Do Shipping Containers Work Well As Converted Bunkers? The Answer May Surprise You!

  • There are some benefits to shipping containers. They are not TOTALLY useless. They can still protect you and your possessions from things such as inclement weather, protect your belongings from theft or vandalism and provide obvious storage for many things. But are they good enough and secure enough to protect you when it matters most?

    Unfortunately, the answer is a resounding NO!!

    • Why shipping container bunkers may not be the best idea:

    Shipping containers were built to be stacked. They’re called Intermodal Freight Containers because they can be moved on trains, boats, helicopters, whatever. They are meant to be large portable closets. They were not to be buried or cut into, and certainly weren’t designed to be used as underground bunkers. Once you do that, you start changing their effectiveness. They are not built for lateral pressure and not designed for long-term wetness or acidic/caustic soil.

    Think about an egg. If you push down from the top of an egg, it’ll hold up to a lot more pressure than you’d think. Press it on the sides though and it crushes before you even start pushing. Same thing for a beer can. You can stand on one with no problem but then push your finger into one of the sides and the whole thing crushes. That’s because the force pushes down on itself, which is why shipping containers can hold a lot of weight if they’re stacked. These containers are designed to hold a LOT of weight as long as it’s held in the right spots, but anywhere else and you might as well just bury an enclosed car trailer. Take a look at what happened with this container that ended up being sent to auction.

    • Other reasons why you may want to rethink burying a shipping container – or underground shelters altogether

    What are you trying to accomplish? Sure, you can get a shipping container for a few thousand dollars. Those few thousand dollars buy you a very small room. A room that I’ve lived in for many, many, many months overseas on different deployments. They’re called Containerized Living Units (CLU’s) or Containerized Housing Units (CHU’s). I used them just to sleep in, along with anywhere from one to three roommates and I gotta tell you, it’s not fun. I couldn’t imagine being stuck in one of them with other people for months at a time.

    That’s not even counting the actual logistics of not leaving the container, including human waste, trash, emotional pressure and the actual tactics involved. If you’ve ever been in combat in an urban environment, you know just how bad of a decision it is to hole up in a room with only one entrance. One entrance means one exit. If they control the entrance, they control the exit, and they have a lot more room and supplies outside than you could have in a bunker.

    Not to mention the fact that shipping containers are prone to have toxic paint and chemicals in the wood, including fumigation sprays that will likely require you to replace all the wood and strip all the paint to be safe.

    Enough of that for now though because there are ways to plan around these problems but I wanted to mention them because people who are drawn to burying shipping container bunkers are the same idiots who’ll not consider what I’ve mentioned already, let alone the tactical disadvantage of being buried in a box a few feet below the surface with limited air supply and exits.

    The plain and simple truth is that a shipping container is designed to be stacked and have pretty much zero horizontal external pressure. Burying it will add a LOT of side pressure, especially if you’re in a rain-prone environment or have certain soils. They’re just not built for that. Might as well just build a frame and fill it with cement in the walls for a lot cheaper.

    As long as it’s sealed, you can make it useable if you spend some time reinforcing the walls, depending on the soil and rainfall in the area. Just make sure that you don’t bury a 9-ish foot container under 6 feet of earth in an area that has a water table 12 feet under the ground. If you want to see some common specifications of shipping containers, check out this wikipedia article.

    Basically, a shipping container is pretty good for above-ground fortification as long as you fix any chemical problem. You can decide to bury one (or more) but to do it properly (not even counting the tactics and other considerations), you’ll have to spend a lot more money to make it right than just buying and delivering the containers.

    So there you have it. All in all, it was a great idea. one that I know many people have utilized however you may want to think twice and warn your friends if they have one that they may want to rethink their SHTF plan.

    Your best bet now and always to ensure your families survival is to meet with a professional survival contractor and let them help you decide on what works best for you and your families needs.

    For more information on this you can always contact our source over at Graywolf Survival.

     

     



    16 Comments

    1. Brandon Franklin said:

      I’ve seen a lot of things regarding burying shipping containers. The general consensus is “don’t do it”, at least without expensive reinforcement. I’m not sure but I’d be willing to bet you could have a lead lined concrete bunker installed for just a little bit more than what it’d cost to reinforce a container. If you are a skilled DIYer then it could probably be done on the cheep.

    2. Jim Dyson said:

      Not buried with out some kind of support around it. They stack which is nice but once weight is spread across the tops they collapse.

    3. Jilliane Clark said:

      I seen some they have been in the ground for awhile and the sides have caved in. Not what I want.

    4. Raymond Dowd said:

      If you bury it you must reinforce it, seal it against leaks. Plus cut holes for intake air . Plus plumbing water and toliet plus septic system. Wire it for electrical. Best to build it above ground and cover it to camouflage it with under growth like brambles and kudzu.

    5. Laura Brown said:

      You have to make sure you support the sides. You can’t bury them without doing that, they are meant to hold weight from top to bottom but not from the sides so they will collapse without reinforcement.

    6. Derek Wheeler said:

      Metal rusts… Not anything I’d use above ground, let alone as a buried bunker.

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