Mobile Office Containers. Built For The Jobsite.

Put a durable office where the work happens. FCC scopes container offices around your team, access, doors, windows, insulation, electrical needs, and delivery plan.

Construction siteTeam layoutElectrical-readyDelivery access
Modified shipping container mobile office staged beside a construction site

Construction-Site Quote Inputs

People count, desk or plan-review needs, door and window locations, insulation, electrical-ready assumptions, site access, utility hookup boundary, and future move plans.

Quick Answer

A mobile office container should be planned around field coordination first.

The container is the shell. The quote gets useful when the team size, layout, windows, doors, insulation, electrical-ready scope, delivery access, and site hookup boundary are visible before fabrication starts.

Jobsite Office Flow

Start with the people who need the space.

Construction Site Uses

Put the office where decisions already happen.

A container office works best when the layout starts with the field role it needs to support, not with a generic floor plan.

  • Superintendent Office

    Keep the daily coordination point close to the work, with room for check-ins, plan review, notes, and locked paperwork.

  • Plan Review Space

    Create a dry, controlled place for drawings, submittals, schedules, laptops, and field meetings without leaving the site.

  • Security Or Check-In

    Use a compact office footprint for gate control, visitor check-in, badge pickup, logs, or equipment-yard supervision.

  • Yard Operations Office

    Support equipment, inventory, drivers, dispatch, and field crews from a relocatable office beside the active yard.

Office Package Scope

Quote the office package as a set of jobsite decisions.

Doors, windows, insulation, wall finish, lighting, outlets, work zones, and delivery access all influence each other. The best quote keeps those dependencies visible.

  • Shell Size

    • 20-foot offices
    • 40-foot offices
    • High cube options
    • Mixed office/storage
  • Access And Light

    • Personnel doors
    • Office windows
    • Cargo-door plan
    • Vents
  • Comfort Package

    • Insulation
    • Ventilation
    • Wall finish
    • Climate assumptions
  • Electrical-Ready Scope

    • Lighting
    • Receptacles
    • Panel location
    • Hookup boundary
  • Work Zones

    • Desks
    • Plan table
    • Check-in counter
    • Secure storage
  • Site Mobility

    • Tilt-bed access
    • Placement side
    • Level support
    • Future move
Site Placement

Keep the office useful after the truck leaves.

A construction-site office needs more than a good layout. It needs placement, access, utility assumptions, and local review handled before the unit becomes part of the workday.

01
FCC Container Scope
Container condition, size, doors, windows, insulation, electrical-ready modifications, quoted finish, and delivery planning.
02
Jobsite And Utility Scope
Level support, final placement area, truck access, final utility connection, local electrical work, internet, and daily operating setup.
03
Approval Scope
Permits, inspections, long-term placement rules, occupancy, public access, and authority-having-jurisdiction decisions.
Mobile Office FAQ

Planning Questions Before You Build.

Mobile office buyers can scan the scope questions first, then open the build, hookup, permit, and relocation details that affect pricing.

01What makes a container work as a mobile office?

The container shell is modified with office-focused openings and interior options such as a personnel door, windows, insulation, lighting, and electrical work scoped to the project.

02Can the office be delivered ready to use?

The goal is to deliver as much of the office build as practical before it reaches the site. Final utility connection, local inspection, or site-specific hookup work may still be required.

03Which size is best for a jobsite office?

A 20-foot unit works well for a small field office or security office. A 40-foot unit gives more room for desks, plan review, storage, or a mixed office and equipment layout.

04Can the office move between projects?

Yes. A container office is relocatable when the site layout, utility connection, and delivery access are planned around future moves.

05Do mobile offices need permits?

Permit requirements vary by jurisdiction and use. Commercial jobsites, public-facing offices, and long-term placements should be checked with the local authority before delivery.

06Can First Choice Containers match our layout?

Yes. Share the number of people, desk needs, storage needs, door and window preferences, and the site access details. The quote can be scoped around that layout.

Quote Prep

Bring the jobsite plan into the first conversation.

People count

Desk or plan-review needs

Door and window preference

Insulation expectations

Electrical-ready scope

Delivery and utility access

Ready For An Office Container?

Get A Mobile Office Quote.

Tell us how many people need the space, where it is going, and which office features matter. We'll scope the container, modifications, and delivery path around the jobsite.