KID REPORTERS’ NOTEBOOK

Grain Bins as Homes?

Brandon with Brett Nelson and Brad Poppen of Sukup Manufacturing
Brandon with Brett Nelson and Brad Poppen of Sukup Manufacturing

Brandon with Brad Poppen (left) and Brett Nelson of Sukup Manufacturing

Across the Midwest, grain bins are a familiar sight. Now, a company in Sheffield, Iowa, is building bins to be used as homes.

Sukup Manufacturing typically makes grain bins for farmers who need a place to store crops. Concerns about hurricanes, earthquakes, and other natural disasters led the company to also make bins called Safe T Homes. Brett Nelson, lead designer at Sukup, says that such shelters are meant “as housing for people who need it.”

Nelson came up with the idea while designing a grain bin for his own home. His design includes heat shields, a loft, and windows with steel screens. Each home is sturdy and comfortable. “The temperature in Safe T homes is at least 10 degrees cooler than being outside in the sun,” Poppen said.

When a disaster strikes anywhere in the world, “we send the bins in shipping containers 10 at a time,” said Brad Poppen, an engineer at Sukup.

Kids climbing in the loft of a Safe T Home. Photo by Sukup Manufacturing

Kids in the loft of a Safe T Home.

SAFE AND AFFORDABLE

So far, most of the Safe T Homes have been shipped to Haiti, which is vulnerable to damaging storms during hurricane season. Since Haiti is a poor country, a lot of people cannot afford decent shelter.

Sukup stepped in to help keep as many people as possible out of danger. During a recent hurricane in Haiti, Nelson said, “60 people were able take shelter in one Safe T Home and escape damage.”

Each Safe T Home costs around $6,000. One home can be built within 24 hours, according to Nelson. Most of the costs are covered by donors in the United States.

Sukup tries to build 100 Safe T Homes a year. The company always has at least 10 homes ready to ship out at any time. A safe and affordable design means that the homes can save lives and help people recover more easily from natural disasters.

A family eating a meal in a Safe T Home. Photo by Sukup Manufacturing

A family eats a meal in a Safe T Home.

 

Top photo courtesy of the author; bottom photos by Sukup Manufacturing