Mining
Containers & Field Offices for Arizona Mining
Hardened storage and field offices for operations where the nearest hardware store is an hour away and a failed part is a multi-day problem.
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What we bring
Built for Arizona mining operations
Hardened storage
Parts, tools, and consumables secured on site. Steel, sealed, and locked.
Field offices
Conditioned space at the working face rather than back at the main office.
Ground level offices →
Workforce housing
Sleeping units, restroom and shower blocks, kitchen and dining for remote crews.
Workforce housing →
Equipment & maintenance bays
Roll-up doors, bench space, power, and ventilation for real work at the site.
Custom builds →
Break & cooling stations
On an Arizona mine site in July this is a life-safety control, full stop.
Dry & sample storage
Sealed, climate-controlled storage for core, samples, and anything that must not take on moisture or dust.
Regional
Copper country
Arizona is a mining state, and its operations sit a long way from supply.
We serve operations across Pima County around Tucson, Cochise County down toward Sierra Vista and the border, Pinal County, and remote sites statewide. What these have in common is distance: from town, from a supply house, and from anyone who can fix a specialized component.
That distance is the actual design input. We build with standard parts, real redundancy, and dust sealing that assumes a mine site rather than a parking lot — so your unit keeps working hard long after the newness wears off.
Answers
Mining questions
Standard, widely available components — because an exotic part with a two-week lead time is a two-week outage when you are two hours from anywhere. Redundancy where failure is expensive. Serviceability by whoever is actually on site rather than by a specialist who has to drive out. And dust sealing and filtration, which matter far more on a mine site than in town and are cheap to do properly at build time.
Usually, yes. Just tell us about the access road up front — a tilt-bed truck needs a road it can use and roughly 100 feet of straight clearance at the destination for a 40ft. A quick photo of the approach lets us bring the right truck and set your unit the first time.
Yes. Sleeping units, restroom and shower blocks, kitchen and dining, and common space — configured to crew size. The long-lead items on a remote camp are almost always power, water, and septic rather than the buildings. Sort those early; they decide the schedule.
Corten steel handles dust, sun, and abuse well — this is close to what containers were built for. The details we add matter most on a mine site: door seals, HVAC filtration, and sealed electrical. We spec all of it for grit and dust from the start, so the whole unit holds up to real mine-site conditions.
Where we deliver
Statewide across Arizona
Ready to get started?
Tell us what you need and we'll send pricing, delivery timing, and availability within one business day.