It’s a question we hear all the time from our customers, family, and even friends when we tell them what we do at Falcon Structures:
“Where do all those shipping containers actually come from?”
It’s a great question. From the outside, it seems like they just appear—steel boxes ready to be transformed into something new. But before a shipping container becomes a modified office, equipment enclosure, or even a bathroom, it has quite the journey.
If you’ve ever wondered about the origin story of these conex boxes, read on.
Want a quick primer? Watch this for a short overview of container origins and the difference between one-trip and used.
Before one-trip containers land at Falcon’s facility, they start their life overseas.
In fact, about 85% of all shipping containers are manufactured in China, where production is centralized near major ports. Of the top 10 shipping container manufacturers globally, six are based in Asia.
Shipping containers are built for durability—able to handle rough seas, heavy loads, and harsh weather. The process starts with large steel sheets, which are:
Each container is then quality-tested to meet the rigorous demands of global shipping.
Most are built to ISO standards, a global benchmark established in the 1960s to streamline international trade. ISO containers are designed with standard sizes and connection points, making it easier for shipping lines, ports, and cranes to handle them interchangeably.
In 2019, ISO containers were officially recognized as commercial building materials in the 2021 International Building Code (IBC)—a milestone effort led in part by Falcon Structures’ CEO and Co-Founder, Stephen Shang.
A whopping 80% of global goods trade is transported by sea. So once a container is manufactured, it’s likely to be loaded with goods—everything from electronics, furniture, food, and raw materials—then exported by way of a shipping company.
Some of the biggest names in global container shipping include:
While many are reused for continued shipping, others end up sitting idle, abandoned at ports or left unused due to trade imbalances between countries. Many of these are one-trip containers, conex boxes that have made just one trip overseas carrying goods, but are impractical to ship back overseas empty. Rather than letting them go to waste, companies like Falcon and other modified container manufacturers create new uses for these durable boxes outside of global trade.
From cargo to construction, the journey of a shipping container doesn’t have to end at the dock. At Falcon, we’re proud to extend its lifecycle and build a better world—one repurposed container at a time.
Follow us on LinkedIn and subscribe to our monthly newsletter for more container insights, modification possibilities, and industry news.