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Colorado’s largest community built from shipping containers is providing a housing road map

Jerry Champlin initially planned a dozen rentable tiny homes built around a courtyard on a residential lot in downtown Buena Vista. After nearly four years of approvals and working with the town, Champlin, a first-time developer, has built what is considered the largest community of shipping containers in the state.
Brian Malone
/
Special to The Colorado Sun
Jerry Champlin initially planned a dozen rentable tiny homes built around a courtyard on a residential lot in downtown Buena Vista. After nearly four years of approvals and working with the town, Champlin, a first-time developer, has built what is considered the largest community of shipping containers in the state.

Jerry Champlin had a plan to help ease the housing crunch in Buena Vista. Why not build a dozen tiny homes around a central courtyard on a residential lot a block from downtown and rent them out for $1,000 a month?

He bought a small home on a big lot in 2019 and floated his plan. Six years later, he’s about to start renting. But the plan, pushed and shoved by local rules and soaring costs, has changed.

He’s now stacked 21 shipping containers around the courtyard in a community he’s called. He built 16 units in 17 of those steel boxes and the rest are community spaces for office work, storage and studios.

And his rents have climbed a bit. He’s got furnished 160-square-foot units available for $1,150. The larger containers, about 640 square feet, are renting for $2,650.

“I ended up with more of an art project that you get to live inside versus an affordable village of tiny homes,” says the first-time developer whose background includes a civil engineering degree and building a technology company.

It is one of the largest residential communities built entirely of shipping containers in the country. And it’s one of several new housing projects — some traditional and some innovative — about to open in Buena Vista.

Jerry Champlin, a first-time developer, has built a 16-unit rental community out of shipping containers in downtown Buena Vista. “It’s been a fun adventure,” he says.

“To do a creative project like this. You have to be willing to take on a lot of risk and, in hindsight, I had to be kind of clueless. I did not know exactly what I was getting myself into, but I needed to have the wherewithal to get through it,” says Champlin, who has lived in a 750-square-foot home for the past four years with his three kids and wife. “If I had known what I know now, in 2021, I would have stuck with my original plan and figured out how to get it through. I would have found a way to force it through, and it would have cost a lot less to build, and we would be up and operational and done a few years ago.”

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