After his longtime home was damaged in Hurricane Irma, a local artist/collector made the "impractical" choice to patchwork together a metal base for himself and his eccentric possessions.

Welcome to Different Strokes, a look at unique home design choices that beg for further explanation.
In 2017, artist, collector, and former gallery owner Rob DePiazza was in the early stages of building an art studio using shipping containers, but Hurricane Irma had other plans. Two days after the Category Five storm tore through St. Augustine, Florida, he surveyed the rubble that a 70-year-old water oak tree had made out of his house of 30 years and decided to pivot from building a shipping container studio to a full-blown shipping container home.
Building with hulking steel freight containers is a specialized niche. Crucially, he’d already connected with Gainsville-based Stephen Bender, an architect who works with them exclusively. "We did the foundation first, but as [the containers] came to the site, one by one, we installed them like Legos," DePiazza says.
Rob DePiazza worked with architect Stephen Bender to build his shipping container house after his longtime home in St. Augustine, Florida, was damaged by a fallen tree during Hurricane Irma.
Photo: Rob DePiazza
The result of this disaster-prompted change is the Prince Road Container House, a 1,600-square-foot space comprising nine containers that was a DIY operation with Rob, who runs a local screen printing business, at the helm, with help from some of his tradesperson friends (none of whom, Rob says, had prior experience in container construction). The "impractical" decision to build a container house was even more so, he adds, as he was "hobbling around on crutches" in the midst of a series of hip surgeries.
The home has three bedrooms and two bathrooms and a colorful exterior mural by Italian artist Riccardo Nannini. Its central nervous system is a loft-like living room with a 20-foot ceiling made by taking the roof of two of the containers, inverting one, and stacking them together. Inside, the decor reflects Rob’s proclivity for art projects: there are gloopy ceramics by California artist Philip Kupferschmidt, discarded vintage oddities, and unconventional custom details, including plywood doors wood-burned with live edge plaques etched with the faces of the "world"s ugliest dogs" (by artist Lois Sander). The walls display the impressive art collection that Rob has amassed over the years, including a Keith Haring poster he bought at the Pop Shop in New York City, an original piece by Wayne White (one of the artists behind Pee-wee’s Playhouse), a serigraph by Raymond Pettibon, and works by some of his artist friends.
Gallery-worthy collection aside, the structure makes no attempt at hiding its shipping container origins—the exposed corrugated metal makes sure of it. But Rob says its look is always subject to change. Although construction was technically completed in 2020, he considers it a work in progress. It’s available to rent on Airbnb, too; Rob likes to list it when he travels. We spoke with Rob about how he relied on friends to help him turn nine hunks of metal into a home and living art project and showcase. Our conversation has been edited and condensed for clarity.
The 1,600-square-foot home was made using nine shipping containers.
Photo: Rob DePiazza
What are some of the features you love about your home?
Rob DePiazza: The way I approach design aspects, like the trim, the casing on the doors, for example. Sometimes I won’t have an idea, but instead of forcing the issue, I’ll live with it for a minute or six months and try not to think about it. An idea popped in my head for the door casings. We had to conceal this two-inch square of rusty metal that wasn’t attractive. We cut strips of the birch plywood so that all you see is the ply. It’s tongue-in-cheek, because typically in cabinetry you don’t ever reveal ply. That’s kind of a thing in the house: it’s an exercise in revealing things that aren’t [usually] revealed, like metal walls. I used a material called Parallam for the stair treads and the landing, which is a structural beam material. You never see it in its normal capacity. It’s usually hidden within a wall.
A seating area on the upper level overlooks the double-height living room.
Photo: Rob DePiazza
See the full story on Dwell.com: Nine Shipping Containers, One 1,600-Square-Foot House With Lots of Unconventional Art
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