Home Magazine

Adventurous Apartment Building Made of 36 Shipping Containers

By Dwell @dwell
Originally published in  The New Prefab as  Stacked High Three dozen shipping containers find a safe port in a modern apartment building in Mexico. Slideshow Prefab housing unit in Mexico made of shipping containers and concrete

La Aduana is an eight-unit apartment building in León, Mexico, made from 36 shipping containers.

Image courtesy of Jaime Sicila. Project  La Aduana Architect  Mario Plasencia

In León, Mexico, Adrián López Menduett sought to create an architecturally adventurous apartment building. After he bought a parcel in the Piletas neighborhood, the city made plans to construct a road across part of his land, trimming the buildable area to just under 2,300 square feet—about a third of the original footprint. This neccessitated a vertically oriented design. To Mario Plasencia, the architect Menduett hired, shipping containers offered a way to keep costs down, to build sustainably with recycled materials, and to use an unexpected construction method. “The containers helped us get noticed,” Plasencia says. “Bringing people out of their comfort zone is a challenge. Everything here is built with the same materials, colors, and shapes.”

Finding the 36 containers needed to complete the eight apartments—a number determined by the number of parking spaces that could fit on the lot—proved difficult. Plasencia scoured many of Mexico’s ports to get them. He repainted each container in its original hue, creating a prismatic exterior. Most of the interior walls were covered with plaster panels for insulation and acoustics—“but it was important to leave one container wall exposed,” Plasencia says, “to preserve that sense of texture.” 

Slideshow

Prefab housing unit in Mexico made of shipping containers with wood staircase

Mario Plasencia, the architect, used wood to wrap the exterior stairwell. 

Image courtesy of Jaime Sicila.

Back to Featured Articles on Logo Paperblog