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Transportable means the structure has to ship cleanly. CoGrid's components are flat-pack, freight on standard trucks, and reassemble fast on the next site.

Transportable homes have always faced the same trade-off: a structure that's robust enough to use is too heavy and bulky to relocate cheaply. Conventional transportable buildings either ship as whole modules (oversized load, route permits, escort vehicles) or as kit pieces that take too long to reassemble.
CoGrid is engineered for the transportable use case from the chassis up. The three components flat-pack tightly, ship on standard freight, and bolt together at the next site without specialist labour. When the project moves or the lease ends, the chassis disassembles and goes with you — same parts, same crew, same documentation.
This works for resource-sector accommodation that follows the works front, government temporary housing during recovery programmes, and commercial operations that need long-tenor portable infrastructure without committing to a permanent build.
Components flat-pack on standard freight (no oversized load permits required), disassemble cleanly with the same fasteners used to assemble, and the system is engineered to handle repeated assembly cycles. Programme depends on size, but a relocation cycle can run in days, not weeks.
Yes — the chassis sits on minimal site preparation (often just a slab or footings) and disassembles without permanent attachment to the land. Local planning approvals will depend on the jurisdiction; we can help with documentation.
Tell us the relocation cycle, the use case, and the conditions. We'll come back with a chassis configuration that suits.