![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhKORCfRJFyTWyTX5vJZ1juma382FyVgWPXffCMNWHOwOmjNceXs2UMHRI1R_G3mr4krBBlKqxftO0wnP_2oel9dpKhcTghKYSL3bDKi0CJK1N2KLwRkINrZ3Rzmve-RyxGs_iGRwTwLP-2/s1600/Shipping-Container-Home-Brooklyn-1.jpg)
Williamsburg couple Michele Bertomen and David Boyle bought a 6×12-meter lot that had been vacant for 60 years, squeezed between two brick buildings.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEggVhWCX5C8LeNlxRMub-0dQNCzFC65czc__2Ab3J7m_7OgIQ1V25ch0wXLVvSBqn7DQVZaOwvSptgB0t8O-y2M5382UqaUCXCz3uDHVt6wJk4u8sJhkZ5zFm3Xw3M33t6gEC9Hq-vlUzBO/s1600/Brooklyn-Shipping-Container-Home-2.jpg)
Conventional building materials would have stretched their budget, so they set out to design and build a shipping container house with a total cost of just $50,000 (not including the lot).
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