WATCH: Jake and Kolby Aulick detail a project underway at Aulick Industries: building container houses. Point a smartphone camera at the QR code, then click the link. 
An agriculturally oriented steel builder like Scottsbluff’s Aulick Industries might seem an unlikely business to evoke a show like HGTV’s “Tiny House Hunters.”
Kolby (left) and Jake Aulick, third-generation leaders of Aulick Industries with brother Austin, see their firm’s prototype “metAul” shipping container house as a way for young adults starting out in life to be able to work and live in Scotts Bluff County. They’re standing next to the back wall of their 480-square-foot prototype in Aulick’s Scottsbluff headquarters building.
This photo, taken in late February before the completion of Aulick Industries’ 480-square-foot prototype “metAul” container home, gives an idea of the depth of the living space it would offer interested buyers. Its kitchen area lies to the right of the entrance, with a living room area to the left and more rooms in the middle and back. A second window opens off the back room, with a bathroom and utility area to that room’s right.
Aulick Industries’ “metAul” container home prototype includes a shower in its bathroom in the far right corner of the 480-square-foot steel structure. The utility area lies beyond the door opening at right. This photo was taken in late February, before the prototype’s recent completion at Aulick’s Scottsbluff headquarters building.
Jake and Kolby Aulick detail a project underway at Aulick Industries: Building container houses. Aulick Industries hope that the container hou…
Kolby (left) and Jake Aulick, third-generation leaders of Aulick Industries with brother Austin, see their firm’s prototype “metAul” shipping container house as a way for young adults starting out in life to be able to work and live in Scotts Bluff County. They’re standing next to the back wall of their 480-square-foot prototype in Aulick’s Scottsbluff headquarters building.
This photo, taken in late February before the completion of Aulick Industries’ 480-square-foot prototype “metAul” container home, gives an idea of the depth of the living space it would offer interested buyers. Its kitchen area lies to the right of the entrance, with a living room area to the left and more rooms in the middle and back. A second window opens off the back room, with a bathroom and utility area to that room’s right.
Aulick Industries’ “metAul” container home prototype includes a shower in its bathroom in the far right corner of the 480-square-foot steel structure. The utility area lies beyond the door opening at right. This photo was taken in late February, before the prototype’s recent completion at Aulick’s Scottsbluff headquarters building.
WATCH: Jake and Kolby Aulick detail a project underway at Aulick Industries: building container houses. Point a smartphone camera at the QR code, then click the link.