A question about these type of container houses, do they get too hot? is it required to have a cooling system as I’ve seen some people have? not many tiny houses have descriptions about that
A lot of people leave the end doors intact so that there can be lots of air flow — I saw one version where the person made inner screen doors that could be used once the outer doors were open. Also, a lot of the heat comes from the heat beating down. In the same version I mentioned, the person’s solar panels provided some shade, but he installed a dropped ceiling (with recessed lighting) that completely insulated the container from heat from the sun.
A lot of people leave the end doors intact so that there can be lots of air flow — I saw one version where the person made inner screen doors that could be used once the outer doors were open. Also, a lot of the heat comes from the sun beating down. In the same version I mentioned, the person’s solar panels provided some shade, but he installed a dropped ceiling (with recessed lighting) that completely insulated the container from heat from the sun.
A question about these type of container houses, do they get too hot? is it required to have a cooling system as I’ve seen some people have? not many tiny houses have descriptions about that
A lot of people leave the end doors intact so that there can be lots of air flow — I saw one version where the person made inner screen doors that could be used once the outer doors were open. Also, a lot of the heat comes from the heat beating down. In the same version I mentioned, the person’s solar panels provided some shade, but he installed a dropped ceiling (with recessed lighting) that completely insulated the container from heat from the sun.
A lot of people leave the end doors intact so that there can be lots of air flow — I saw one version where the person made inner screen doors that could be used once the outer doors were open. Also, a lot of the heat comes from the sun beating down. In the same version I mentioned, the person’s solar panels provided some shade, but he installed a dropped ceiling (with recessed lighting) that completely insulated the container from heat from the sun.