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The three-bedroom house of architect Bernard Morin and wife Joyce Labelle, which is made up of seven shipping containers, is shown in St. Adele, Quebec. The shipping containers that make up the homes created by Joyce Labelle and Bernard Morin's company Maison Idekit Home, have also been used as affordable housing. Joyce Labelle speaks with CTV about her and her husband's idea to use recycled shipping containers to build inexpensive houses that can still be stylish.

Shipping containers recycled into dream homes

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CTV News: Genevieve Beauchemin with details
They have traveled around the world, but now shipping containers are increasingly being recycled into living space. And while at first the spaces were basic, the old Maritime containers are now being turned into beautiful homes.

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Date: Sun. Jun. 14 2009 9:46 PM ET

A Quebec architect and his wife have transformed seven old steel shipping containers into a contemporary architectural gem in Ste. Adele, Que., and are hoping now to build a business out the project.

Rather than spend about $400,000 to build their 3,000-square-foot dream home out of wood, the couple decided to use an eco-friendly alternative at the bargain price of $175,000.

The home is the first project of Joyce Labelle and Bernard Morin's company Maison Idekit Home, and the first of its kind in Quebec.

Labelle and Morin began building their three-bedroom house in 2007, and the next year they moved in with their six children. 

The main pieces of the house were the steel shipping containers, six metres high and 2.5 metres wide.

The containers have been arranged in an unconventional Cubist design, taking advantage of the natural slope setting -- nestled in the woods of St. Adele, northwest of Montreal.  Some containers are stacked upright, others on their sides or stacked on top of each other. 

The master bedroom departs from the main portion of the house and a large balcony encircles the back supported by stilts. It's like a big Lego project.

Widows of different sizes and shapes have been cut into the containers. Five inches of urethane insulation have been added to outer layer, and then finally protected by brown wood siding.

Indoors, many of the walls retain the corrugated look of the standard shipping containers. The original dents and serial numbers add to the character of the home.

The container concept has been a dream of Morin's for years, Labelle said.

"He used to be an architect for many years. He had this dream to transform containers, but it wasn't the proper time," she told CTV News.

But these days, building environmentally-friendly housing is also a good business proposition, and this was an ideal time for the couple to build their first prototype.

For the past 15 years architects thinking green have used shipping containers to provide affordable housing. They've also been used for shelters in hurricane-prone areas in the United States, for student housing in Holland and for a residential development in London, England called "Container City."

After withstanding the punishing weather of the high seas, the containers make for durable homes. The hurricane-proof containers are resistant to rust, mould, termites and fire.

Idekit Homes also sells house extensions online that come with materials for roofing, carpentry and insulation. The unit also includes a single sink, drawers, washroom facilities (sink, shower and toilet), a telephone jack and a smoke detector.

The three-year old company based in Adele will be starting two more residential-building projects in the next two months using 12 containers, Labelle said.

Idekit Homes is also planning on offering mobile "businesses in a box," she said.

The fully-insulated containers would be built to meet engineering standards and would come with the supplies to set up a mobile office, she said.

With a report by CTV Montreal's Danielle Hamamjidan

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