Agriculture
Container Storage for Arizona Agriculture
Dry, rodent-resistant, lockable storage on the property — for operations with no permanent outbuilding and no interest in building one.
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Uses
What Arizona agriculture stores
Feed & seed
Dry, sealed, and rodent-resistant. Ventilation matters in Arizona heat — a sealed box in July is hard on anything heat-sensitive.
Irrigation parts & equipment
Pipe, fittings, pumps, and tools locked up on the property instead of scattered across it.
Tack & ranch supplies
Saddles, tack, and supplies kept dry and secure without building a tack room.
Refrigerated produce storage
Field-side cold storage that protects margin between harvest and the packing house.
Reefer rentals →
Field offices
A conditioned place to do paperwork and get out of the sun during harvest.
Ground level offices →
Workforce housing
Seasonal crew housing for operations that bring in labor at harvest.
Workforce housing →
Regional
Yuma, Pinal County, and the seasonal spike
Arizona agriculture does not run on a flat schedule, and neither should the way you rent storage.
Yuma is one of the most productive winter vegetable regions in the country. Demand for on-site storage and cold storage spikes hard with the season and eases after — which is exactly what rental is for. Rent the months you actually need instead of paying for a year you do not.
Pinal County — Casa Grande, Maricopa, Queen Creek — runs a mix of row crop, dairy, and increasingly rapid residential encroachment on land that was farmed last year. Operations there often need storage that can move as the footprint changes.
Tell us your season and we will structure the term to match it.
Answers
Agriculture questions
Sealed steel with intact door gaskets is genuinely rodent-resistant — a real step up from a wood shed or a barn stall. The doors are the only meaningful entry point, and we confirm the gaskets before a unit leaves the yard, so your feed and seed stay protected. For dry, secure ranch storage, this is about as good as it gets without putting up a building.
Very common, and it works well. Dry, sealed, lockable, and rodent-resistant. Two practical notes: heat is real, so anything heat-sensitive needs ventilation or insulation; and a well-ventilated container manages condensation far better than a sealed one in a climate with big day-night temperature swings.
Yes. Yuma is one of the most productive winter growing regions in the country, and field-side cold storage protects margin between harvest and the packing house. The one thing to plan for is power — most reefers need three-phase, so if you do not have it we will help you size a generator for the unit. Sort that out up front and your cold storage runs smoothly all season.
Agricultural land and unincorporated county parcels are often treated differently from city lots, and storage containers frequently face fewer restrictions there. It does vary by county and by whether the container is plain storage or a structure with power, so we are glad to share what we have seen to help you check with your county.
Where we deliver
Statewide across Arizona
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Tell us what you need and we'll send pricing, delivery timing, and availability within one business day.