During my mother's childhood in her country of origin, a neighbor might swing by your house and deliver a plate full of chow, delicacies or baked goods. Local custom was that when you returned the plate to them a few days later, you never gave it back empty, but loaded it with the fruits of your own kitchen labors.
When I was a waiter my boss used to dress me down if he caught me traveling empty-handed between the ground floor and the storeroom in the basement. He had grown up in a four-storey Brooklyn brownstone, he explained, and his mother would admonish him if he traveled between floors without carrying anything. "There's always something that needs to be brought up or down," she'd say.
These lessons are universal, and no one knows them better than logistics coordinators for shipping companies. If a container crosses the Pacific loaded with Toyotas and goes back empty, that's a huge waste of fuel. But despite their best efforts, it happens all the time. And even if they weigh different amounts, 1,000 empty containers take up the same amount of space as 1,000 full containers, meaning the ships are forced to make the same amount of trips each way.
That will change if Dutch entrepreneur René Giesbers' Cargoshell folding shipping container concept makes it into production. When empty, the Cargoshell can be folded flat, taking up only 25% of its original volume. Ships can carry four times as many empty containers as full. And the Cargoshell is made from composites rather than steel, which give off far less CO2 during the production process.
A video of the prototype is below. Non-Dutch-speakers will not be able to follow what they're talking about, but you can fast forward to 1:20 to see the ten seconds where they unfold the thing.
Create a Core77 Account
Already have an account? Sign In
By creating a Core77 account you confirm that you accept the Terms of Use
Please enter your email and we will send an email to reset your password.
Comments
How do the doors work on this concept?
1) The shipping container probably isn't as strong as other shipping containers so you can't stack them as high as regular containers because they're prone having the latches shear off and fold up.
2) They probably cost 10X the the price of a regular shipping container and the extra cost doesn't justify the savings over the lifetime of the container.
3) They only have a prototype and need funding to actually start producing them.
Am I right?
In short translation: This guy sells boilers and heating systems so has little authenticity with containers or harbors. But he saw some containers and thought they where in dire need of an innovation. So he started tinkering with his sister and brother and came up with this foldable composite container. It's pure TRIZ in action. Simple yet genius. This container doesn't only weigh less it also takes very little space if empty freeing up place for more filled containers. Which is a good thing for ships.
Love it!...a lot
T