$1000 for shipping? is it the two ply corrugated lexan that looks like this:
http://www.lexanegypt.com/lexanegyupt(EN)/images/lexan%20sheets.jpg or were they solid? you could buy a whole greenhouse kit the size of your friends' for that price.. (costco.com sells them, in fact, which includes shipping costs).
...this whole post came about 2 months too late for someone wanting freebies. we had a 5x8 greenhouse on our roof that we had purchased from one of those kits... the metal frame just wasn't sturdy enough for chicago winds (or rather, for chicago winds atop a 40' building...?). it was a POS as far as durability and every time it got really windy it was a mad rush to repair and anchor it better... eventually it blew to pieces when we had those 90mph winds last winter.... i threw the metal frame out, but kept the plastic lexan sheets thinking i'd rebuild it stronger with wood.... never happened.. and the day we were moving out after selling the place i left all the plastic sheets in the alley. i picture in my head them blowing away like a tornado had hit the alley, but maybe some keen eye caught them in time. there wasn't enough time to really dig around for a good taker though :/
...that said a few tidbits...
i made it extremely sturdy by siliconing all of the joints with silicone caulk... (the real problem them is that made the thing into a giant sail, so when it finally broke away it didn't fall apart, but rather ripped the bolts out of the concrete wall that were anchoring it...).
the air temperature is a real issue though. the same things that insulate it when you need will make it get too hot when you don't need. in the summer we had to keep the door wide open or it would be too hot. it really served no useful purpose in the summer, except we could've had bananas and other tropical stuff that wouldn't otherwise grow. also, some plants prefer a really warm day then a cooler night, and it's harder to control that in a greenhouse... my next point of modification was going to be replacing one of the panels with a screen and mounting a fan for ventilation... then somehow being able to re-insulate that area in the winter would be essential.
in the winter, it actually did a surprisingly nice job keeping its temperature. we bought a very small outdoor greenhouse heater (electric powered, looks basically like just about any other space heater really... probably any "garage" heater would be an equivalent..) and had it plugged into a thermostat switch that would turn it on when it dropped below a programmed level. we were surprised to find that we had a hard time staying in the greenhouse long enough to see if/when the heater came on. we know it did at some point, but it wasn't on enough to even notice it really. and more importantly we never noticed an increase/decrease on the electric bill... had we kept it around a bit longer i would've probably hooked it up to something to measure exactly how often it came on. (we did have a wireless outdoor thermometer gauge placed inside, but the temp readout of that showed the temps were relatively constant).
i did a lot of research on "passively" heating the greenhouse... the problem is i didn't really get too involved in caring about that until it was too cold to really be outside working on it. so as a temporary passive measure i filled old wine bottles with water and left them sitting in various spots within the greenhouse... (theory being that water holds temps longer...). i have no idea how well this helped and would have liked to have done more real measuring of it in a temperature where it wasn't so extreme, but i don't think it hurt either ... (if you do this and then ever let the greenhouse get outside air temps, remove the bottles or they'll freeze and shatter)
but if you google around, there are entire greenhouse plans for passively heated greenhouses... some people have built home-made water heaters almost that circulate to heat... (think a grid of wine or beer bottles attached to a board, interconnected by tubes, placed on the inside roof, or a back wall, etc). i've seen some that use hay bails as a wall, which somehow helps.