As you have seen, Tanner from @BendheimBoards not only likes to surf, but he is a handyman who knows how to solve any problem thanks to his great talent for doing DIY projects. Check out his channel for more videos like this! th-cam.com/channels/aTs2gm7IBRitSzh4_3hhWg.html
Skills like this don't come from just watching TH-cam videos. It takes a lot of hard work, dedication and experience. He takes pride in his work and it shows. Hats off to all you true skilled craftsmen.
except, he didn't have much of a plan for many details, like gluing that insulation onto a completely unprepared surface. it's probably already delaminated. this is the problem with how-to videos on youtube; all you see is the immediate results. you need to know how it holds up after years.
I used to build out seacans for construction site offices, workshops and tool storage, also did a bunch of tiny homes too. I always put a door or large opening window at the opposite end of doors for emergency egress. I would also cut in a 16”x16” opening at the end and put a vent that can be changed to put an a/c unit or extractor fan or just for cross venting. Those insulation panels are great. Looks like the plastic ribs are 16” on centre? Cut your first sheet of drywall so that all the edges of the board land on the joint and can then be screwed at the edges so your tape doesn’t crack
@@MAGABeardagree. Not a very good drywall job. Panels should be horizontal leaving less seams and all edges should be at the “studs” otherwise there will be a lot of cracking.
Great job! The only thing I noticed that I'd have done differently would have been to install the ceiling drywall panels first. Let the wall panels provide support for the edges of the ceiling. But it isn't wrong to do it the way you did. The wife and I just finished building our own 1500 sq/ft home ourselves. It took us two years, but it came out looking amazing, and the insurance appraisal came in at over $280,000, so we must have done something right! We've got a few raw vids of our work uploaded.
@@oggyoggy1299 It helps prevent any potential sagging over time. It's just standard practice. And again, it's what I mentioned I would have done, not what They did.
Tanner is a man of many skills. Just Awesome brother. You have inspired many of us . Some of us may not have your skills. I maybe willing to try some of what you have done here although on a smaller level . Great job, impeccable workmanship and design. Love it .
@@SuperDarkrock I know this video is like an work space set up. I wonder which is better for an actual home set up. Probably the spray cause of weather conditions but still the "lego" like setup for building a functional space is amazing.
@arcadebit1551 How do you figure that? You can buy a 40 x 8 x 9 shipping container for a little over $2K a piece. 10 of them at that size would give you 3,200 Sq ft of potential usable space. Besides, a shipping container build is going to be a lot stronger than a wood framed house in the event of tornadoes or hurricanes. Also, they're a bit more fire resistant. They provide great security, as someone can't just kick in your door.
I had a 20' container workshop made from an insulated aluminum reefer container. Built a large shop to replace it, but it's still in use as a storage unit. It was fun and COLD with the A/C going.
Tanner, I love the shop you built. I love the styrofoam that you used for your insulation. I am thinking of using conex container boxes to build a small second home with shop and I had been looking at spray foam but now I will have to take a look at the styrofoam like what you used. The only thing that I would have recommended would have been to run your electrical in the valley of the container and cover it with your styrofoam and drywall making it all inside the walls. Since you are limited on space I would think that you would like to keep the walls clean giving you as much room inside as you can get since you are working on surfboards. Either way, you did one hell of a job. If you make any updates to your new shop I hope you post another video!
If you knew anything you know this video is absolute bunk. He glued styrofoam to the walls and screwed drywall to the styrofoam this is going to fall down all over him he's not actually going to live in this or do anything with it it's not even livable. The electrics terrible this dude's fake
@@XxgoodbudsxX I know plenty and I wish people would do some research before posting. If you would have watched the video you would have known that it was never meant to be lived in and It was a workshop for surfboards. Just because you might think it is bunk what make you an expert on styrofoam panels? My guess is nothing. If you would have spent just a little time doing a little research. Instead of bashing someone. Then you might have known that the styrofoam panels are made by InSoFast and they have built in studs. Also they used Adhesive(Loctite PL Premium) not glue but from your original post I would guess that you would consider them to be the same and not understand the difference.
Yes people think they know it all when they know crap. I don't think the drywall was screwed into the foam it was into the solid part of the structure. That's what I would have done but I'm into a wood walls no seaming. But what he did was good. 73
I would say, this man understands exactly what he’s doing, he knows a lot more about peel and shear strength than the people making negative comments, these are manufactured load bearing composite foam panels, not old bits of packaging material, with a solid skin they’re incredibly strong and have an excellent stress to weight co-efficient, these are used in construction of walk in cold rooms, and if these people actually read the captions as well they would also realise that his fixtures are actually bolted or riveted to the container walls as well 😊 - Julie
Actually, this guy was doing so well until he built the frame for his sliding door wrong. Basically two King studs instead of a King and a Jack stud to set the header on. He doesn’t know framing.
@@frankiek2269 no he didn't. None of what you're saying is necessary. It's a steel shipping container. The framing for his door is not going to carry a load. It's for installing the door and nailers for drywall. I personally would have framed it in a conventional manner. At the very least double 2x4 header. And at least a trimmer under either side of the header. But his framing is fine. It's gonna last a long time. He's probably not going to be in this shop long. Especially if people buy his boards. He's gonna need a lot more square footage.
Pretty sure at least one of them was a fake man, and also a bunch were real women. Statistically speaking this has to be the case. Also there were two squirrels and a slime mold.
I was wondering if the size would be too small for a workshop but it seem perfect for what your doing. Also I’ve never seen someone roller the walls before the cutting in, might try it myself .
This man is incredibly gifted, and I’m sure his surfboards are built that way too. It was worth every minute. I wouldn’t mind a new and larger container for our homestead, but with a shooting platform on the rooftop.
Absolutely! So amazing! I couldn't stop watching this! Only wish Virginia had a slew of people that could do this for customers! Imagine! Would be amazing as well! Sadly, extremely hard to find anyone to even do simple home improvement work. Being an elderly & female homeowner is fir the birds but so are those so-called 'Senior Housing' condos & facilities that tell lies about living the good life, HAH - NOT A CHANCE! The good life is this: 1ST - BUY SOME LAND; 2ND - BUILD A HOME - hopefully a safe & formidable exterior like this structure that Home Insurers love to give premium discounts for them. Structure material that resists weather & nature elements like Borer Bees that bore through wood, and Wasps that make nests, and Ants that invade woodframe homes, plus Spiders that sometimes have a deadly bite! Plus, safer from HURRICANES, TORNADOS, SNOW BLIZZARDS, ETC! I'll build a home out of this structure ANY DAY! Ohhhh, yes! Then #3 - SIT BACK & LIVE THE TRUTHFUL GOOD LIFE and get some travel and fun time in before your life suddenly ends! LIFE IS TOO SHORT....MAKE IT SWEETER THAN SWEET, SAFER THAN SAFE, AND BE GRATEFUL TO GOD FOR BLESSING YOU & YOURS!
Got to give this guy a big thumbs up, very impressive work, well done to him to be doing all of this him self, he's keeping the business costs down. Well done mate 👏
I’m not a surfer but what an awesome build!!!! sat through the whole thing… your build gives people great ideas of what they can do with these things….thx
I was thinking the same. So many other things I would have done before putting the door on. It mitiages risk of damaging it while bringing in all the other materials
An advantage of the external conduit is that the wires have more protection and are more accessible if changes or repairs are needed. There is also a cool industrial aesthetic to it. Running the wiring behind would have offered a cleaner look though.
Looked nice and clean before he put all that electrical piping in and also did nothing on the outside. How ugly would that be to have a shipping container sitting in your yard
I have a few of these and I would never put drywall in, I would do a plywood and then run exposed conduit. With ply you can mount anything anywhere and it weighs the same. Change anything the way you want whenever a layout stops working because it will. Several times.
He can always dress the outside with vinyl or siding of his choice. A little apex roof would look nice with a hexagonal window in front. However, with no apex it would be easier to keep it mobile with less height restrictions for transport.
So many questions: *How would I give the outside a more "residential" look so the neighbors and city don't give me any shit about having a conex box in my backyard? (that's the biggest question) *Total cost? *Square footage of interior?
I built a conventional prefab storage shed in my backyard. I made sure it was the legal 5 ft. from the fence because good relations with neighbors are important to me. I even painted a faux window on the back to make it look less like a blank wall from their side. If somebody put a conex box right next to my fence I'd be upset. .
No windows needed. Windows are weak spots giving robbers an easy chance to enter and rob very expensive tools, materials and boards when no one is around. A shop is not a place to go in to look outside. Lots of jealous ignorant jackasses here trying to sound intelligent. This shop is PERFECT in all aspects and the naysayers are imbeciles who probably have a hard time trying to sharpen a pencil let alone even having 10% usage of any skills.
Many towns and some counties have strict rules about those containers. Better start by checking local zoning laws. In our town they are not allowed. And HOA if applicable.
After I raised up to 325k trading with her I bought a new House and a car here in the states 🇺🇸🇺🇸 also paid for my son's surgery (Oscar). Glory to God.shalom.
Wow that's nice She makes you that much!! please is there a way to reach her services, I work 3 jobs and trying to pay off my debts for a while now!! Please help me.
I'm guessing "for very practical reasons". FFS...First: it's a workshop. The aesthetic is not bad. Second: future modification is easily executed (refer to the first point, workshop needs may change). Third: cost + PIA factor.
Really cool product. But someday Mankind's going to learn that insulation should only go on the outside of structures and not in the middle nor on the inside. I learned this from two of the top architects in their field. The first guy was Malcolm Wells the father of underground homes and the grandfather of all the Green Technology out there today
As you have seen, Tanner from @BendheimBoards not only likes to surf, but he is a handyman who knows how to solve any problem thanks to his great talent for doing DIY projects. Check out his channel for more videos like this! th-cam.com/channels/aTs2gm7IBRitSzh4_3hhWg.html
didnt utilize the hooks
sliding door that was dumb
Nice job
Skills like this don't come from just watching TH-cam videos. It takes a lot of hard work, dedication and experience. He takes pride in his work and it shows. Hats off to all you true skilled craftsmen.
I just realised how hard it is to follow while reading, voiceover is so much easier to follow. Great work on the container, love it.
こんなにきれいに作れるならDIYも楽しいだろうね😁👍
He did great work, but the thumbnail is click bait. It is not the container in this video.
Par for the course with this content creator
Ty now I refuse to watch it and thumbing that hoe down💯
was the reason i started to watch and you saved me some time!
Yeah as soon as I seen the single container I was like ok you can’t build a double wide out of that
I have to thumb this down due to the thumbnail. Not cool.
"Plan the work, then work the plan!" I enjoyed every second of watching this job, and the guy wearing flip-flops the whole time! 😂
Me too!
except, he didn't have much of a plan for many details, like gluing that insulation onto a completely unprepared surface. it's probably already delaminated. this is the problem with how-to videos on youtube; all you see is the immediate results. you need to know how it holds up after years.
Woooooooooow
So beautiful ❤️❤️❤️
I used to build out seacans for construction site offices, workshops and tool storage, also did a bunch of tiny homes too.
I always put a door or large opening window at the opposite end of doors for emergency egress. I would also cut in a 16”x16” opening at the end and put a vent that can be changed to put an a/c unit or extractor fan or just for cross venting.
Those insulation panels are great. Looks like the plastic ribs are 16” on centre? Cut your first sheet of drywall so that all the edges of the board land on the joint and can then be screwed at the edges so your tape doesn’t crack
Another example of don't worry, be happy - live for today.
That's a good idea
@@MAGABeardagree. Not a very good drywall job. Panels should be horizontal leaving less seams and all edges should be at the “studs” otherwise there will be a lot of cracking.
Great job! The only thing I noticed that I'd have done differently would have been to install the ceiling drywall panels first. Let the wall panels provide support for the edges of the ceiling. But it isn't wrong to do it the way you did. The wife and I just finished building our own 1500 sq/ft home ourselves. It took us two years, but it came out looking amazing, and the insurance appraisal came in at over $280,000, so we must have done something right! We've got a few raw vids of our work uploaded.
What’s the difference. It’s glues and screwed into position. You should rely on the wall panels for any support.
@@oggyoggy1299 It helps prevent any potential sagging over time. It's just standard practice. And again, it's what I mentioned I would have done, not what They did.
I would have put the sliding door in towards the end of the build. You have to work around it when making it an early install.
Now that’s what you call a “Handy man”.
Tanner is a man of many skills. Just Awesome brother. You have inspired many of us . Some of us may not have your skills. I maybe willing to try some of what you have done here although on a smaller level . Great job, impeccable workmanship and design. Love it .
They have shipping conainer specific insolation foam now? Holy crap thats amazing!!!!!
Bad idea to put it in. Should be used outside
They're building houses out of them now. Perfect hurricane shelters.
@@SuperDarkrock I know this video is like an work space set up. I wonder which is better for an actual home set up. Probably the spray cause of weather conditions but still the "lego" like setup for building a functional space is amazing.
If you dont plan on moving it regular, it is way cheaper to build a wood framing.
@arcadebit1551 How do you figure that? You can buy a 40 x 8 x 9 shipping container for a little over $2K a piece. 10 of them at that size would give you 3,200 Sq ft of potential usable space.
Besides, a shipping container build is going to be a lot stronger than a wood framed house in the event of tornadoes or hurricanes. Also, they're a bit more fire resistant. They provide great security, as someone can't just kick in your door.
nice workshop
I had a 20' container workshop made from an insulated aluminum reefer container. Built a large shop to replace it, but it's still in use as a storage unit. It was fun and COLD with the A/C going.
Doubt it
Doubt what?
Doubt it
Doubt it.
I think doing construction work with flip-flops is the most impressive thing
California...
Nevada.
Tanner, I love the shop you built. I love the styrofoam that you used for your insulation. I am thinking of using conex container boxes to build a small second home with shop and I had been looking at spray foam but now I will have to take a look at the styrofoam like what you used. The only thing that I would have recommended would have been to run your electrical in the valley of the container and cover it with your styrofoam and drywall making it all inside the walls. Since you are limited on space I would think that you would like to keep the walls clean giving you as much room inside as you can get since you are working on surfboards. Either way, you did one hell of a job. If you make any updates to your new shop I hope you post another video!
If you knew anything you know this video is absolute bunk. He glued styrofoam to the walls and screwed drywall to the styrofoam this is going to fall down all over him he's not actually going to live in this or do anything with it it's not even livable. The electrics terrible this dude's fake
@@XxgoodbudsxX I know plenty and I wish people would do some research before posting. If you would have watched the video you would have known that it was never meant to be lived in and It was a workshop for surfboards.
Just because you might think it is bunk what make you an expert on styrofoam panels? My guess is nothing.
If you would have spent just a little time doing a little research. Instead of bashing someone. Then you might have known that the styrofoam panels are made by InSoFast and they have built in studs. Also they used Adhesive(Loctite PL Premium) not glue but from your original post I would guess that you would consider them to be the same and not understand the difference.
Yes people think they know it all when they know crap. I don't think the drywall was screwed into the foam it was into the solid part of the structure. That's what I would have done but I'm into a wood walls no seaming. But what he did was good. 73
@@ronb6182 если крутить в металлический корпус контейнера, то саморезы будут торчать снаружи. Гипрок прикручен именно к пенопласту
@@TheBasov4 speak English or don't bother. I don't do gibberish! 73
Génial trop beau super travail bravo 👍👍💪👏
Excellent hands on workmanship 👏👌👍
I’m sure the neighbors love to look at that monstrosity every morning while they’re having coffee 😂
I would say, this man understands exactly what he’s doing, he knows a lot more about peel and shear strength than the people making negative comments, these are manufactured load bearing composite foam panels, not old bits of packaging material, with a solid skin they’re incredibly strong and have an excellent stress to weight co-efficient, these are used in construction of walk in cold rooms, and if these people actually read the captions as well they would also realise that his fixtures are actually bolted or riveted to the container walls as well 😊 - Julie
Yes, he’s certainly got his act together. But me, even as a contractor I would probably move to a house that already has a shop, lol.
Why do so many randoms feel the need to tone police?
Actually, this guy was doing so well until he built the frame for his sliding door wrong. Basically two King studs instead of a King and a Jack stud to set the header on. He doesn’t know framing.
@@frankiek2269 no he didn't. None of what you're saying is necessary. It's a steel shipping container. The framing for his door is not going to carry a load. It's for installing the door and nailers for drywall. I personally would have framed it in a conventional manner. At the very least double 2x4 header. And at least a trimmer under either side of the header. But his framing is fine. It's gonna last a long time. He's probably not going to be in this shop long. Especially if people buy his boards. He's gonna need a lot more square footage.
Condensation would be the problem
6.5 million real men sat and watched this workmanship. 💪🏾 bravo!
Add one more then.
Make that 14.2 million; and counting
💯
Pretty sure at least one of them was a fake man, and also a bunch were real women. Statistically speaking this has to be the case. Also there were two squirrels and a slime mold.
And women...
That styrene is so flammable!
Not if it doesn't catch on fire in the first place /s
Soo good!!!
Doing what he loves and has the space/time to do it very good 🎉
Incredible workmanship!
Super cool build. Image how much more awesome that space would be if it was insulated with Clark Foam.
This was executed perfectly. Nice space💯
I was wondering if the size would be too small for a workshop but it seem perfect for what your doing. Also I’ve never seen someone roller the walls before the cutting in, might try it myself .
This man is incredibly gifted, and I’m sure his surfboards are built that way too. It was worth every minute. I wouldn’t mind a new and larger container for our homestead, but with a shooting platform on the rooftop.
Very professional, my respect. You are brilliant. Nina
Nice work!
Amazing what one can do with the hands and the brains if you only put your mind into it.
Absolutely! So amazing! I couldn't stop watching this! Only wish Virginia had a slew of people that could do this for customers! Imagine! Would be amazing as well! Sadly, extremely hard to find anyone to even do simple home improvement work. Being an elderly & female homeowner is fir the birds but so are those so-called 'Senior Housing' condos & facilities that tell lies about living the good life, HAH - NOT A CHANCE! The good life is this: 1ST - BUY SOME LAND; 2ND - BUILD A HOME - hopefully a safe & formidable exterior like this structure that Home Insurers love to give premium discounts for them. Structure material that resists weather & nature elements like Borer Bees that bore through wood, and Wasps that make nests, and Ants that invade woodframe homes, plus Spiders that sometimes have a deadly bite! Plus, safer from HURRICANES, TORNADOS, SNOW BLIZZARDS, ETC! I'll build a home out of this structure ANY DAY! Ohhhh, yes! Then #3 - SIT BACK & LIVE THE TRUTHFUL GOOD LIFE and get some travel and fun time in before your life suddenly ends! LIFE IS TOO SHORT....MAKE IT SWEETER THAN SWEET, SAFER THAN SAFE, AND BE GRATEFUL TO GOD FOR BLESSING YOU & YOURS!
Got to give this guy a big thumbs up, very impressive work, well done to him to be doing all of this him self, he's keeping the business costs down. Well done mate 👏
Awesomeness!
Wow!
Every builders dream... I am so jealous! Rock on guys!
Don’t be this guy wasted a lot of money with his glue onto metal
Absolutely amazing work.
Spotless, always the best way to start a workshop. Ask any mechanic working on racing cars! Cheers mate
Killer setup dude 🤙
All in sandals, Tanner is a legend.
I loved the steel toe safety sandals😂
Its a safety sandal 😄
Very well done.
Một nhà sáng tạo kỹ lực quá tuyệt vời bạn ơi like ĐK ủng hộ bạn đầy đủ
I’m not a surfer but what an awesome build!!!! sat through the whole thing… your build gives people great ideas of what they can do with these things….thx
Every so often TH-cam will send you videos, which you feel they need more than just one like. More like 100 likes. This video was one of them.
Nice job!
Amazing build - probably better quality than most new homes on the market.😊
This man is a genius!!!
The wall taking all the space
That was great....now show us the one from the thumbnail!
I enjoyed watching him cutting and installing the insulation panels.
Very talented man! Excellent work!
Why didn’t you run the electrical before you put the sheet rock up? There’s channels inside that ins so fast insulation for electrical
I was thinking the same. So many other things I would have done before putting the door on. It mitiages risk of damaging it while bringing in all the other materials
An advantage of the external conduit is that the wires have more protection and are more accessible if changes or repairs are needed. There is also a cool industrial aesthetic to it. Running the wiring behind would have offered a cleaner look though.
Looked nice and clean before he put all that electrical piping in and also did nothing on the outside. How ugly would that be to have a shipping container sitting in your yard
I have a few of these and I would never put drywall in, I would do a plywood and then run exposed conduit. With ply you can mount anything anywhere and it weighs the same. Change anything the way you want whenever a layout stops working because it will. Several times.
Electrical is mounted on outside in any metal structures.
Amazing work !
Have two 20-footers one For my shop and one for storage, They are great !
Drywalling is an art!😊🇨🇦👍
Absolutely incredible..!!!! WOW..Awesome results and a fantastic look....You got talent, Bro.! Greetings from Greenville, NC.
I always install ceiling dry wall before I do the walls.
same
The sides help hold the ceiling up at the edges.
Everyone does
That's the correct way.. ceiling is always 1st
Ceilings first always 👍🏻
Not only is he a Jack of All Trades but he’s also the master of them
Nice workspace from the inside. Neighbors are going to love the shipyard look from the outside.😂
Who cares About the neighbors?
@@dannyelpdyahoocombr Nosey neighbors will make you care
Shut up puss
@@Victorious416uh huh
Puss
He can always dress the outside with vinyl or siding of his choice. A little apex roof would look nice with a hexagonal window in front. However, with no apex it would be easier to keep it mobile with less height restrictions for transport.
Class job 👏
Just about the only thing worth a damn in California...loved this video and the man's attention to detail..
Good work 😊🎉🎉🎉
손재주가 너무 부럽네요😊
Amazing 🤩
Amazing, I enjoy viewing. Thank you for sharing
I loved that video
الحمدللّٰه على كل حال دائماً وأبداً
Amen
Very Nice!
So many questions:
*How would I give the outside a more "residential" look so the neighbors and city don't give me any shit about having a conex box in my backyard? (that's the biggest question)
*Total cost?
*Square footage of interior?
I built a conventional prefab storage shed in my backyard. I made sure it was the legal 5 ft. from the fence because good relations with neighbors are important to me. I even painted a faux window on the back to make it look less like a blank wall from their side. If somebody put a conex box right next to my fence I'd be upset. .
Awesome! You've completely transformed its functionality, making it so luxurious and convenient. I really love this video!
Супер!!!!!!!!!!!👍👍👍👍
Impressive, most impressive!!!
A couple of windows would've been nice...
yeah they feel like caves without windows
No windows needed. Windows are weak spots giving robbers an easy chance to enter and rob very expensive tools, materials and boards when no one is around. A shop is not a place to go in to look outside. Lots of jealous ignorant jackasses here trying to sound intelligent. This shop is PERFECT in all aspects and the naysayers are imbeciles who probably have a hard time trying to sharpen a pencil let alone even having 10% usage of any skills.
@@ranger178maybe a man cave? 😂
Likely needs to control the light to see flaws in the board.
A sky light would be cool too
Such a dope video
Many towns and some counties have strict rules about those containers. Better start by checking local zoning laws. In our town they are not allowed. And HOA if applicable.
Mind your own business
Good job!!👍
Hmmm interested to know what you screw sidewall fixtures into? Didn't see any lumber going in initially. Nice though
Foam panels have studs embedded in them.
Plastic studs. That's why he had to attach wood framing for the door so it would be strong enough.
Soo cool man, great job! 👍
After so much struggles I now own a new house and my family is happy once again everything is finally falling into place!!
I'm 37 and have been looking for ways to be successful, please how??
Thanks to my co-worker (Alex) who suggested Ms Claudia Ann Brandon.
She's a licensed broker in the states 🇺🇸
After I raised up to 325k trading with her I bought a new House and a car here in the states 🇺🇸🇺🇸 also paid for my son's surgery (Oscar). Glory to God.shalom.
Wow that's nice She makes you that much!! please is there a way to reach her services, I work 3 jobs and trying to pay off my debts for a while now!! Please help me.
Great work 👍💪💪
Kudos! This is an exquisite build.
First class craftsman,5 star build,well done .....
вау.
люди иногда покупают и чинят такие контейнеры чтоб там жить.
а автор просто сделал мастерскую для серфинга 🎉 круто
Great work! Your are very skilled in many lessons.
The twelve families that lived in that container for 4 month while moving to a new country would probably have loved that insulation
And the ac. Maybe if they like and subscribe next time.
This is 1 disgusting comment wow.
Great job 👏
Why not embed the electrical in the wall prior to drywall?
When you build your container home you could do it that way.
I'm guessing "for very practical reasons". FFS...First: it's a workshop. The aesthetic is not bad. Second: future modification is easily executed (refer to the first point, workshop needs may change). Third: cost + PIA factor.
Where to find that profile foam isolation? Someone knows?
faked video !
@@kevonslims7269What an ignorant response. Kick rocks buddy!
Absolutely awesome my brother!!!!!
👌🏿👌🏿👊🏿👍🏿
It’s hard to believe that this is easier or cheaper than just building a stick shop.
If you price a smaller stick built shed at Home Depot or Lowe's, they go for over $10k.
It is not cheaper.
@@TheHonudiver it is more durable and it's cheaper if you do the work yourself.
@@72Dexter72Manley72 it's a shed, with very little floor space. Cute and durable, but not cost effective.
faked video !
its really cool to see that you built all of this yourself!
Красиво,парень молодец.Только смущает ,что все стеллажи, полочки крепятся по сути к гипсокартону и утеплителю (полистирол,пенопласт).
Чего тут суперского?! Бюджет чумовой, один только контейнер сколько стоит🤦
Может себе позволить .
Не смущает, а шокирует. Потратиться только для того, чтобы снять это видео... Бесполезная работа.
Как раз хотел такой комментарий оставить, но вовремя нашёл этот.
Там пишут, это какой-то суперпластик
Really cool product. But someday Mankind's going to learn that insulation should only go on the outside of structures and not in the middle nor on the inside. I learned this from two of the top architects in their field. The first guy was Malcolm Wells the father of underground homes and the grandfather of all the Green Technology out there today
Fantástico😉
Great work - therapeutic to watch it
👏👏👏 otro supermán americano 🤪
Beautiful work. I'm a professional painter, and the job was 👌🏿 Awsome.
Гипсокартон на саморезах , саморезы в пеностироле😮, а потом еще и полки туда же-фантазер ты меня называла😅
SlavkinoShow, He used self-tapping screws that went into the metal behind the drywall.
@@vaughndavideastman6461 я так и понял😂😂😂 новая технология , даже если не смотреть на длину тех саморезов 😂😂😂
This guy is awesome I wish I had a dad like this.....😔
Nice job bro.
This man did a good job.😊👍👍🤳
The fact that he did the whole job of flip-flops, very impressive😂
Appreciate your work!
That tick foam takes up alot of space. Almost a foot around.
Yea but not insulating isn’t really an option those containers are super hot in summer and freezing in winter.
@@voivod6871you could insulate from the outside and also add paneling and make it look less "containery"