A containerised (modular) plant is factory-built, tested and shipped in an ISO container; a conventional plant is constructed in concrete on your site. Both treat the same water — the decision is about speed, capacity, footprint, disruption and whole-life cost. Here is the honest comparison, from a company that builds containerised systems.
The two approaches are not better or worse — they win in different situations. Containerised moves the build into a factory: it is faster, tested before it arrives, compact and relocatable, with predictable cost. Site-built puts permanent civil infrastructure on the ground: it scales to the largest flows and the lowest unit cost, and integrates with existing concrete assets. Most of the decision comes down to four things — capacity, timeline, site constraints and how long the plant must stay.
| Factor | Containerised / Modular | Conventional / Site-Built |
|---|---|---|
| Lead time | Short — built in the factory while site works proceed in parallel | Long — sequential civil, mechanical, electrical on site |
| Quality control | Factory-assembled and FAT-tested — arrives known-good | Built and tested in situ — weather- and trade-dependent |
| Capacity ceiling | Bounded by container size; scale by adding modules | Effectively unlimited — best for very large flows |
| Footprint | Compact, dense, vertical integration | Larger; uses open tankage |
| Site disruption | Minimal — craned in, plug & play | Significant — excavation, concrete, long site presence |
| Relocatable | Yes — redeploy, hire, or move with the project | No — permanent asset |
| Unit cost at large scale | Higher $/m³ at very high flow | Lowest $/m³ at large, permanent scale |
| Capital profile | Predictable, packaged; OPEX/hire options | Higher civil capital; long asset life |
| Best tenure | Temporary, rapid, remote, or uncertain horizon | Permanent municipal/industrial infrastructure |
Because the plant is assembled and factory-acceptance-tested before it leaves the works, it arrives proven and commissions in days, not months — and the factory build runs in parallel with your site preparation, compressing the programme. That makes containerised the right answer when time is critical (a consent deadline, a HAB event, a plant failure), when the site is remote or space-constrained, when the need is temporary or relocatable (construction dewatering, hire, pilot/demonstration), and when you want a predictable, packaged price rather than open-ended civil works. You scale by adding containers. The ceiling is the box: very large flows need multiple modules, and deep retrofits into existing structures can be constrained.
A site-built plant puts permanent reinforced-concrete tankage and bespoke structures on the ground. It is the right choice for very large, permanent flows — municipal works, major industrial sites — where the lowest cost per cubic metre over a long asset life matters most, where the layout must be fully bespoke, or where you are integrating with existing concrete tanks. The trade-offs are a longer, weather-dependent programme, significant site disruption (excavation, civils, extended trade presence), and a fixed asset that cannot be moved or redeployed.
Match the approach to your priority
| If your priority is… | Lean towards |
|---|---|
| Speed to operation / a hard deadline | Containerised |
| Remote, off-grid or space-constrained site | Containerised |
| Temporary, relocatable, hire or pilot need | Containerised |
| Minimal site disruption / known-good (FAT) delivery | Containerised |
| Very large, permanent flow (municipal/industrial) | Site-built |
| Lowest whole-life cost per m³ at large scale | Site-built |
| Fully bespoke layout / integrate existing concrete | Site-built |
Tell us the flow, the timeline, the site constraints and how long the plant must run — our engineers will recommend containerised or conventional, with the honest trade-offs and a costed route.
Containerised systems, packaged plants and configurations
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