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Affiliation(s)

Department of Architecture, School of Applied Sciences, Central University College, Miotso 00233, Ghana

ABSTRACT

The population growth in Ghana has assumed an alarming rate. The provision of urban infrastructure and housing has however not been commensurate with the demand especially in housing, thus the acute housing deficit. The idea of using shipping containers as a building component is by no means new in the Accra Metropolis as most shipping containers are re-constructed architecturally and used for temporary accommodation needs like storage, make-shift shops, emergency shelters and site offices. The concept of using these shipping containers as modular building components in architecture however, is still foreign to building practitioners and the nation at large. This research paper set out to use the containers not for luxury apartments but to harness the merits of availability, low – cost of resource, speed of construction and structural stability of the International Standard Organization (ISO) shipping containers in addressing the housing deficiency problem in the nation by meeting the basic need of shelter. Based on the hypothesis of being a cheaper alternative to the concrete and sand-crete blocks, which is the main construction technology used now, similar house types of both technologies were compared to ascertain the variation as part of the methodology for this research. The methodology also included literature reviews and case studies. The scope of this study was limited to 2-bedroom single-storey and multi-storey house types in Accra, the capital city of Ghana. In the final analysis however, this research proved that the container house is not cheaper than the traditional blockwork and concrete construction method is and is better used in temporary accommodation, in situations where time is essential.

KEYWORDS

Accra, cost analysis, housing, shipping containers.

Cite this paper

Journal of Civil Engineering and Architecture 19 (2025) 196-207

doi: 10.17265/1934-7359/2025.04.005

References

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[2]   Bank of Ghana, (2007). “The Housing Market in Ghana” Bank of Ghana. Accra.

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[4]   Freightraders, (2010.) “Container Specs” Freight Traders, Accessed 28 May 2013.

[5]   Ghana Shippers Authority (2011), “Shipping Containers Statistics” Accessed December 20, 2012.

[6]   Kotnik, Jure. (2008). Container Architecture: This Book Contains 6441 Containers. Barcelona: Links International.

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[8]   Okeniyi, E.I. (2013). Container Housing for Middle Income Earners in Ghana. Thesis dissertation, Department of Architecture, Central University College, Miotso, Ghana.

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[10]  Slawick, H, Bermann, J. Buchmeier, M. Tinney, S. (2010). Container Atlas: A Practical Guide to Container Architecture. Berlin. Gestalten.

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