Man Uses 11 Shipping Containers To Build His 2,500 Square Foot Dream House, And The Inside Looks Amazing

Will Breaux Builds 3-Story Container Home Challenging Traditional Architecture
On McGowen Street, designer and builder Will Breaux has transformed a sketch into a striking reality: an 11-container, three-story home that reimagines urban living. Constructed from repurposed shipping containers, the residence combines industrial durability with thoughtful interior design, creating light-filled, functional spaces within steel shells.
Each container was carefully cut, reinforced, and fitted, turning what was once cargo infrastructure into bedrooms, living areas, and common spaces. Far from following a trend, Breaux said his project was motivated by a question: why should homes be fragile, wasteful, or unimaginative?
Shipping containers, designed to withstand oceans and storms, provide fire resistance, structural strength, and a second life that keeps tons of steel out of landfills. The result is both practical and symbolic—a sustainable, unconventional home that challenges assumptions about what “livable” looks like.
Architectural observers say the project serves as a quiet rebellion against conventional building methods. In a city dominated by brick and siding, Breaux’s container home stands not just as a residence, but as an invitation to reconsider how design, sustainability, and creativity can intersect in modern urban living.




