Flat Pack Container House.
For Worker Camps
Flat pack gives you the lowest cost per bed for large worker camps. Units are fabricated at our Riyadh factory and assembled on your site by our own crew, built to pass Civil Defense and labour-welfare inspection. Best for camps of 50 beds and up where both the budget and the move-in date are fixed.
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Flat Pack Container House Product Range
Flat Pack Container House Products for Efficient Camp Delivery
Choose from 20ft, 40ft, knock-down, foldable, insulated and bolt-together flat pack container house formats for project camps, site offices and relocatable facilities.
20ft Flat Pack Container House
20ft Flat Pack Container House | Knock-Down Unit
20ft flat pack container house with pre-assembled roof and floor. Walls and columns assemble on site. Up to four units in one 40ft container.
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40ft Flat Pack Container House
40ft Flat Pack Container House | Knock-Down Unit
40ft flat pack container house with pre-assembled roof and floor. Larger open-plan space. Stacks up to three storeys. Joins into bigger buildings.
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Flat Pack Portable Cabin
Flat Pack Portable Cabin | Relocatable Steel Cabin
Flat pack portable cabin for temporary and relocatable use. Steel frame with sandwich panels. Dismantles and re-erects without panel loss.
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Flat Pack Foldable Container House
Flat Pack Foldable Container House | Fold-Out Unit
Flat pack foldable container house combines flat-pack strength with fold-out speed. Faster on-site assembly than standard flat pack.
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Knock-Down Flat Pack Container House
Knock-Down Flat Pack Container House | KD Unit
Knock-down flat pack container house ships fully demountable. Bolt-connected panels cut freight and need no crane to install.
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Bolt-Together Flat Pack Container House
Bolt-Together Flat Pack Container House
Bolt-together flat pack container house assembles with bolted joints. No welding on site. Dismantles for reuse on the next project.
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Insulated Flat Pack Container House
Insulated Flat Pack Container House | Rock Wool Panel
Insulated flat pack container house with rock wool or glass wool panels. Holds interior temperature in desert heat. Class A fire option.
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Flat Pack Container House Price
Flat Pack Container House Price | FOB Cost Guide
Flat pack container house price by size and spec. FOB and EXW basis. Cost drivers explained. Request a project quote.
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What Is a Flat Pack
Container House?
A flat pack container house is a building that ships as a kit. The steel frame, wall panels, floor, doors and fittings come flat. A small crew bolts them together on site to make a finished room. It is not an old shipping container. It is not a ready-made cabin. It is a labelled kit that goes up fast and works well when many rooms are the same.
cx/cy & --x/--y.
Each room ships as one numbered set.
Frame, four corner posts, 15 wall panels, doors and fittings. Every part is labelled. Your crew builds one room at a time. No digging through loose parts.
Frame first. Then panels. Then closing.
There is a set order. Frame first. Then wall panels. Then doors, windows and sealing. Four workers put up five to seven rooms a day this way. See How It's Built for the full steps.
The same room goes up faster.
Flat pack works best when rooms are the same. The more rooms repeat, the faster the camp goes up. Each room sleeps up to four workers. More repeats means a lower cost per bed.
Flat Pack Component Specifications.
Six parts make up the unit: frame, walls, roof, floor, openings and the connection kit. Below is what each one is made of, with the numbers that matter on a hot, coastal site: fire, heat, wind and rust.
Bolted Steel Frame
The skeleton. The crew bolts the base frame, roof frame and corner posts together first. Everything else sits on this, so it has to go up square.
One System For The Whole Camp.
Dormitories, offices, toilets, showers, kitchen support and gatehouses all come from the same kit. You order standard room types, combine them into the layout your site needs, and run the whole camp from one supplier.
Standard Rooms, Built To Combine
Start with a standard room, then combine units side by side or stack them up. One box can be a dorm, an office, a toilet or a shower room. Two or more boxes join into bigger offices and meeting rooms. The corridor and stair come as their own boxes, so a full two or three floor block goes together from the same parts.
Worker Accommodation
The main job. A standard room sleeps up to 4 workers and meets the 4 m² per person rule. Repeat the same room down a 1.8 m corridor and stack up to 3 floors for a full block.
Site Office Blocks
One box makes a 3-person office. Join two boxes for a 6 to 8 person team, or up to four boxes for a meeting room that seats 40 to 50. Same frame as the dorms.
Ablution Blocks
Toilet and shower boxes, built ready for plumbing. A toilet box holds 5 squat pans and 3 urinals. A shower box holds 5 stalls. Floors are waterproof with a built-in drain slope.
Dining Support Units
Kitchen and serving boxes with the power, exhaust and drainage set in the right place. Wipe-clean inside. Sized to sit next to the dining area.
Gatehouse And Security
A small box at the camp entrance for access control. Door side, window position and the cable runs for CCTV are set before it is built.
Remote Camp Expansion
Adding rooms later? The same kit repeats. New phases use the same frame, panels and parts, so the camp grows without bringing in a second supplier.
How It's Installed, Step By Step.
A flat pack container house goes up with bolts and basic tools, on a prepared foundation, in a set order. Four workers put up one unit in two to four hours. Here is how a unit is installed, from the ground up, plus the three things that decide whether it goes up clean.
Foundation & Site Prep
Start on level ground with a simple foundation, a concrete pad or a strip footing. Clear the site, and mark the water, power and drainage points. Leave room for a crane if you are stacking.
Concrete pad or strip footing
Unpack & Check
The unit arrives flat-packed. Unpack it, lay the parts out, and check them against the packing list. Nothing is welded, so there is no fabrication on site.
Check against packing list
Frame & Level
Bolt the base frame down and level it. Stand the four corner posts, then add the roof frame. This frame carries everything, so it goes up first and square.
Bolted, no welding
Panels, Doors & Windows
Slot the 75 mm rock-wool wall panels into the frame and fix the sealed roof panel. Then fit the steel door and the double-glazed windows. A drill and a rubber mallet are about all the crew needs.
Basic hand tools
Service & Finish
Run the wiring and any plumbing, fit the ceiling, then seal the joints and add the trims. Connect power and water, check it over, and the unit is ready to use.
Ready to useThree Things That Decide A Clean Build
Level base.
A unit that is not level twists the door and window frames. Shim or grout the base until it is true.
Square frame.
Check the frame is square before you tighten the bolts, or the wall panels will not sit flush.
Sealed joints.
Seal every joint. Unsealed seams are where the first heavy rain gets in.
A four-worker crew works through this in two to four hours, around five to seven units a day. Stacking to three floors uses a crane. Across a camp, the same steps repeat unit by unit. Saudind builds and installs to this process locally in Saudi Arabia.
Flat Pack Camps, Delivered.
These are real camps built from this flat pack system and now in use. Each card shows the sector, the size and what the units are used for, so you can see it working at the scale you are planning.
Solar PV Plant Worker Camp, Saudi Arabia
FAQ
Flat Pack
Container House
Questions.
Search demand around flat pack container houses usually concentrates on transport density, assembly speed, foundation work, material specification and the difference from factory-complete prefab units.
Useful enquiry details: quantity, room function, destination, unloading method, floor count, wet-area requirement, panel thickness and whether installation is supply-only or supply-and-install.
Basics
A flat pack container house is supplied as a disassembled building set: steel frame members, wall and roof panels, floor system, door and window sets, trims, sealing materials and connection hardware. The parts are packed flat for transport and bolted together on site.
It is not a converted shipping container. The structure is purpose-built for modular camp buildings where repeated layouts, transport density and site assembly speed are more important than receiving a fully finished room in one piece.
Flat pack container house: ships disassembled, loads more units per container, needs site assembly and works well for large repeated camp quantities.
Prefab container house: ships as a more complete room unit, needs less assembly after delivery, usually has higher factory-finished interior quality and is better when the client inspects finish quality before occupancy.
Flat pack is strongest for projects with repeated room layouts and high unit counts: worker dormitories, site offices, ablution blocks, gatehouses, storage rooms and camp expansion phases.
For procurement planning, it is usually most practical when the project has 50+ beds, a tight delivery schedule, limited shipping budget or remote site access where compact loading reduces transport cost.
Packing & Delivery
One 40HQ container can usually carry 8-16 complete flat pack units. The final loading quantity depends on panel thickness, bathroom content, accessories, furniture, packing method and whether units share the same layout.
| Factor | Effect On Loading |
|---|---|
| Standard repeated room | Higher loading density |
| Wet-area unit | Lower loading density due to fixtures and plumbing parts |
| 75 mm panels | More volume than 50 mm panels |
| Furniture package | May reduce unit count per container |
The confirmed packing list should match the approved layout, including frame members, panels, door/window sets, fasteners, trims, sealing materials and any MEP or furniture package. Each set should be numbered by unit and assembly sequence.
For remote sites, confirm unloading equipment, site access width, storage area and whether the delivery route allows a 40HQ container truck or requires smaller local transfer vehicles.
Installation
Under prepared site conditions, one standard unit can normally be assembled in 2-4 hours by a trained crew of four using basic hand tools. The sequence is base frame, corner columns, top frame, wall panels, roof panels, floor finish, doors, windows, trims and sealing.
A crane is not normally required to lift a complete finished room, because the unit is assembled from packed parts. The site still needs a controlled unloading method such as forklift, crane truck or planned manual handling depending on package weight and ground condition.
For two-floor or three-floor layouts, lifting equipment may be needed for upper-level placement, stairs, roof materials or large package handling.
Standard single-floor units require a level support base such as concrete pads, strip footings, steel supports or another engineered flat bearing surface. The foundation should be ready before delivery so frame alignment and bolted connections are not delayed.
For stacked buildings, confirm ground bearing capacity, column support points, stair placement and bracing requirements before production drawings are released.
Specs
The standard box size used on this page is 6055 x 2990 x 2896 mm. Standard flat pack buildings can be configured for single-floor, two-floor or three-floor layouts when the frame, connection and foundation details are engineered for stacking.
| Item | Standard Reference |
|---|---|
| Module size | 6055 x 2990 x 2896 mm |
| Stack height | Up to 3 floors when engineered correctly |
| Wall panel | 50-75 mm rock-wool sandwich panel |
| Typical use | Dormitory, office, welfare and sanitary units |
Yes. Common custom items include internal partition layout, door and window position, wall panel thickness, exterior colour, floor finish, bathroom layout, AC opening, electrical route and furniture package.
For batch production, customisation should be frozen before production drawings and packing lists are released. Late changes can affect panel cutting, loading density and site assembly sequence.
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92P8+MG, Southern Hyt, Riyadh 14575
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+966 532580666
info@saudind.com