Across India's fastest-growing infrastructure sectors — highways, metro rail, energy, and large-scale industrial campuses — a quiet revolution is underway. Project managers who once relied on brick-and-mortar temporary offices are increasingly turning to portable cabin solutions, and the economics are difficult to argue with.
The cost equation
A conventional temporary structure on a project site takes weeks to build, involves multiple contractors, and is effectively demolished when the project ends. A high-quality portable office cabin, by contrast, can be deployed and functional within 48 hours, then relocated to the next site without any material loss.
Consider a mid-sized infrastructure company running four concurrent projects across different states. With traditional site offices, they commission and demolish four separate structures — at both capital cost and environmental cost. With a portable cabin fleet, the same units rotate between sites over their entire 15+ year lifespan.
"The cabin we deployed for the Rajasthan highway project was reinstalled three times across different site locations — each move cost less than 2% of the original unit price."
— Site Project Manager, L&T Infrastructure
Specification snapshot
Modern portable office cabins are engineered to standards that rival — and often surpass — conventional temporary structures. Here's what a premium-grade unit looks like under the hood:
| Parameter | Specification |
|---|---|
| Primary frame | MS ISMC / ISMB, 2.5–3mm HRCA steel |
| Wall panels | 75mm PUF sandwich, U-value ≤ 0.35 W/m²K |
| Installation time | 24–48 hours on levelled ground |
| Wind resistance | Up to 160 km/h |
| Warranty | 5 years — structure, panels, electrical |
| Certifications | ISO 9001:2015, IS 1641 Class B fire |
| Relocatable | Yes — crane-liftable base, forklift pockets |
| Standard sizes | 8×12 ft to 20×40 ft; custom on request |
Thermal performance in Indian conditions
Perhaps the most underappreciated feature of modern portable cabins is their insulation performance. PUF sandwich panels with a U-value of 0.35 W/m²K keep cabin interiors at a comfortable 24–26°C even during peak Indian summer — with a standard 1.5T split AC unit, running costs are significantly lower than comparable brick structures.
The outer PPGI skin reflects a substantial portion of solar radiation, reducing heat ingress before it even reaches the insulation layer. In test conditions at 48°C ambient, interior temperatures remain within 8–10°C of the air-conditioned set point without any supplementary cooling.
Compliance and certifications
Reputable manufacturers supply cabins built to IS standards — IS 1641 Class B fire rating for panels, IS 3043 for earthing, ISI FR-rated PVC wiring throughout. This makes them suitable for government tenders, defence contracts, and sites with strict safety audits. ISO 9001:2015 certification covers the full manufacturing process, from raw material procurement to final QA inspection.
The verdict
For any project running longer than three months, the lifecycle economics of portable cabins decisively outperform conventionally-built site offices. Add the flexibility to relocate, the speed of deployment, and the predictability of a warranty-backed product, and the question is no longer whether to use portable cabins — it's which specification best fits the project.
MAC Infrastructure's office cabin range covers 8×12 ft single-person units right through to 20×40 ft open-plan offices for 25+ staff, with full customisation on cladding, interiors, electrical load, and MEP configuration.