Get creative with containers

Dangerous Goods 20ft. (Supplied).

After 20 years delivering containers across Queensland, we’ve learned that the best solutions come from thinking beyond basic storage.

While a container makes excellent lockable storage for your household goods, there are plenty of other ways to put one to work on your property.

Here’s a few…

Mobile workshops that follow the work

Imagine having your tools and equipment right where you need them instead of driving back to the shed multiple times a day. A 20-foot container can be fitted out as a mobile workshop and positioned at whichever paddock you’re working on that season. Add some shelving, a workbench, and good lighting, and you’ve got a functional workspace that moves with your machinery. During critical harvest windows, the time savings alone could justify the investment.

Feed storage that doesn’t feed the rats

Storage sheds work fine until you’re dealing with a mouse or rat plague. Containers offer a completely sealed solution when the doors are shut—raised off the ground with steel construction means no entry points for vermin. If you’re losing seed/feed to spoilage and damage, a few containers dedicated to storage could eliminate those losses entirely. It’s one of those investments that pays for itself quickly when conditions turn against you.

On-site accommodation during busy periods

If you hire seasonal workers, housing them can be a headache. Containers can be modified with insulation, windows, and air conditioning to create basic but comfortable accommodation. They’re not permanent structures, which means there’s often less red tape involved, and they can be relocated or removed when the season ends. For operations that need flexibility with worker housing, it’s worth exploring what’s possible.

Chemical and fuel storage done properly

Meeting workplace health and safety requirements for chemical and fuel storage can be expensive. Containers offer a compliant storage solution—they can be bunded, locked, properly ventilated, and positioned away from other buildings. If you need to keep diesel and chemicals separate and secure, modified containers could tick all the regulatory boxes while keeping costs under control.

The key question

What makes these applications work is matching the solution to a specific problem. Containers are versatile, durable, and can handle Queensland’s tough conditions—but they’re not the answer to everything.

If you’re considering a container for your property, start by asking “what problem am I trying to solve?“ rather than “what size do I need?“ Once you’re clear on the challenge, the right solution usually becomes obvious. And if a container isn’t the best option, that’s worth knowing too!