Pallet House I Beam Design

The average life of a Refugee camp is 7 years, with some exceeding beyond 50 years. There is a need for an alternative shelter to the typical tent solution that can transform a temporary living condition into a permanent home. Pallet House by I-Beam Design, was conceived as a transitional shelter for returning Refugees. I-Beam-Design, Suzan Wines, Azin Valy, New York, NY
Video Rating: 4 / 5

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25 Responses to Pallet House I Beam Design

  1. 914light says:

    VERY COOL !!

  2. lynnrusty says:

    @rubadux the whole reasoning behind why shipping containers are being used, i agree totally. Make a nice fort or paintball cover for the kids haha

  3. clownstangler says:

    better off building from fire resistant petrol

  4. clownstangler says:

    better off building from fire resistant petrol

  5. MrAnthonyRizzo says:

    It is soooooo pretty however it seems rather impractical as a tiny home or a green house or a shed, but as an art project it is magnificent. I really love the overall design and esthetics. Also the builder displayed a very clever use of materials. It is a job well done despite that one flaw of the use of space.

  6. caman5 says:

    Could have built a much more efficient and functional structure by disassembling the pallets and recycling the wood and nails…

  7. KnoxBlondie says:

    Nice place of solitude.

  8. indiehipsters says:

    In Due Time<3

  9. Newenglandah1376 says:

    Cool Idea, cheap way to make the kids a great play house.

  10. fixt100 says:

    please have a look into earthbag construction much safer and only requires the bags a shovel and some barbed wire to secure one row to the other

  11. karencentral says:

    I wouldn’t be so critical of this idea. I think it is very important to execute many small projects using all kinds of otherwise discarded materials and sharing those ideas with others. This how meaningful solutions are generated. Even better ideas can emerge from these small experiments. In disaster situations, materials, building expertise, and logistics can vary greatly. There can probably be no one single solution that works in all situations. Thank you for sharing this.

  12. Livingdeadsavior says:

    Makes a great garden house?

  13. pouncey007 says:

    It will be a rotted wooden fence in 10 years

  14. coffeeexmachina says:

    Once on a deployment to Yugoslavia, we stayed in small metal conex containers that were very secure, water tight, and comfortable. We didn’t need a team of engineers to build them on-site, they just trucked them to the location and dropped them off. Can you imagine the small army of workers they’d need to assemble those pallet shacks for thousands of people? And most of the pallets I’ve seen are junk. Typical university types with big ideas and no common sense.

  15. loudspeaker237 says:

    Ide live in one of those

  16. patriotgoatmam says:

    Why would they have to be quakeproof necessarily? Most refugees are there for either political reasons or famine or politically induced famine or just plain war, not earth quakes.

  17. briangunn21 says:

    what is the other material…plastic?

  18. briangunn21 says:

    @deborahbeatty that well*

  19. DIECASTER says:

    “You Know You Mite Be A Redneck”,.. when you are actually thinking about building one of these,… 0_0

  20. deborahbeatty says:

    @gtq838 There’s a pallet factory nearby that makes them that good.

  21. 1423bmxguy says:

    Now set the sombitch on fire

  22. carriemaizey says:

    Beautiful! I’m going to stick one overmy use-less swimming pool :) Design goes exactly with design of my eco house. Thanks for this.

  23. wildbill23c says:

    That’s a pretty cool idea. And once put together would be a pretty sturdy house I would think especially if its made using the heavier pallets that use hard wood.

  24. rubadux says:

    @teknotoast oh, well, so it is a 1:1 design study (model, or dummy), in which stage and case it is acceptable that it doesn’t actually work, and not a prototype, which I think of as a structure that already works under realistic conditions. — In my opinion, functionality supersedes cool in design. Have you ever seen elderly people struggling with a 70s handrail like this: prestigestairs . com/Images/crap.jpg ?

  25. gtq838 says:

    @TWPAirsoft lol, for real, the best pallets i’ve seen in a long time. looks like they actually made the pallet themselves.