Construction
Containers & Offices for Arizona Construction
Job-site storage and offices that fit the site you actually have — and survive a full Arizona summer with a crew in them.
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What we bring
Built around how Arizona job sites actually run
Secure tool & material storage
14-gauge steel and a lockbox that shields the padlock from bolt cutters. The hardest target on most open sites.
Container rentals →
Ground-level offices
Sits low to the ground — a single low step or a short ramp, not a trailer staircase — with a footprint that fits dense infill.
Ground level offices →
Office + storage in one
A 20ft split between office and secure storage. One delivery, one footprint. Our most common job-site build.
Job-site offices →
Conditioned break rooms
Shade, cold water, and air conditioning where the crew is. A heat-illness control, not an amenity.
Multi-container complexes
Conference rooms, plan tables, and private offices joined into one interior. Cheaper than leasing nearby.
Custom builds →
Gate & security kiosks
10ft units at the entrance with sightlines and climate control.
Arizona specifics
What Arizona job sites demand
- Heat is a safety problem, not a comfort problem. A conditioned break space is where your crew cools down before heat exhaustion becomes heat stroke. Size the HVAC for a door that opens every four minutes.
- Infill sites have no room. Tempe, downtown Phoenix, central Tucson — the 40ft often does not fit, and neither does a trailer with its stairs and landing. Ground level and two 20ft units are why we get called.
- Caliche cuts both ways. Excellent bearing surface, miserable to trench. Great for setting containers, hard on anything that needs to go underground.
- Monsoon season is real. July through September, dust and sudden water. Doors that seal matter more than people think until the first storm.
- Theft on open sites. Copper and tools walk. A container with a lockbox is the single most cost-effective security on most sites.
Answers
Construction questions
A 20ft container for tools and materials, and — once there is a superintendent on site full time — a 20ft office. The most efficient version is usually a single 20ft split between office and secure storage: one delivery, one footprint, one lock-up at the end of the day. That covers the large majority of sites we serve.
A 20ft needs about 60 feet of straight clearance; a 40ft needs about 100. On dense infill around Tempe, downtown Phoenix, and central Tucson, the 40ft frequently does not fit and two 20ft units are the answer. Ground-level offices also fit where a trailer cannot, because there is no tongue or staircase footprint to find room for — just the box itself, set low to the ground.
A temporary storage container on an active construction site usually does not need its own permit and is often covered by the project permit. An occupied office with power may be treated differently, and it varies by jurisdiction. Your GC usually knows, and we are glad to share what we have seen across Maricopa and Pima County to point you in the right direction.
Yes — it needs the same truck and clearance as the original delivery, billed as a service call. We will relocate it properly so it stays square and the doors keep sealing. Just give us a call rather than dragging it with a loader, and it moves clean every time.
Where we deliver
Statewide across Arizona
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