African Design Magazine October 2014 | Page 81

Feature: Architects of Justice The reasons for this are as follows: • Containers are fabricated for the purpose of moving cargo around the world. • Once they are no longer fit to serve as cargo carriers all containers are eventually headed for retirement. • With a little work they can be refurbished for use as a building material. • Re-using them implies that the energy and material originally used to fabricate them, for the purpose of carrying cargo, is carried into a second use as a building material. • In the case of bricks and mortar the primary use is as a building material and in our current world they are seldom re-used which means that once the first building they are used in is demolished the energy and material used to create them is lost. • In addition a container building may even be re-used a third, fourth, fifth time as a building material. There is also a saving on transport which has a direct impact on carbon emissions: • Using a container as a building material requires the container to be taken, by a truck, to a fabricators yard for modification, following which it is delivered to site by truck. • This totals two truck trips. • Conversely a brick and mortar building would require numerous trucks to deliver a range of materials (bricks, cement, building sand etc.) to site which would very quickly add up to more truck trips than it would take to get a finished container building to site. The ultimate goals of sustainability are to Reuse, Reduce and, Recycle. The re-using of shipping containers as a building material ticks all three of these boxes. AD Further recommended viewing on the reuse of shipping containers africandesignmagazine.com 81