Sustainability isn't just a feature. It's the foundation.

Modern building with rust-colored metal siding and black metal balconies, against a bright blue sky with scattered clouds.

Built Different. Built Intentionally.

It all started with a question: what does it look like to build something that belongs here, for the long haul?

The answer was 173 industrial freight containers, stacked and cantilevered into three structures on a pier foundation driven 80 feet into bedrock. The result is the largest shipping container community in North America.

Exterior view of a modern building with a black spiral staircase and small balcony on the upper floor, metal railing, and surrounding greenery.

Corten steel doesn't need to be painted, it doesn't warp, and it doesn't degrade. These containers were engineered to handle the harshest conditions on the planet, and now they're home. We let the material do what it was built to do, and designed around the industrial legacy of Wedgewood-Houston, a neighborhood built by welders and makers who worked with their hands and built things that lasted.

The Architecture Is the Story

A bright living room with a white couch decorated with brown, gray, and patterned pillows, a round wooden coffee table with decorative objects, a tall green plant near the window, and a view of a yard with grass and trees outside.

Floor-to-ceiling Pella windows bring in natural light without sacrificing thermal performance. Mitsubishi heating and cooling units run quietly and efficiently, keeping your utility bills where they should be. Closed-cell insulation means your home holds its temperature, whether it's July in Nashville or a cold snap in February. These aren't features we added. They're decisions we made from the start.

Engineered for How You Actually Live

A person riding a white bicycle on a paved road during daylight, wearing a black skirt, white sneakers, a grey top, and a grey backpack.

On-site recycling. Community greenspaces. Walkability to Geodis Park, local restaurants, and everything Wedgewood-Houston has become. When your building, your neighborhood, and your values are aligned, sustainability stops being a compromise and starts feeling like home.

The Footprint You Want to Leave