This has become a popular idea with architects lately. We've been asked to look at it a couple of times but have run into obstacles that keep it from being a realistic structural system. It depends where you are located - but around here I've only seen it done for small structures, or where there is an independent system added to or built around the container.
Here we haven't had much luck with getting the building department to look favorably at using containers for anything substantial. They have a lot of questions/concerns, things like: fire rating - what UL assembly are you referencing, one developer had testing done to get a UL rating but was unable to pass the test, inspections/testing - who is going to sign off that a container meets your specs, containers are governed by a performance spec - i.e. Xkips at each corner, Ypsf pressure on side walls - but they may meet that with different geometry/materials, how will you relate that to building code requirements and reference standards. Connections are also an issue. For anything substantial we have redundancy requirements that require tension connections as a percent of gravity etc. - you need to start coming up with funky custom connections that take tension, shear etc. across the container joints.
I know that they have been used in some locations - might just depend how open your building department is to new/different systems.