Humanities Information

Some Villain Thoughts About a Container Village


Preview: "Shipping containers" have yet nothing to do with "housing" in Romania. Is there any chance that they will soon? Belonging to Eastern European block, released in 1989 from communist oppression, Romania has already experienced 15 years of less and less stunning freedom.

-----------

I read a few articles about shipping container housing. It took me about five minutes to realize this subject makes your mind frolic endlessly on an imaginary (however not utopian) land. Those articles belong to some very respectable gentlemen (at least that was the impression they made on me, at first reading) - that praise living in shipping containers.

Let's go cheap

A 40 foot-long shipping container could reach to $1,500-2,000. I started asking myself questions about how this subject could become a solution for homeless people in Romania (that's where I live), where flats cost (at least) $20,000. And they're not 40 foot-long.

At the same time, Romania has a lot of peripheral categories: the poor, the old, the young, the unemployed, the pitman, the gypsy, the orphan, the student.

Could they benefit from this recent discovery that living in some kind of shoe-boxes can be really cool and trendy? I'll try to answer that.

A few advantages from a Romanian point of view: for peripherals it's cheap, for artists it's unconventional the subject is quite green you can "camp" anywhere you want (Romania has not few spectacular landmarks) the result you get using shipping containers can be anywhere between "plastic" and "platinum", practical and fantasy, serious and ludic - you can move your "house" around. At least that's what LOT/EK people are trying to prove by their "mobile dwelling unit" project. Earthquakes, floods and sliding land are some serious problems in Romania, so being able to leave the place at a snail's pace may be useful. - most Romanians live in blocks of flats that pretty much look like overcrowded shipping containers (and usually inadequate to modern standards: water supply, heating, insulation, comfort etc). Could shipping container houses actually mean a reasonable escape? Maybe, if they are properly transformed and adapted to living conditions. - A sad fact is that few Romanians actually have the possibility to pay $2,000 cash for a house-to-be.

If you are not a Romanian 2007 could be, in the optimist version, the year that Romania will join EU. Compared to Western standards, Romanian land properties are very cheap. Land-purchase conditions are the same for both Romanians and foreigners.

A few observations to Mr Doug Casey's reportage about his Romanian adventure (http://www.escapeartist.com/efam17/Romania.html).

Given the reasons Mr. Casey liked Romania, I quickly made some "counts". The average Romanian needs to work (at a medium economy salary rate of $11 per day) 2272 days to buy an apartment; or, 103 months (I excluded weekend days of course, they don't pay); or 9 years. This without considering any interest. And supposing that this particular individual doesn't eat, dress or pay rent. Just work his butt off. In real terms, he needs more than nine years, probably 25. That's pretty much for an average ephemeride that lives an average 75 years life.

Mr. Casey's mentioning of the brief trial and execution of the Ceausescu couple has suddenly brought to my senses a smell of a Dogville atmosphere that I have never before associated with Romania. Of course, I'm talking about the movie dog-ville, not the real one.

That takes me back to the initial idea that shipping container housing is a subject that gives you some chalk drawn-squares (or parallelepipeds in our case) that make you want to play like kids do with their Lego pieces.

But here are a few more questions:

Where do you find those imaginative grown-ups that are able to play with shipping containers in a coherent / artful manner?

What would their work be worth in the end?

How much do utilities cost (water, energy, gas supply etc.)?

Would the authorities be open to hear this as an alternative solution to traditional housing?

About The Author

Iulia Pascanu

E-mail address: iulia.pascanu@neomedia.ro

Iulia Pascanu writes for http://www.shipping-container-housing.com where you can find information about building with shipping containers and shipping containers industry.


MORE RESOURCES:

06/01/2024
How does the digital transformation of agriculture affect carbon emissions? Evidence from China’s provincial panel data

Humanities and Social Sciences Communications, Published online: 01 June 2024; doi:10.1057/s41599-024-03223-x

How does the digital transformation of agriculture affect carbon emissions? Evidence from China’s provincial panel data

more info


06/01/2024
Beyond central-local relations: the introduction of a new perspective on China’s environmental governance model

Humanities and Social Sciences Communications, Published online: 01 June 2024; doi:10.1057/s41599-024-03082-6

Beyond central-local relations: the introduction of a new perspective on China’s environmental governance model

more info


06/01/2024
Exercising control in media during Covid-19: the “Stay at Home” campaign on Twitter in Greece

Humanities and Social Sciences Communications, Published online: 01 June 2024; doi:10.1057/s41599-024-03240-w

Exercising control in media during Covid-19: the “Stay at Home” campaign on Twitter in Greece

more info


06/01/2024
Exploration of a method for insight into accessibility design flaws based on touch dynamics

Humanities and Social Sciences Communications, Published online: 01 June 2024; doi:10.1057/s41599-024-03234-8

Exploration of a method for insight into accessibility design flaws based on touch dynamics

more info


05/31/2024
Hesitant or determined? The influence of social and environmental factors on settlement decision-making of rural in-migrants: evidence from Dali, China

Humanities and Social Sciences Communications, Published online: 31 May 2024; doi:10.1057/s41599-024-03188-x

Hesitant or determined? The influence of social and environmental factors on settlement decision-making of rural in-migrants: evidence from Dali, China

more info


05/31/2024
Unemployment, hustling, and waithood: exploring Zimbabwean urban male youth’s utilisation of ICT in soccer betting

Humanities and Social Sciences Communications, Published online: 31 May 2024; doi:10.1057/s41599-024-03230-y

Unemployment, hustling, and waithood: exploring Zimbabwean urban male youth’s utilisation of ICT in soccer betting

more info


05/31/2024
The impact of corporate social responsibility in technological innovation on sustainable competitive performance

Humanities and Social Sciences Communications, Published online: 31 May 2024; doi:10.1057/s41599-024-03193-0

The impact of corporate social responsibility in technological innovation on sustainable competitive performance

more info


05/31/2024
Breaching boundaries: reflections on the journey towards a transdisciplinary arts and sciences undergraduate degree programme to address global challenges

Humanities and Social Sciences Communications, Published online: 31 May 2024; doi:10.1057/s41599-024-03165-4

This commentary reflects upon the progress, limitations, and some of the pitfalls of one UK London-based HE institution’s development of a trans-disciplinary arts and sciences undergraduate degree programme specifically designed to build knowledge and confidence in students to both reflect upon and effectively respond in constructive and just ways to some of the ‘global challenges’ facing society. It does not challenge the importance and necessity of specialist expertise but sees the potential of a trans-disciplinary approach to education as not just complementary but increasingly valuable to a wider range of graduates. Graduates needed to lead systems change and facilitate wider appreciation and practical understanding of multidimensional problem-solving, the importance of stakeholder engagement and more holistic systems thinking, something that should not be limited to those who have the opportunity and means to study Masters or PhD degrees. As one of a few UK universities that offer inter-disciplinary or trans-disciplinary undergraduate degrees and with some added insights from a former colleague who now works on University College London’s (UCL) interdisciplinary BASc, we offer the following suggestions and advice for those interested in working towards developing trans-disciplinary provision. This includes the development of a financial model that allows students and staff to work between departments or faculties; an administrative structure that promotes communication and information sharing between different departments without compromising the requirements of data protection; the buy-in and support of senior leaders who both understand and can advocate for the benefits of a trans-disciplinary approach and explicit university-wide recognition of the staff who work on such programmes in terms of career progression and support for the trans-disciplinary research they undertake.

more info



home | site map | contact us