My wife and I have recently become serious preppers and since we have no basement or other place for constant temperature storage, we were thinking about burying an alumnium shipping container in one of the ditches on our farm and I was wondering if anyone has any imput on whether this would work or not. I think it will work because of the following reasons:
1. Alumnium won't rust..... I'm still going to coat it with alumnium sealing paint (the type used to seal tin roofs).
2. The units are watertight..... Still going to run drainage pipes under the gravel base that it's going to rest on and with the slope of the ditch running away from and down from the unit, that should insure proper drainage. I'm also going to cover the top to keep standing water off of it.
3. The units are never moist inside..... I have another shipping container that's above ground and it's never moist inside, probably because of the oak floor.
4. Cost.... At $1500 for the 8 foot 6 inch by 45 foot unit, no more than $2000 for the dozer work, and $500 for gravel, pipes, and paint, I don't think I could pay skilled laborers to pour a slab, build cinder block walls, and put a roof and doors on an underground storage area 382.5 sq feet for anywhere close to what I would pay to bury the unit.
My concern is I have overlooked something that would make it difficult, impractical, or impossible to do this. I'm asking for imput both positive and negative because the last thing I want is to do this and find out that it won't work or I forgot something. I look forward to your comments.
Thanks and God bless.
1. Alumnium won't rust..... I'm still going to coat it with alumnium sealing paint (the type used to seal tin roofs).
2. The units are watertight..... Still going to run drainage pipes under the gravel base that it's going to rest on and with the slope of the ditch running away from and down from the unit, that should insure proper drainage. I'm also going to cover the top to keep standing water off of it.
3. The units are never moist inside..... I have another shipping container that's above ground and it's never moist inside, probably because of the oak floor.
4. Cost.... At $1500 for the 8 foot 6 inch by 45 foot unit, no more than $2000 for the dozer work, and $500 for gravel, pipes, and paint, I don't think I could pay skilled laborers to pour a slab, build cinder block walls, and put a roof and doors on an underground storage area 382.5 sq feet for anywhere close to what I would pay to bury the unit.
My concern is I have overlooked something that would make it difficult, impractical, or impossible to do this. I'm asking for imput both positive and negative because the last thing I want is to do this and find out that it won't work or I forgot something. I look forward to your comments.
Thanks and God bless.
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