ground squirrels, prairie dogs , hedge hogs will burrow through edge of gravel creating a massive rodent network to live on , which brings snakes , you'd be dealing with rodents and snakes constantly
This is great. I particularly liked the detail in the foundation construction. I live on the east coast and when building on a sloped site, we struck a large continuous seam of rock. So we decided to anchor one corner of the house basement on this bedrock, poured the slab , built up the walls and used floating “I” beams to act as a dish type bearings to support the weight of the house on top, in case of earth quake. It was actually cheaper to build like this and people thought I was crazy. 2 earthquakes later, the house has settled nicely into the sloped site. In a container this would simply look like a single independent pedestal post under each corner with a cast iron dish and a corresponding twist lock with a cast iron ball. The whole structure “ floats “ on the four corners.
This is great. I’ve been listening to you talk about this for months and I’m so stoked to finally see it in detail. Bravo! I can’t wait for the next video.
thank you! should be up next week!
Been waiting the whole build for these videos.
Thank you for being transparent with cost and fees. That’s good stuff to know.
yes thanks but it shows its out of reach for people legally trying to live on the cheap
@@NomadicSociety In California it is, it's much cheaper in a free state.
Dude shipping containers are engineered to handle way more stress than this will ever take. I think you over-engineered the whole foundation. Also why would you try to create anything of value in California? You're not even near the beaches, just go to Nevada it'll be the same thing but cheaper.
Your perspective is understandable but fairly ignorant. Few questions for you... Were they designed to have large holes cut in the corrugated steel walls for doors an windows while still perform to the "engineered" stresses you state? No... Were they designed with certain deflection criteria in mind that will prevent windows from binding/cracking over time? No... Were they designed with higher factors of safety required when dealing with residential dwellings as opposed to industrial applications? No... Is there someone at the manufacture's company willing to stamp the permit documents accepting legal liability for the containers performance? No... I agree that other states let you "do it yourself" but the ones that do don't have significant earthquakes threats to worry about. This area on the other hand has the San Andreas fault running right through it. And there are countless people who dump these containers on their property in the desert and live in them without issue. You just can't permit them, meaning you cant insure them or sell them as a house to someone else.
travsb1984 you are the only reasonable person in this comment section.
@@travsb1984
1: No, but this won't affect their sturdiness as a single-story structure. The frame takes most of the load, even if the holes are in the corners it will still have more than enough shear strength for this.
2: They are designed not to deflect that much, as they need to be stacked incredibly high without tipping. Think about a normal wall. It's just a wooden frame with studs running vertically every few feet, some diagonal members, and drywall nailed over it. This is a welded steel frame with corrugated steel walls designed to support over 20 tons in stormy waters. The windows will be fine.
3: The standards they are designed to meet are far more intense than those of a residential house (as far as structural integrity goes) This is why they are made of corten steel, and houses are made out of wood.
4: Why would the company need to accept liability? Their product has been modified and isn't being used for it's intended purpose.
5: Many of the regulations he ran into had nothing to do with earthquakes (700 sqft minimum footprint, 18" minimum 'crawlspace' height, etc.).
These containers are designed to be stacked and unstacked 10 levels high on boats for 10 years straight with essentially no maintenance, exposed to the elements and the waves, connected to one another only by four bolts.
I think they can handle sitting on the ground and having people walk around in them.
@@bradenanderson6989 Your responses and assumptions confirm that you still know very little about engineering principles, or how the permitting process works in general... Thinking something will work, and proving it will work mathematically are two very different standards. FYI, all of my questions were rhetorical and had answers of no... I would agree that California has too much red tape, but most of the design considerations would apply anywhere, not just in CA. The only requirement that stuck out during the video that made me role my eyes was the 700 sq ft requirement. To my knowledge this is not a California requirement. Building codes in California are actually controlled at the local level, and they are free to amend the CBC however they see fit. I suspect the 700sq*ft requirement is a local requirement.
@@bradenanderson6989 Not to go to crazy in the comments, but I'll give you some insight. Shipping containers are not designed to be perfectly ridged bodies. They have some flex in them. This allows each container to conform to the support it's placed on so that all four sides will align with the pined restraints and full bearing will be maintained, preventing them from "teeter-tottering" on uneven ship decks, tractor trailers, or train cars. I had two of these containers on my property for storage and can attest first hand they are far from rigid. We leveled the ground the best we could with shovels but we were only within about and 1" of true flat. When the containers were dropped they flexed until all sides were fully bearing on the soil. This was perfectly adequate for my needs, but if this were differential settlement caused by inadequate footings in a "house", every window and door in the container would have binded or even broke. That's the difference between doing something yourself and having it designed by professionals in the permitting process.
i appreciate how you just jump right in the whole process with out a long and unnecessary intro.
You should look into Helical Piers. They are very easy to install and perform better than concrete under seismic loads because they allow movement. This would give you fast installation, adjustability, and a steel connection to your cargo containers.
I thought the whole idea of Shipping Container House is to minimize work, time and money for constructing a home... and I don't think you saved any of those for it to matter
99maxa ...it was an exercise in absurdity. A conventional interior built in a steel oven in the desert...only because of the “repurposed” cashe?
Cache
@@davidjose2193 - hey David - did you know you can go into your original comment and edit it? Off to the right are 3 vertical dots. One will say 'edit'. Click that and you can fix anything you wrote.
To be fair, the actual construction of the home was far cheaper than a 'normal' home would be. The permits and taxes wouldn't be factored into the cost of materials and labor. Realistically, even with all the permits and taxes, its probably still cheaper than constructing a regular home in the same location.
@@michaelbaker2495 Now imagine how much cheaper it is to do in EVERY OTHER STATE.
this is going to be a great series. the project looks great, the site looks inviting, and the concept of the three separate buildings is cool. Not a new idea, but definitely one that makes a lot sense with a stable weather climate. cant wait to see this one unfold.
My son is stationed at 29 palms and just bought a beautiful home near the Joshua tree. We were able to come out there finally and visit. He took us to the Joshua tree. Amazing place.
@5:22 is the best part of the video. You've done an amazing job detailing and explaining the process of erecting a house on an empty property. Great video!!
I’m impressed more with the video organization than its content. Very concise
CA: HEY STOP!!
Builder:? What?
CA: Do you have a permit?
Builder: Sure right here.
CA: No No No my friend I need the permit for this permit to be permitted.
😂😭😂 I am screaming. This comment is golden. I use to be a planner in California.
Don't forget the Conversation Tax and the Breathable Air Tax.
HaHaHa:)))) I am laughing too hard right now!!!!!! DO NOT Ever build anything in Sunny CAli !!!
@@GrafDevelopments HaHaHa:))))))))
sounds like California is even worse than Germany/most of Europe because we slapped a container on our property , needed no real building permit but a pointpermit like you need for a garage or a new driveway and it did not have to have any foundation, we put some welded railway rail frame and a few pieces of concrete tiles/bricks below we just needed to prove that it is removeable without any pollution and that the chimney and sewage dont leak - e just use it for storage and workroom but you could live in there
you should have taken a coolingcontainer, they are already isolated and got some electronics installed you can repurpose
get some old windows from a demolition site-just be there at the rigth time and ask if you can cut some windows with the framework out to repurpose them, here you get your windows almost for free
As if a container would collapse from a earthquake, just ask those people if they are capable of breatheing and thinking at the same time what do they imagine? a landslide with the container skiing and rolling down a mountain
Seeing all these building related comments for California is killing me LOL! But more importantly, I think this is such an AMAZING resource for people considering building container homes. I for one am a very detail fascinated person, who also loves to learn in general. Excited to see the rest of this process
buy a good camper van and live where ever you want
Buy a sprinter van, and build it out to be the perfect (hidden, because it just looks like a van) camper
How much is a top of the range camper van ?
How much would a California permit be for that? lol
If you're gonna have multiple containers, it would make sense to lay them out as a perimiter to form a courtyard. You can then erect shade cloth over this courtyard to create a sort of greenhouse where you could have a nice garden which may even provide a haven from the dry heat of the environment.
Also, I would have put cyclone bolts into the concrete slab and tied the containers to them.
That right there is exactly my goal. To buy permits, buy the containers, buy trees if permits are needed for that as well, and start crops.
I do give you a boat load of credit dealing with CA laws! and Not giving up. Congrats Bro!!!
I have 32 years in Concrete foundations experience and with ground that hard where you had to use metal stakes You don't need a monolithic foundation for that container!!!
level and prep ground and set it and forget it. Pure greed and corruption!!!
@Joshua Mendoza screw that.. Just plonk it down. If it sinks overtime, just lift up the house, pour in some more dirt, pack it down, and put the house back.
Yeah Tall, I'm from Australia (35 yrs in the game) and I've designed quite a few container projects and I confess I'm completely mystified by this approach. I just run screw piles (to even bearing ground) at the 4 corners and lift the bastard up 600mm above ground. I run conecting timber decks between the containers and pre-cast 'Home Depot' (Bunnings in Aus) pad footings and timber posts to bearers and joists and standard decking flooring timber (internal and/or external). Cheap as shit and great for the bloke who is good with his hands but not a builder, so he can get on with his dream. All your plumbing is accessible under floor and if you do happen to suffer earthquake damage at least you can get to everything. As far as being level ??? get a fucking laser if you can't operate clear flexible hose and water.
@@twowongs8266 Gotta love people who know how to just get something done simply and effectively 👌
California Dreamin' has become a nightmare.
Finn K opportunity costs
"Sprinklers for fire suppression" you got a single bush every like 5 feet from each other
But, but...they might gang up on you!
I died laughing on your comment dude 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@@pendejo6466 1- build a defensive wall around your house
2- make the bushes pay for it
3- ???
4- profit
Did he mean sprinklers inside the building?
@@geothr33 idk but usually sprinklers destroy almost as much of your inventory as a housefire would - the difference being that the sprinklers saves the house itself which the fire could easily burn to the ground. In this case, what is there really to save? The shipping container which is effectively the house? What do you really need sprinklers for here, I mean worst case you go and buy another shipping container lmao. Everything inside it will be ruined by the water anyways.
You should have used a shipping container as foundation for your shipping container!
Basement
😆
$25K in planning and permits!!! I was thinking this whole thing would cost $25K (less land).
california shake down
*ahem* frick CA.
Hey Ben! My colleagues and I are actually making a container project based on all of your videos. You inspired us to make a difference, and now we are making a portable research station that will have multiple uses and be sent around the world. We fabricated the windows and doors out of steel and will set up the interior. It would be great to hear from you and show you some of our progress.
Thanks for showing whole process. So anobody can use it for his own building and can learn from your exprience. You are awesome!
Now THAT'S a concrete project! I've been so excited for this to come out, Ben! I really like the format and how you explained why you landed on the slab on grade style foundation...that is the kind of information that almost all building shows seem to lack. Can't wait for episode 2!
Nice work! I’m also a designer in Los Angeles and I know exactly how rigorous the permit process is. I Just finished my detached new 1200sq. ft. ADU in the back of my house I had to go through additional requirements like Low Impact Development Design..It wasn’t easy but got the Final Inspection approval yesterday 🙌👍🤜. For the 18” min. Crawlspace I believe there is an exemption to that rule if you use a naturally durable or preservative-treated structural floor system. But going with a monolithic slab foundation is a good choice and Engineers prefer to use it when designing a new house for is structural reasons. I can’t wait for the next episode!
I see a lot of negativity around here, and I’ll just say you DID IT GREAT! It’s inspirational to see how some people actually come out and take the things even when it is challenging and many don’t dare to even think of it, mediocrity or fear, or just broke people.
Claps to you and great documentary, subscribed and supporting ❤️❤️!!!
This was my dream I rented a house in Joshua Tree for three years with the plans on buying land and building my own shipping container house. After dealing with San Bernardino permit department and the state of California in general I said eff it. I’ve now bought a retired SnapOnTruck that I’m converting into a tiny home on wheels
Nomad News, can you give me your input about building in San Bernardino, I'm buying a house on one acre lot in Hesperia and hoping to have an ADU as a container house. Much appreciated if I can hear from you soon.
I'm building what I call a hybrid container home, in Upstate South Carolina. The basic permit was about $1100.00. I'm making 2 stacks of 2, 24' apart, on two end piers each stack, foundation wall on the inside facing sides, and 2 cylindrical piers, 12" diameter, starting with 2'wide x 1' thick footings all around. Add to that a foundation wall riser, 12" wide, 12" high, then narrowed to 7" wide, total rise 36". The entire foundation wall, with change in thickness was a monolithic pour. The inside has a 4" ledge, upon which the garage floor is poured. In each end of the end piers (18" wide by 81/2' x 40" high), are steel plates 1/2" thick x 12" x 14", with 5/8-11 threaded anchor "L" bolts in each plate, 4 each, embedded in the piers. Other plates are similarly embedded in the foundation walls and side piers. The bottom containers are to be welded to the plates. Top containers attached using standard shipping lockdowns to bottoms. Roof over entire structure, second floor uses I beams, bar joists, etc. This design does away with room width limitations between upper containers. Only openings in containers are for doors and windows. Rectangular tubing frames for all openings. Main living space is on upper floor, 1600sq/ft. Lower level is garage, workshop/ utility bottom left container, entrance hall and office/ den for right side. Stairway is alongside inner wall of right container. The ends are to be structural steel standard metal building design. With the rebar, I welded all risers, etc. This house will last for generations, weather storms, etc. Compared to the stick built on slab houses popping up around here, they are as a cheap car compared to a dump truck, structurally. BTW, I'm doing most of the work myself. I have an older Bobcat to be my workhorse. I would NEVER consider building in a high overhead, control freak state like Kleptifornicatia. And... I'm on 3 acres, with a creek running along the south boundary. The Smokies are 20 minutes north of here, Asheville 55 miles north. I will have water, no matter what happens in the desert out there. Water was one of my must haves. One more thing: this isn't meant to be cheap to build. It is meant to be solid shelter, not a temporary sticks and osb "tent."
How is your project going? (Resident of WNC here)
I would very much like too see this shelter. PLEASE!!!
@@gloriaharris5356 Just look up Andrew Camarata's youtube channel which is what I thought he was describing at first.
I'm curious about what why you spaced out the containers the way you did, as opposed to connecting all of them to create one space. Wouldn't keeping them separate make it more complicated to heat and cool? I'm excited for the next episode!
Dumb liberal thinks its hip. They rarely make any sense.
@@rahenkamp1 Wow you're politicizing a design choice on a home you're ridiculous.
@@rahenkamp1 there may be a legitimate reason for it.
Probably because the weather is really nice out there. It's an indoor/outdoor lifestyle
@@ot505 That'd be a good reason. it just looks really hot there.
For a shipping containers we usually go with pillar foundation design, depending on the environment and frost line depth we drill about 1,5m in depth and ~10-20cm in diameter, put in concrete and metal bases just like in your initial drawings. There is also full metal screw in type of pillars, some people use them because they are cheaper alternative, but I am not sure if they are better, those are basically big and long metal screws, they just go in the ground and thats all. These foundations are usually used for smaller constructions.
The foundation you used here would be considered as too much in most of the countries, we usually use these foundations for a traditional houses, although we make them deeper, that probably depending on a frost line, usually we dig in ~1,5m depth here in Lithuania.
When your permits alone cost 5K MORE than you paid for the 10 acres of land - that should have been your clue to GTFO and build in another state. 20k for the land, 25k for the permits - Hence why they sold it so cheap.
Game Changer the land was only cheaper cause of the location though... kinda how it works everywhere in the world
@@keanukoren6109 I wonder if that means I can build on top of an active volcano for cheap.
@@TheEndingAbyss there are no active volcanoes in California, which is what the original commentor was talking about. So, although your comment was kind of off topic, and you look really silly with all that cake on your face, I can answer your question..yes you can definitely build on top of an active volcano. I think you should buy the plans this guy is selling and go nuts. Any volcano should do. Might I recommend the one that is currently spewing lava in Hawaii. Forget about the permits, just do it and report back here to share your results.
@@dustinsharber95 I didn't reply to the original comment, I replied a comment within with a joke about what he said. You look pretty silly with all that cake on your face completely missing that.
any guy that has $50,000 lying around to build ugly tiny houses with doesn't care.
Makes sense. California prefers people remain homeless than have the possibility that the shipping container not have (gasp) proper paperwork.
Regulation is not a bad thing. If you loosen regulations too much you get greedy people and companies disregarding essential safety precautions. Building codes are for example meant to protect you from fire death in your house. Things like Boeing 737 Max 8 crashing into the ground because of a lack of proper government oversight is just a recent example. Regulations is there to protect us. That being said, it needs to be sensible regulation which is actually justifiable and not more bureaucratic than necessary.
@@emperorshievpalpatine I think you miss the point. California overregulates, and has regulations that make no sense. In this case, the builder obviously has the money. But see this case:
th-cam.com/video/n6h7fL22WCE/w-d-xo.html
Where the California government PREFERRED that people remain homeless, even though the homes were build on private land. Why would they do this? Because California is more about power over people's lives than any real safety concern. Being homeless on the sidewalk is clearly less healthy than any kind of shelter.
the point of the regulation is to stop people from doing very thing; and just buy a house in the suburbs from a construction firm who contributed to the regulators election fund.
Scott Franco I don‘t really know all the details of California‘s building regulations and perhaps there is indeed overregulation. I just wanted to point out that the narrative particularly found in the US that all regulations is bad and prohibits „free enterprise“ is equally flawed as too much regulation. Regulation in general is a good thing as long as it is sensible and justified.
Heath Newland That indeed then is corruption. But this is a problems of campaign finance laws and anti-corruption enforcement. It is not a problem of the idea of regulation. Regulation is only as good as the people who make it.
Guy did one in the Ozarks here in Arkansas with 4 containers, cost about 60k, including the mountain top he purchased..
Those permits are absurd.
K Sullysvan wow, I’ve heard about that
Regulations and prices in parts of CA can definitely be a turn off. But I don't want to live in the south again. I've lived in CA twice. There's a reason people still move there.
@@JeannineFUNNY yes, it takes a strong stomach to live down here..
K Sullysvan aye I’m from Jonesboro Arkansas 👌🏼
K Sullysvan
$60k.......and he’s in the Ozarks. There’s a reason it’s cheap.
Smart guy - kudos for the mental and emotional flexibility to pull this through
so much actually useful information rather than feelings and PR. Thank You!
Sir, you'll need a permit to breathe the air within that 10 acre space.
LOL 😂
For safety reasons of course
And of course theres also going to be a $50 respirator fee .@@jlewsd
Just saying ..... A wise man on the street said that : " ... GOD created every living thing to breathe free air because GOD cares for everyone and that is why the Air is free."
In other words ...no permits to breathe the air ... "Everyone gets to breathe air..... Ask the trees !". Happy Days !
@@MeetTheSmythes It's just a joke. Please don't hit me with your bible.
The corners of containers are strongest, all the weight up to 20+ tonn rests on those 4 points.
I'd just have dug 4 corner holes in the ground, compacted them and poured in concrete, and made sure it was all leveled. Also put container-shoes (Twistlock) in/on the concrete to better keep the container in place during windy conditions, they do grab alot of wind these big boxes.
I never heard of a twistlock but just looked it up, great advice.
Was thinking the same!
The civil guys really worked him over here. Does anyone know who stamped these drawings?
@Benzo Thats Cali for you, I don't see how any normal person can live there at the cost of living rate.
I would have hired a piling/foundation drill, then inserted used carpet roll tubes then fill with various size aggregate + compact at each stage + insert reinforce rods and pour concrete using air pokers to reduce air pockets, but it important to remember that the altering/cutting out of container walls does compromise its structure if not supported underneath, so I would have the container resting on 8 points ( 4 each side on 40 ft container to possible reduce flex),...the `Twistlock` is a great idea.
In South Chicago they turn homes into shipping containers.
nice
wait wait, you needed a permit to move dirt out there in the middle of nowhere? holy crap!!! Nothing like gov't overreach.
Yeah that seemed a bit nutty, but the fact is when one moves earth it affects those downstream
so excited for this new channel. Thank you for being so detailed and including all your costs.
As a brit I think I would feel the need to riot if I had to pay $25000 for permits to build a simple shipping container house. I would definitely consider living in another state over something like that.
California is a socialist hell hole. They want you to pay taxes 12 years after you move out.
Gotta love California.
this isn't the norm. only in the shithole from hell known as leftist progressive california.
trust me, people are migrating out of CA in droves. it's an absolute hellhole of marxist propaganda and unbelievably corrupt bureaucracy
California for you. It's a joke
Right especially on your own land you purchased, California is not worth to build in bit I did like the video and the results
Thank you for taking the time to film it all!
"Permits costs me over $25,000 and took over 4 months"
Add this to the long list of reasons California sucks.
maglen69 just buy a house already built
Dont have those permits and all of a sudden you have 10k homes that dont fit the code and kill hundreds of people in 20 years.
@@Lawkodi Permits are fine, but they sure as hell don't need to cost $25,000. That's absolutely insane for permits.
@@MrClarkisgod It wasn't just permits in the 25k, it was surveys, drawings, etc. and it sounds like he had to have the drawings updated which is also expensive. This is why subdivisions are cookie cutter houses, it is way simpler to get going if you don't have a ton of variations.
Jarbear - Brawl stars yeah just buy a 3 room 1300 square foot house for $400k. That’s much better. Oh and don’t forget the taxes out the ass. Living in California sucks
10 years from now this California home will be ALMOST complete!
Thanks for sharing; I'm looking forward to the whole series. Thanks for sharing the pricing too
GREAT video. I love how detailed it is, but still understandable for the average person. I've wanted to build my own for years, and this really helps.
25g in permits to set a shipping container in the desert? Good luck with the rest of that nightmare.
27 for me in Joshua Tree.. Thing is the money is out here in Cali so paying bribes is a part of the numbers.. His place will easily do 100k a year in rental income..
I plan on building my own place and everytime I consider doing it in California ,,, I watch this video :
What I found interesting to see, that the plastic foil that was used to cover the floor area before the pouring, was covered with sand.
In Western European countries, the plastic barrier is used to prevent sand, or dirt being near, or at risk of getting in contact with the concrete, as it could comprise the concrete mixture. It is also common to put the plastic all the way underneath the concrete, and not just underneath the thinner floor area.
The small prefabricated concrete blocks, are used to highten the rebar but serve to keep the plastic in place.
Also it is mandatory in our area to use a vibrating surface or penetrating compactor, to increase concrete strength.
Using the slab on grade seems a sensible compromise, I was wondering if insulation (HD graphite EPS e.g.) was considered placing underneath the slab.
NIce vid!
chalky940 ....wind blows plastic around prior to pour. Mexican technology is sand.
I am so happy to have found your channel. I'm not sure I can go thru what you have gone thru. It is a lot of work for DIY, but I will try very soon. The house I am buying has more than 1 acre of flat land, it has a beautiful existing home and 4 car garage, circular driveway and fully landscaped with one shed and one 40ft container already there. I was going to have a huge workshop for my business but now I could do what you do to rent it out. Thanks for sharing this video.
Glad this series is starting, have been looking forward to this!
The amount of paperwork (and its cost!) is crazy. In Poland, if the land is generally accepted to build there anything, you can build something up to 35m2 and 5m hight without any permit. And permits takes time but cost closer to $250 than $25000.
Jan Klosowski That's because California is still a communist country.
I’m Polish. and would love to visit soon from Canada. possibly move there. any places of interest you would recommend. thanks !!
17madracki17 Texas or Wyoming.
annndddd thats why people die in a hot fiery mess in poland while playing escape room games :P
@@blaze-JS Nah. It was just an unfortunate fire. I guess it happens sometime here and there in California too… oh wait…
$25,000 for permits?! Legalized and government regulated bribery.
Seriously Criminal. Land of the Free.
It's more like extortion than bribery.
What u didn't no that your gov is the REAL MOBB.....🤣🤣😂🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸snakes of America
@Justin Case, Hey Justin, You wouldn't happen to be from Australia would you? Like the Justin Case I met at Phegans Bay on the Central Coast of NSW?
For 25000$ I got a large container house (10m*4) plus a pool
Saw Episode 1 & 2 and love all the tiny details, pricing and set backs during the build, great job. Will continue watching your channel.
Cut to the chase - this money-saving DIY project costs "15-20%" MORE than conventional building methods.
sdushdiu ...agreed! An insulated conventional interior...built in a steel oven...in a desert! Because “repurposed” is hip among millennials?
Given time, they also will learn. Bless them for being creative at this base of their young lives.
Out in the open desert you can get away with a cc. Just don't call it a house.
Yes, as I suspected. Thanks for the info.
@@davidjose2193 Should he cut down some trees instead or what?
In cali*
This would be an affordable way to build as long as you first pick a state that isn't California
montrealhas %50 taxes. Big reason a lot of hockey players dont want to play there. Water is paid to the house, delivery or some fee, the we pay for the water draining. We pay for gravity!!!. Good house to be in if there's a drive by.
If concrete dries too fast it cracks & crumbles. What provision did you make for curing the concrete slabs after they were poured?
Not if he cured it properly.
You put so much work into this project and this video. Thank you daddy.
I'm very surprised at the size of the foundations for such a small and considerably light dwelling. And of course you answered the question later in the video :)
The raised piers are good for airflow and accessing pipework in the future. I also find you get a little less creepy crawlies.
What I learned: never build anything in CA. lmao.
What I learned:
Shipping containers = $12850
Groundwork = ~$1400 (didn't say how many days the excavator worked)
Concrete = $6000
Handwork+ Pipes+ Rebar+Beer= ???
Permits = $25000+
Not to mention collecting rainwater is illegal and can be jailed
Bwahahhahahah
And yet Californians wonder why housing is so unaffordable.
Step 1- Move as far away from California as possible.
Step 2-????
Step 3 Profit!
@@Unconventional03 try kansas or some other amazing conservative -paradise- hellhole
This is exceptionally well done. Thank you for putting this out!
"California is a pretty regulation-intensive state". Winning the award for understatement of the day. Thank you for actually doing everything according to California's rules and documenting it all. It really illustrates the cost of those regulations, and saves the rest of us the aggravation and bankruptcy that would result from attempting to build anything there. Also interesting: They regulate how much of your own soil you can move around on your property. I wonder what the penalty is for over-flatening or creating an illegal berm.
So much California bashing, but it is an awesome place to live. Yes, California is not cheap. Yet, our weather and options of entertainment and outdoor adventures are the best in the US hands down. You get what you pay for. It is really cheap to live in tornado ally.
yes! California sucks. All of these commenters should stay far away. Please just stay where you are and keep doin' what you're doin' to make your town and lives so much better. Nothing to see here in Cali.
That foundation is way over the top, you've been taking for a ride on that
What would be wrong with having six or eight 12" Sonotubes and putting the shipping container on top of that?
@@andrewmalone8709 seismic activity. It's California.
@@TheLegendaryFolklore I get that, I'm just wondering what the problem would be structurally if you did that. It seems like it would be perfectly fine in a saner state.
@@andrewmalone8709 it would be, but considering it's Cali, I think seismic waves would just kick the house into waves and shred the container one pillar at a time instead of a solid platform.
I doubt the amount of concrete, size of the hole, etc... had a real significant impact on the total cost of the house
Why didnt you connect the Containers so you have One Large Home, Or Stack the Containers and Have a Second Floor or a Great Room.
He needs a permit for that
@@oscara.9265 I wouldn't be surprise......soon u will need a permit to breath......the beast got the planet on lock down😂😂🇺🇸🇺🇸
@@gangstalkingsimulation1319 and another permit to fart, because its different gas emission, breathing raise CO2 level, and farting rise Sulfur level.
@@S1lverarrow 😂😂😂
I appreciate your explanations about the structural part of the building, its a lot of learning. Thanks for sharing most of the related information
So glad you made this second channel! It really does feel like a legitimate television series is being born! Thank you Ben And I will see you next week in Atlanta. This time I won’t make you sign my hat.😂
Chris
Does this mean Ben has another channel? I am new to following this build and also very excited to watch the process!
@@NoStringsRunning th-cam.com/users/HomeMadeModern
The house plans i used are now available for sale here: gum.co/WLXVe
Link to the company i bought my shipping containers from: www.containerdiscounts.com/shipping-containers-for-sale-home-made-modern
Follow us on instagram for project updates: instagram.com/benjaminuyeda/
We are still working on getting the website for this project up and running so please be patient.
Good evening, I'm thinking of doing the same in south africa next year if the cost will be reasonable .how can we keep in touch please?regards bam
Holy crap you are a twin of my cousin
@@b-annm5571 you see people this is a GREAT idea in south Africa- it makes sense people to fill it with all supply's, a generator, beds, a scooter,tools, a gas grill, 4x4s to set it on and build a bug screen surround, a water reservoir,plumbing etc and etc. ship all this on a freighter and call it a cheap home but in America?? not as sensible of a choose in my book ;) but to each his own.
You are an angel
Angle the beams toward each other ,and one post on the open side. W your original foundation.
Excellent descriptions and explanations for your project. Great video!
thank you thank you thank you!!!!!!! im building this in Jamaica and i cannot believe you broke it down WITH costs!
Moral of the story - don't do anything in California. Omg.
lol, obviously, you are right.
I literally came to the comments to type exactly that. Lol
"I was allowed to move 50 square yards of dirt." Sad.
That’s 2500 yards total. For what he is building that’s sufficient
50 cubic yards, 10 dump trucks.....a miniscule amount....
Hello there. I popped in your videos and I pretty enjoy them. Well done for your effort.
I am an engineer myself having a background in Greek building code (very tough stuff due to intensive earthquakes over the continent) but also worked and still working on projects for California.
I need to note at this point that the building codes all across California are way too overestimated to the point that are not cost effective at all. Owners just financially suffer to finish off their investment without actual "engineering reasons" I dare to say.
In the meantime your engineers are afraid of undertaking the responsibility (due to the strict and sometimes unclear codes) so they come up with solutions that definitely cost a lot more than it should.
I will give you an example on the "lateral movement" that you mentioned. Just let the self supported element "container" freely move on a leveled surface. It won't go anywhere..You could have implemented supported slabs that could be either screwed in the ground (technology used for PV projects in open spaces) or just deep hammered vertical steel slabs in the ground adding some self expanding concrete to fill up any gaps between the slabs and the soil.
I hope I managed to give you an idea of how that could work according to my knowledge.
Many Regards from Greece!
Andreas.
hmmmm......letting the container move freely opens up the risk of severing electrical/water/sewer lines
@@alexfromoz thanks for the comment. I reckon that setting limiters around the support won't cause any problem. it's quite a popular method and I propose you could have a deeper look in it. It's like a restricted support instead of fixes like when calculate cantilevers.
Thank you of sharing your video. I been interested in building container home for years. There just wasnt much information out there. Im saving up money to build my dream container home now. Thank you again for sharing the important information.
I thought the idea was a low cost home made from a Shipping Container ! watching this it probably would have cost less to buy a normal house
Not in all cases especially in California but I think this guy just did it for the satisfaction and he probably sold it for even more because I was looking and I could get 10 acres in the California desert for 5k or less right now if I looked hard enough
Dalton Betancourt It’s for sale right now for $380k.
@@SometimesMonkeysDie 😮 nah. I can buy a real house and land WITH GRASS for that
well, the original idea was cheap, what's expensive is to live and try to build something in California
Hipsters downgrade for fashion
If I do this, I'm going with the crawl space option; much easier to run and hide and access all the mechanical, electrical and plumbing; and much cheaper.
I was thinking the same. Plenty of room to run plumbing, electrical, etc. with a house of that size.
Though I wonder how difficult it would be to change plumbing, electrical, etc. later on if done this way. I'm not very experienced in that so I don't know.
100k permit fees! still want a basement?????
I have been interested in shipping container living for awhile now, but couldn’t find much info on the actual build. Thank you for this! So informative! What is your IG account called?
Me, too. I have no problems with railings if I want to build decking 18 inches above the ground. In fact, I plan on making the tops of the containers usable as decks so there will have to be railings on the containers, too.
If I took away one thing it would be, NEVER BUILD IN CALIFORNIA!!
Johnny Onthespot only benefit would be the amount you could charge for rent. But at $25000 for just paperwork plus whatever the costs for the rest of the project, it could still be years before you see any profit from it. However, once you’re out of the hole that’s a pretty nice pay day in my opinion.
@@davidearle7209 By the time you're out of the hole the Democrats will tax you back into it. You are better off in Nevada or Utah..
Johnny Onthespot lucky for me I’m in Arkansas and land prices are pretty reasonable down here. Thank God
Those that can’t afford, bitch about it.
Yeah auckland nz would be more like 75g before putting containers down if you let the government know lol ... and that would be on a 300g property not even close to the city .
So far I've seen one suggestion for a different foundation and about 200 gripes about California.
I would agree with that one suggestion: use piers at each corner. To deal with the lateral stability issue, make the piers sit on massive footers. Or use the box itself as a structural element. The connection between the pier and the box would have to be totally rigid in all directions, which might call for some additional steel welded to the outside of the box. I could see I-beams welded vertically to each corner, and then extending downward and embedding in the piers. Or something.
Can't wait to see how he insulates this thing.
@@toothlessgrin7540 That's right, he said that. And he wanted to keep the floor level with an outdoor deck, so that would have to be raised too. Hm.
Not to argue with his priorities, but I think I would have gone with a raised house and deck. That might also have helped the house adapt to the site, which isn't totally flat, it appears.
I don't recall why he rejected a perimeter wall foundation.