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Bangor resident Chad Walton wants
everyone to go to Google and search “shipping container homes.”
Walton purchased the former Lemforder building Monday and soon will be
making modular buildings — homes, offices, dorms, emergency shelters and
others — using recycled, prefabricated shipping containers.
“It’s crazy what we can do with them,” he said Tuesday at his new desk
within the old Lemforder plant, which is now SnapSpace Solutions Inc.
“We’re not creating the wheel — just nobody is doing it here, so we’re
going to.”
Container City, a four-story building in London that is filled with work
studios and apartments built in 2001 using shipping containers as the
building blocks, is just one example.
Walton said customers can design their buildings to look like anything,
such as a traditional New England home, and can cover them with vinyl,
brick or any other siding.
“Once you put on the siding and trim them, they look cool,” he said,
adding that each of the buildings will go up quickly and be Energy
Star-certified.
Shipping containers can be connected and stacked to create modular,
efficient spaces, and a range of creature comforts can be added easily.
The containers are designed to be indestructible and are hurricane- and
tornado-rated, Walton said.
Walton, a Houlton native, has been running businesses in the Bangor area
for 24 years. Among his properties is the Houlton International Corp.
facility, which he owns under Aktem Real Estate Investments.
His company, Turbine Specialist LLC, conducts metal finishing of
turbines at GE Power Systems in Bangor and finishes gun barrels for
Bushmaster Firearms in Windham, and he builds homes under Walton Homes
Inc.
He started thinking about using shipping containers for prefabricating
buildings a decade ago, but really got going on the idea after Hurricane
Katrina hit in 2005.
“The biggest key is the speed in which we can respond with housing,”
Walton said. “With Katrina, they didn’t have a place to feed people. We
could plop down a cafeteria in hours. Nobody else can do that.”
Walton said he has talked with the Federal Emergency Management Agency
and the Red Cross and hopes to sell them disaster relief units since
they can “put them up, use them, tear them down and reuse them,” he
said.
Maine Rural Development Authority is supplying some of the project’s
funding, and Walton is working with two
University of Maine programs — the
Knowledge Transfer Alliance and the Advanced Manufacturing Center.
Walton needed a large facility, and the 126,000-square-foot former
Lemforder plant is almost big enough. He also will use his
60,000-square-foot building in Houlton.
“This facility is going to be a prototype and manufacturing facility,
and the Houlton facility is going to be strictly manufacturing,” Walton
said.
The purchase price of the Brewer property was not disclosed. It had been
listed at $2.5 million.
The Brewer property’s proximity to transportation infrastructure is a
major plus for moving the finished product.
“We can put it on a train, a boat or on the highway,” Walton said. “When
it gets to the site, it’s going to snap together quickly.”
To prefabricate and sell the structures, Walton said, he will need
engineers, designers, electricians, carpenters, plumbers, welders,
painters and salespeople and would like to hire “as many [former
Lemforder employees] as we can to manufacture these.”
Lemforder officials announced in January 2009 that their Brewer plant,
which once employed around 400 people making tie-rod ends and ball
joints for several vehicle makers, would close in mid-2010.
Their last shipment of goods left Brewer this week, so the timing
couldn’t be better, said D’arcy Main-Boyington, Brewer’s economic
development director.
“This is great news,” she said, adding that in addition to how fast the
buildings can be put together, “the price is less than stick-built,
considerably.”
No matter what customers want, the modular buildings can be modified to
suit their needs, Walton said.
“What can you dream up?” he said. “If you want something — snap — we can
put it together.”
A copyright story
from the Bangor Daily News by Nok-Noi Ricker, Tuesday, February 1, 2011.
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